Burkina Faso allows ex-leader Kabore to travel to the UAE ‘on medical grounds’

Burkina Faso's former President Roch Marc Christian Kabore holds his final campaign rally ahead of the presidential election, in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso, November 20, 2020. (Reuters)
Burkina Faso’s former President Roch Marc Christian Kabore holds his final campaign rally ahead of the presidential election, in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso, November 20, 2020. (Reuters)

Burkina Faso has allowed ex-president Roch Marc Christian Kabore to leave the country for the first time since his ouster in January, granting him permission to fly to the Middle East on medical grounds, a government source and aides said Thursday.

“After receiving the requisite authorization from the military authorities, president Kabore will head to the United Arab Emirates on medical grounds,” a member of his entourage said.

The 65-year-old former leader will leave “shortly with his wife,” the source said.

A government source confirmed this account and said the authorities had “worked diligently to facilitate the trip,” without providing details.

An official from Kabore’s People’s Movement for Progress (MPP) said: “His health has been quite poor for a while now, and he needs to undergo tests to help his medical care.”

Local media reported Kabore would head for Dubai on Thursday via Abidjan, neighboring Ivory Coast’s economic hub.

Army officers led by Lieutenant-Colonel Paul-Henri Sandaogo Damiba overthrew Kabore on January 24 amid anger at his failure to quell the country’s bloody fighting.

His whereabouts and welfare became points of friction with the regional bloc, the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS).

Kabore was first placed under house arrest in a villa in Ouagadougou before being allowed to return to his home in the capital in early April.

The military authorities said they had given him back his freedom, but his supporters continued to demand his “release.”

When he made his first public appearance since his ouster in June to meet Damiba, his supporters worried that he looked frail.

They blocked him from attending a summit of former presidents the following month, called by the junta in the name of “social cohesion” against the extremist threat.

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