Audio By Carbonatix
Burkina Faso's military government has said it foiled a "major plot" to overthrow junta leader Capt Ibrahim Traoré, with the army alleging the plotters were based in neighbouring Ivory Coast.
Security Minister Mahamadou Sana said the coup attempt was led by current and former soldiers working with "terrorist leaders". The intention was to attack the presidential palace last week, he added.
The aim of the plan was to "sow total chaos, and place the country under the supervision of an international organisation", Sana said on state television on Monday.
It is the latest of several claims of attempts to remove the junta leader who seized power in 2022 amid increasing militant attacks.
Burkina Faso, like its Sahel neighbours, has been battling armed jihadist groups, with an estimated 40% of the country under their control.
Despite promises by Capt Traoré's military government to improve security and even seeking new security partnerships with Russia, the situation remains dire with frequent attacks from insurgents.
In this latest coup attempt, which happened last week but details of which have only just been released, Sana said the plotters attempted to use Burkinabe religious and traditional leaders to sway army officers into backing the plan.
"The manoeuvre was to culminate, according to the terrorist plotters' plan, on Wednesday 16 April, 2025 in an assault on the presidency of (Burkina) Faso by a group of soldiers recruited by the nation's enemies," he said.
"The brains outside the country are all located in Ivory Coast," he added, naming in particular two former army officers, believed to be behind the plot.
He said "sensitive information was passed on to "terrorists" to increase attacks on the military and civilians and "incite a revolt against the authorities".
Last week, several military personnel, including two officers, were arrested for planning to "destabilise" the government, security sources told the AFP news agency.
The Ivorian authorities have not yet commented on claims it hosted the plotters but the Burkinabe junta has often blamed its southern neighbour of supporting its opponents in exile.
The latest claim comes months after Ouagadougou said it thwarted another "destabilisation" plot against the junta last November.
Burkina Faso, along with two other military-led states – Mali and Niger, has broken away from the regional West African bloc, Ecowas, to form a new alliance.
They have cut ties with former colonial power France and allied with Russia instead.
Latest Stories
-
Endangered antelopes flown to Kenya from Czech zoo in ‘historic homecoming’
6 minutes -
Five takeaways from the King’s historic address to Congress
10 minutes -
Let’s join ‘National Streetism Awareness’ to raise awareness about plight of street children – Salome Atiglah
10 minutes -
Prada launches Indian-made sandals after cultural appropriation backlash
11 minutes -
Outrage after Indian man carries his sister’s skeleton to a bank to prove her death
14 minutes -
GOIL launches 2026 HSSEQ Week with Focus on Psychosocial Well-being
24 minutes -
NPRA’s digital revolution: How technology is reshaping Ghana’s pension sector
33 minutes -
CID clears Sesi-Edem, Council of State member in $14.3m gold deal probe
34 minutes -
Credit to corporate institutions tighten in first two months of 2026
44 minutes -
Two dead after small plane crashes into Australia airport hangar
45 minutes -
Banks wrote-off GH¢394.8m as bad debt in February 2026
50 minutes -
‘Dumsor running in shifts, not 24-hour economy’ — NPP’s Dr Ekua Amoakoh slams gov’t over power outages
54 minutes -
AIPS Awards 2025: JoySports’ Mubarak Haruna takes second and fifth spots in continental ranking
54 minutes -
Green finance: Legal foundations, global realities, and Ghana’s regulatory pathway
56 minutes -
Gov’t clears $29m Suame road debt, boosts project with GH₵3bn funding
58 minutes