OUAGADOUGOU, Burkina Faso
Burkina Faso's junta chief on
Tuesday signed a charter setting a three-year transition period before the
country holds elections, an AFP journalist said, just over a month after he led
a coup to overthrow the country's elected leader.Leader of the military junta, Paul-Henri Sandaogo Damiba
"The duration of the
transition is set at 36 months from the date of the inauguration of the
president," according to the transition charter signed by
Lieutenant-Colonel Paul-Henri Sandaogo Damiba, who replaced former president
Roch Marc Christian Kabore in late January.
The transition period is
longer than the 30 months proposed by a technical commission set up by the
junta at the beginning of last month and by a draft charter discussed for
several hours at meetings between the regime and civil groups on Monday and
Tuesday.
Those meetings also involved
political parties, unions, youth and women, as well as people displaced by the
jihadist attacks that have hit Burkina Faso since 2015.
The charter also stipulates
that the president of the transition "is not eligible for the
presidential, legislative and municipal elections which will be organised to
put an end to the transition."
That provision also applies to
the 25 members of the transitional government.
The charter specifies that one of the main missions
of the transition is "to fight against terrorism, restore the integrity of
the national territory".
It also aims to "provide an effective and
urgent response to the humanitarian crisis and the socio-economic dramas and
community caused by insecurity" and "strengthen governance and the
fight against corruption". - AFP
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