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Thomas Sankara
| who killed the lion king?
"I want people to remember me as
someone whose life has been helpful to humanity",
President Thomas Sankara (1949-1987)
Who killed the lion king?
There is actually no murder mystery:
When Thomas Sankara was killed after four years as President of
Burkina Faso, it was at the orders ? if not at the hands ? of
one of his oldest friends, now President Blaise Compaore Echoes
of Shakespeare's Julius Caesar as much as Disney's The
Lion King. Why should we care about this particular African
tragedy?
We
should care because the revolution Sankara led between 1983 and
1987 was one of the most creative and radical that Africa has
produced in the decades since independence. He started to blaze
a trail that other African countries might follow, a genuine
alternative to Western-style modernization ? and, like other
radical African leaders such as Patrice Lumumba and Amilcar
Cabral, was shot down as a result. Whereas his murderer, still
in power eight years later, has pursued self-enrichment and
politics as usual and has been fed by the West for his
compliance.
An incorruptible man
A
major anti-corruption drive began in 1987. The tribunal showed
Captain Thomas Sankara to have a salary of only $450 a month and
his most valuable possessions to be a car, four bikes, three
guitars, a fridge and a broken freezer. He was the world's
poorest president.
Sankara
refused to use the air conditioning in his office on the grounds
that such luxury was not available to anyone but a handful of
Burkinabes.
When
asked why he had let it be known that he did not want his
portrait hung in public places, as is the norm for other African
leaders (and as Blaise Compaore does now), Sankara said ?There
are seven million Thomas Sankaras?.
Chronicle of a revolution
Feb 1984 Tribute payments to and obligatory labour for
the traditional village chiefs are outlawed.
4 Aug 1984 All land and mineral wealth are nationalized. The
country's name is changed from the colonial Upper Volta to
Burkina Faso, words from two different local languages meaning
?Land of the Incorruptible?.
22 Sept 1984 A day of solidarity: men are encouraged to go to market
and prepare meals to experience for themselves the conditions
faced by women.
Oct 1984 The rural poll tax is abolished.
Nov 1984 ?Vaccination Commando?. In 15 days 2.5 million children
are immunized against meningitis, yellow fever and measles.
3 Dec 1984
Top civil servants and military officers are required to
give one month's pay and other civil servants to give half a
month to help fund social development projects.
31 Dec 1984 All domestic rents are suspended for 1985 and a massive
public housing construction program begins.
1 Jan 1985 Launch of a campaign to plant 10 million trees to slow the
Sahara?s advance.
4 Aug 1985 An all-women parade marks the anniversary of the
Revolution.
10 Sep 1985 The mounting hostility of the region?s conservative
regimes is revealed at a meeting in Yamoussoukro, C?e d?Ivoire.
Feb-Apr 1986 ?Alpha Commando?. A literacy campaign in nine indigenous
languages involves 35,000 people.
End of 1986 A UN-assisted program brings river blindness under
control.
15 Oct 1987 Sankara is assassinated in a coup d??at along with 12
aides. His body is unceremoniously dumped in a makeshift grave
which quickly becomes a shrine as for days thousands of people
file past it to pay their respects. Popular feeling forces the
new regime to give Sankara a decent grave.
A villager?s assessment of Sankara
?I wasn?t surprised when he was killed ? the Revolution took me
by surprise but that didn?t. He had bad men around him, people
who just wanted to get fat and drive around in big cars. Many
things changed in the Revolution. Not always in the best way.
But because of the Revolution we know a little more about the
type of politicians we need. It taught us to work by ourselves
for ourselves. But Sankara wanted everything to happen too
quickly ? he expected too much.
?If I were President myself I would do just as Sankara did and
send my ministers out to the villages to learn what it?s like
there and give the peasants help. Sankara?s very best idea was
to teach us that it wasn?t enough to live with what we get in
wages each month ? we should get by with the minimum and give
the rest to the development of the country instead of always
asking for aid from overseas.?
An eminently corruptible man
Captain
Blaise Compaor?played a key part in the 1983 Revolution ? he
led the march on the capital that released Sankara from house
arrest to become President. Compaor?himself served as Justice
Minister and Sankara?s effective second-in-command.
Compaor?
has garnered a considerable personal fortune from his position
and allegations of corruption and nepotism under his regime now
abound. One of his early acts was to buy a presidential plane to
reflect his personal prestige.
Power
from a major new hydro project has been diverted to electrify
Compaor? home village, Ziniar? while big towns have been
ignored.
Chronicle of a ?rectification?
15 Oct 1987 Blaise Compaor?assumes the Presidency,
backed by Major Jean-Baptiste Lingani and Captain Henri Zongo.
Nov 1987 The Committees for the Defence of the Revolution, the
local bodies which had replaced traditional ?ites, are
abolished.
1988 Salaries of civil servants, reduced under Sankara, are increased and
the special tax that forced them to contribute to health and
education projects is scrapped.
Dec 1988 A World Bank report lauds the unusually high standards of
financial management in Burkina Faso during the revolutionary
years while noting the increasing incidence of corruption since
Compaor? takeover.
Sept 1989 Lingani and Zongo attempt to oust Compaor?in a coup and
are executed.
Dec 1989 31 Sankara supporters are detained without trial for over
a year. Lecturer Guillaume Sessouma dies during torture.
Dec 1990 The draft constitution guarantees freedom of association
and expression and property rights. It provides for an elected
President and National Assembly.
Early 1991 A structural-adjustment package is agreed with the IMF,
involving privatization and liberalization of the market.
May 1991 All political prisoners are released.
Dec 1991 Blaise Compaor?wins the presidential election. This is
not surprising since he is the only candidate ? 73 per cent of
the electorate do not vote.
1993 The IMF lends Burkina $67m for 1993-5 on condition that it continues
implementing free-market policies.
June 1993 An official presidential visit to Paris establishes
Compaor?as France?s favourite ally in West Africa.
Jan 1994 The CFA franc is halved in value in relation to the French
franc at the insistence of Paris and the IMF.
March 1994 Compaor?tightens his control, sacking the prime minister
to install a loyalist.
A villager?s assessment of Compaor?/span>
?France gave Blaise money. I don?t know exactly how but they
did. And when you have money in Africa you can do anything. The
trade unions have been bought off, for example ? the President
gives them money so that they?ll shut their mouths. He?s our
President, we agreed to that ? but his policies come from
France. Every order comes from France and he never asks the
Assembly?s opinion.
?There is no real opposition. Politics here means who will
give money. People who want to become ministers or deputies look
to develop themselves first and the country after ? they all
know the Western way of life, they want everything easy.
Politics is just a means of becoming rich and giving you a big
car. And Blaise gives money to opposition groups so they will
divide and, voil? no opposition. Another Sankara simply
couldn?t arrive out of the current democratic landscape.?
?I would like to
leave behind me the conviction that if we maintain a certain
amount of caution and organization we deserve victory... You
cannot carry out fundamental change without a certain amount of
madness. In this case, it comes from nonconformity, the courage
to turn your back on the old formulas, the courage to invent the
future. It took the madmen of yesterday for us to be able to act
with extreme clarity today. I want to be one of those madmen. We
must dare to invent the future.?
Thomas
Sankara,
1985
http://www.mathaba.net/www/black/sankara.shtml
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