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Human rights concerns in wake of mass arrests

Violent skirmishes over food price rises in Ouagadougou caused the city to shut down on 28 February 2008 Brahima Ouedraogo/IRIN

Some 184 people have been imprisoned in Burkina Faso over the last fortnight, among them Thibault Nana, the leader of a small opposition party who is accused of masterminding a demonstration in the capital Ouagadougou in late February.

“There are reports that some [detainees] have been tortured, and some have been sent to jail without being heard by an investigative judge,” Phillipe Ouédraogo, the leader of the “G14” coalition of opposition political groups told IRIN.

The government’s spokesman and transport minister Phillipe Sawadogo told journalists on 4 March that Nana, the opposition leader, is accused of “holding seditious sentiments.”

Nana had called for a “dead city” day of strikes and civil action in Ouagadougou which took place on 28 February to protest against increases in the prices of basic products.

Similar demonstrations took place earlier in Bobo-Dioulasso, the second largest city in the country, as well Banforo and Ouahigouya. Some of the protests turned violent.

Fears

On 3 March the state-owned newspaper Sidwaya reported that 29 persons had already been sentenced to between three and 36 months in prison in Bobo-Dioulasso, less than two weeks after the strikes had occurred.

The trials have raised the concerns of human rights advocates and opposition politicians.

“This is not normal,” Ouédraogo, the leader of the “G14” coalition said. “Everybody’s constitutional rights must be respected, above all by the state,”

Ouédraogo also accused the police forces of “exaggerating” the number of protestors and having arrested many people in the streets at random.

Jean Chrizogone Zougmonré, chairman of the Movement of Burkinabe for Human Rights (MBDHP), the main human rights movement in the country, confirmed that some of the people arrested have been victims of “serious violence” at the hands of the security services.

He said his organisation has appealed to authorities to prevent further abuses.

Denial

Since the beginning of the demonstration in Burkina Faso authorities have rejected claims that price hikes of between 10 and 65 percent on basic goods in recent months are a result of new taxes.

The government is now forcing importers to pay their taxes, the Minister of Economy and Finance Jean Baptiste Compaoré reiterated on 4 March.

“In the past [money] was going straight into the pockets of individuals… now it is time for the government to take what it is owed,’’ he said at a press conference.

bo/nr/dh


This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions

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