UN human rights chief Michelle Bachelet deeply deplores this week’s military takeover in Burkina Faso, her office,
OHCHR, said on Tuesday.
OHCHR has called for a swift return to constitutional order and urged the army to immediately release President Roch Marc
Christian Kaboré and other high-level officials who were detained in the coup on Monday.
Ms. Bachelet had visited Burkina Faso last November where she stressed the importance of preserving hard-won democratic
and human rights gains.
During the visit, OHCHR had observed mounting frustration and impatience with the deteriorating security situation in
the country, with increasingly vicious attacks by armed groups and others across the Sahel region, and the Government’s
response.
Given the security threats, and the tremendous humanitarian challenges, OHCHR Spokesperson Ravina Shamdasani, told
reporters in Geneva it is more important than ever to ensure rule of law, constitutional order and international rights
obligations are respected.Preserve ‘democratic space’
“It is crucial for democratic space to be effectively protected, to ensure people are able to air their grievances and
aspirations, and to participate in meaningful dialogue to work towards addressing the many crises in the country”, she
said.
This latest coup in West Africa comes amid a “multifaceted crisis”, according to OHCHR’s Shamdasani – a crisis that
ranges from “climate change that affects the ability of herders and pastoralists to carry out their daily work and
conflicts erupt as a result of it, to violent extremist groups attacks on local populations, as well as the
deteriorating humanitarian situation”.
OHCHR estimates that three million people are food insecure in the country.
Those factors “generate a lot of frustration” among the population, Ms. Shamdasani said, adding that the High
Commissioner believes that “the way to manage this frustration and to find a way out of this conflict, through dialogue,
through the meaningful participation of people from all sectors of the society.”Guterres urges generals to back democratic institutions
Reiterating his concern voiced on Monday over the coup, UN Secretary-General António Guterrestold reporters outside the Security Council on Tuesday that the role of the military “must be to defend their countries and their peoples, not to attack their
governments and to fight for power.”
“We have, unfortunately in the region, terrorist groups, we have threats to international peace and security”, he said.
“My appeal is for the armies of these countries to assume their professional role of armies, to protect their countries
and re-establish democratic institutions.”
Asked about the apparent high level of popular support witnessed on the streets of the capital Ouagadougou. Mr. Guterres
noted that public celebration was common:
“It's easy to orchestrate them”, he said, “but the values of democracy do not depend on the public opinion at one moment
or another. Democratic societies are a value that must be preserved. Military coups are unacceptable in the 21st
century.”