Burkina Faso army enters capital to disarm coup leaders

OUAGADOUGOU (Reuters) – Burkina Faso soldiers marched into the capital Ouagadougou without resistance late yesterday as army leaders began surrender talks with the elite presidential guard that staged a coup against the government last week.

Burkina Faso had been preparing to head to polls on October 11 for a vote aimed at restoring democracy after last year’s overthrow of longtime leader Blaise Compaore when the 1,200-member unit took the interim president and several cabinet ministers hostage on Wednesday.

Military convoys from regional centres drove towards the capital Ouagadougou on Monday, cheered along by residents opposed to last week’s military coup. Some units entered the city centre while others remained on guard at strategic entry points, residents said.

“The RSP (presidential guard) is now negotiating the conditions of its surrender to the head of the army,” said a senior military source involved in the operation, referring to talks under way in Ouagadougou’s Camp Guillaume Ouedraogo.

A statement signed by several military chiefs earlier said the regular armed forces were seeking the surrender of the presidential guard, known as the RSP, “without bloodshed”.

“We ask them to immediately lay down their arms and go to Camp Sangoule Lamizana,” read the statement, referring to a barracks in Ouagadougou. “They and their families will be protected.”