The exhumation of what are believed to be the remains of Burkina Faso’s former President Thomas Sankara has begun. Once exhumed they can be formally identified – a long-standing demand of Mr Sankara’s family and supporters.
Seen as Africa’s Che Guevara, the anti-imperialist revolutionary was hastily buried with 12 others in a 1987 coup.
Permission for an exhumation was denied during the rule of his successor, Blaise Compaore, who left office last October amid street protests.
Mr Compaore has always denied being involved in the ex-leader’s killing, insisting that the “facts are known” and he has “nothing to hide”.
While he was in office, a Burkina Faso court blocked a request by Mr Sankara’s family for his remains to be exhumed.
But the new interim government said Mr Sankara’s family would be given the means to help identify the corpse, according to the AFP news agency.
Hundreds of people went to the graveyard where the exhumation is taken place in the Burkinabe capital, Ouagadougou, but were not allowed in by security forces, a local journalist reports.
Miriam Sankara, the former leader’s widow, told the BBC French Service in March that the family wanted the judiciary to exhume the corpse.
“And if they do it, it should be in the context of a judicial process that we have always demanded, in the context of finding out the truth and the helping in the search for President Sankara’s murderers,” Mrs Sankara said.
Her husband became president in 1983 after an internal power struggle. He led his country for four years until his death at the age of 37.
BBC
UM– USEKE.RW