Burkina Faso Lawmakers Seek Treason Trial Against Ex-President
Lawmakers from Burkina Faso's interim parliament on Thursday adopted a resolution asking the High Court to put deposed leader Blaise ...
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Lawmakers from Burkina Faso's interim parliament on Thursday adopted a resolution asking the High Court to put deposed leader Blaise Compaore on trial for "high treason" and violating the constitution.
The resolution was approved by 60 out the 63 MPs present, an AFP reporter saw. Three lawmakers abstained from the vote.
Burkina Faso has been run by transitional authorities since Compaore fled the country last year after his plans to extend his 27-year rule sparked a popular uprising.
Thursday's resolution accuses Compaore of seeking to modify the constitution "with the aim of curbing the process of democratic change" in Burkina Faso.
Transitional government
It calls for the 64-year-old to be "referred to the High Court of Justice to answer the allegations of high treason and violation of the constitution", the text said.
The lawmakers also accused former premier Luc Adolphe Tiao and his government of "intentional assault, murder and complicity in assault and murder".
Compaore, who came to power in a coup in 1987, sparked mass anger when he announced his intention to change the constitution so he could stand for a third term in 2015, prompting hundreds of thousands to take to the streets in violent protests.
On October 31, Compaore stepped down and took refuge in Ivory Coast.
The military briefly took control of the landlocked nation of 17 million people before handing over to a transitional government, due to stay in place until presidential and legislative elections are held in October.
Unconstitutional act
In a setback to the temporary authorities, a regional West African court on Monday annulled a new electoral law that sought to bar several political parties and individuals linked to Compaore from contesting the October 11 polls.
The Economic Community of West African States (Ecowas) Community Court of Justice ruled the change constituted "a violation of the rights" to freely participate in elections.
The government had argued that the amended law would only exclude those who had taken part in an "unconstitutional act".
Burkina's High Court, which was set up in 1995, has the jurisdiction to try the president and government officials for serious crimes committed while in power.
The nine-member court's current president, senior judge Elisabeth Bado Some, was elected in April.