OUAGADOUGOU— Former Burkina Faso President Blaise Compaore has been jailed for life for his role in the assassination of revolutionary leader Thomas Sankara 35 years ago.
The sentencing of Compaore by a military court on Wednesday crowns a six-month trial of 14 men accused of killing Sankara on Oct 15, 1987, a prosecution marked by grim testimony and disrupted by a military coup.
Revered among pan-Africanist radicals, Sankara was an army captain aged just 33 when he came to power in a coup in 1983.
The fiery Marxist-Leninist railed against imperialism and colonialism, often angering Western leaders but gaining followers across the continent and beyond.
He and 12 colleagues were gunned down by a hit squad on Oct 15, 1987, at a meeting of the ruling National Revolutionary Council.
The massacre coincided with a coup that took Sankara’s erstwhile comrade, Compaore, to power.
Throughout his 27-year reign, Compaore clamped a tight lid on the circumstances of Sankara’s demise, fuelling speculation that he was the mastermind.
The historic trial into Sankara’s death opened last October, more than 34 years after his death.
Prosecutors had demanded a 30-year jail term for Compaore, who now lives in exile in neighbouring Ivory Coast.
Compaore was tried in absentia on counts of attacking state security, concealing a corpse and complicity in a murder.
The trial was suspended after a coup on Jan 24, 2022 that deposed the elected president, Roch Marc Christian Kabore.
One of the world’s poorest countries, Burkina has a long history of political turmoil but was a relative oasis of peace until jihadist insurgents encroached from neighboring Mali in 2015 that has claimed some 2,000 lives and displaced some 1.8 million people.
The trial resumed after new military strongman Paul-Henri Sandaogo Damiba restored the constitution and swore an oath.
Compaore, who was deposed by a popular uprising in 2014, boycotted what his lawyers dismiss as a “political trial.”
Source: Nam News Network