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Update | Burkina Faso president rejects opposition calls to step down after mob violence

Riots in Ouagadougou over President Blaise Compaore's plan to extend his 27-year rule

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The scene in front of parliament yesterday in Ouagadougou. About 1,500 people had breached a security cordon and were ransacking the building. Photo: AFP
Reuters

Burkina Faso’s President Blaise Compaore said on Thursday he would stay in power at the head of a transitional government until after elections, rejecting opposition calls for him to step down immediately following a day of violent protests.

The head of the armed forces, General Honore Traore, had earlier dissolved parliament and announced talks with all political parties to create an interim government to take the West African country to democratic elections within a year.

The move came after at least three protesters were shot dead and scores wounded in clashes with security forces as demonstrators attacked the homes of senior members of the ruling party and symbols of Compaore’s long rule.

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Hundreds of people had earlier stormed parliament, looting the building and setting it on fire, while others ransacked state television, forcing it off the air.

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Protests also gripped Bobo Dioulasso, Burkina’s second-largest city, and other towns across the gold and cotton-producing country.

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