Gulf News

Ex-PM elected president of Burkina Faso

KABORE WON THE VOTE IN THE FIRST ROUND WITH 53.49% OF BALLOTS

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Roch Marc Christian Kabore has won Burkina Faso’s presidenti­al election, official results showed, after a year of turmoil that saw the West African country’s former leader deposed and the military try to seize power.

Kabore, who governed under former strongman Blaise Compaore before turning his back on the old regime, won the vote in the first round with 53.49 per cent of ballots, the electoral commission said late on Monday.

“We must get to work immediatel­y. Together we must serve the country,” he told a crowd of several thousand supporters outside his party headquarte­rs, pledging his “determinat­ion to open up the opportunit­ies for a better tomorrow”.

Kabore’s main rival Zephirin Diabre, who took 29.65 per cent of votes, congratula­ted the former premier just before the results were released, according to a journalist at the scene. The new president also expressed his “warm congratula­tions” to the election authoritie­s that organised the poll, the first time in almost three decades Burkina has voted in a new leader.

The poll caps more than a year of upheaval in the country after Compaore was ousted in October 2014 by a popular uprising, after trying to change the constituti­on to extend his 27year rule.

The country was once again plunged into turmoil in September when the elite presidenti­al guard loyal to the former strongman tried to seize power, forcing the elections to be delayed.

Finally held on November 29, the poll went off largely without incident, though some ballot stations were forced to stay open later than scheduled after long queues formed outside.

People in Burkina, a poor nation of 18 million people with a history of coups, are hoping the election will usher in a long era of peaceful democracy.

Kabore, a former banker seen as a consensus figure by some and an opportunis­t by others, has pledged to build “a new Burkina Faso” by fighting youth unemployme­nt, improving education and modernisin­g the health system.

“We have had a total rupture with the old system,” Kabore said Sunday, pledging to “bring real change to the country”.

Kabore, a former banker, has pledged to build “a new Burkina Faso” by fighting youth unemployme­nt, improving education and modernisin­g the health system.

Broad coalition

For over a decade he led the ruling Congress for Democracy and Progress (CDP) party and was seen as Compaore’s likely heir, but fell out with the strongman in 2012 and last year formed his own opposition party.

The 58-year-old managed to garner a broad coalition of support from Campore supporters and opponents, as well as from cities and rural areas. Michel Kafando, who has presided over the transition­al regime put in place after Compaore fled, praised the vote as “a victory ... for the Burkinabe people”.

It was “the first fully democratic, transparen­t” election since 1978, when the former French colony was still known as Upper Volta, Kafando said.

 ?? AFP ?? Jubilant mood Above: Supporters of Burkina Faso’s new president Roch Marc Christian Kabore celebrate at his party’s headquarte­rs in Ouagadougo­u yesterday, after the election victory.
AFP Jubilant mood Above: Supporters of Burkina Faso’s new president Roch Marc Christian Kabore celebrate at his party’s headquarte­rs in Ouagadougo­u yesterday, after the election victory.
 ?? AFP ?? New era dawns Left: Presidente­lect Kabore waves to supporters in Ouagadougo­u yesterday. The poll caps more than a year of upheaval in the country after Blaise Compaore was ousted in October 2014.
AFP New era dawns Left: Presidente­lect Kabore waves to supporters in Ouagadougo­u yesterday. The poll caps more than a year of upheaval in the country after Blaise Compaore was ousted in October 2014.

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