The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Macron to declassify Sankara documents

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OUGADOUGOU. — French President Emmanuel Macron has vowed to declassify documents related to ex-Burkinabé leader Thomas Sankara’s assassinat­ion on October 15, 1987.

Macron arrived in Burkina Faso on Monday, on the start of his first Africa tour.

“These documents will be declassifi­ed for Burkina’s judiciary, which will have access to all the documents on the Sankara case,” Macron announced at a press briefing, after meeting with Burkina President Roch Marc Christian Kaboré.

The Thomas Sankara Internatio­nal Memorial Committee (ICD-TS) on October 15 marched in Ouagadougo­u demanding the truth about his assassinat­ion.

The demonstrat­ors stopped at the French Embassy, and also delivered a memorandum at the military justice tribunal in Ouagadougo­u.

They asked France to help facilitate the process to reach the truth, and encouraged the Burkinabè military justice authoritie­s who have possession of the Thomas Sankara assassinat­ion file.

The ICD-TS had also asked for the opening of a judicial inquiry in the Sankara case, to “situate the responsibi­lities of the French in the planned assassinat­ion.”

Meanwhile, the French president told African youths in Burkina Faso yesterday that he belonged to a new generation of French leaders who would build partnershi­ps with the continent rather than tell it what to do.

But a youth protest against him, stones pelting one of his delegation’s vehicles and a botched grenade attack on French troops hours before his arrival in Burkina Faso’s capital Ouagadougo­u showed the hostility that still lingers after decades of an often tense France-Africa relationsh­ip.

Macron was also subjected to rowdy student questions at the university after his speech in the capital, and was sometimes left fruitlessl­y hushing as he struggled to get his answers heard above the crowd.

In his speech, peppered with references to African nationalis­ts such as Nelson Mandela and Burkina’s revolution­ary leader Thomas Sankara, Macron promised a break with a past in which France often seemed to call the shots to former colonies.

“I am from a generation that doesn’t come to tell Africans what to do,” Macron said during a speech to university students, prompting an applause.

“I am from a generation for whom Nelson Mandela’s victory is one of the best political memories.”

The 39-year-old is on a three-day visit to Burkina Faso, Ghana and Cote d’Ivoire aimed at boosting cooperatio­n in education, the digital economy and migration.

“I will be alongside those who believe that Africa is neither a lost continent or one that needs to be saved,” he said.

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Thomas Sankara

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