Burkina Faso will return to civilian
rule and reinstate an interim government led by
president Michel Kafando.
The decision comes after Benin's president Thomas
Boni Yayi held talks with coup leader general
Gilbert Diendere in the capital Ouagadougou.
"We may hope again," Boni Yayi said at a press
conference after a third round of talks with
Diendere late on Saturday.
"We are going to relaunch the transition that was
underway - a transition led by civilians, with Michel
Kafando," he added, saying that more details of the
"good news" would be provided on Sunday.
Also Read: Burkina Faso crisis: AU threatens
sanctions
Soldiers from the elite presidential guard (RSP)
stormed into a cabinet meeting on Wednesday and
abducted President Kafando and Isaac Zida, the
prime minister, disrupting a transition period due
to end with polls next month.
Diendere, a former spy chief and close ally of
Blaise Compaore, the former long-term
president, was named junta head the next day.
It was not clear if the alleged deal included amnesty
for Diendere or if the election schedule could be
restored.
Deadly clashes
At least 10 people have been killed and more than
100 wounded in street clashes with soldiers since
the coup.
The coup derailed a yearlong transition process that
followed the fall of longtime President Blaise
Compaore during a popular uprising last October.
Elections were supposed to be held on October 11,
but Diendere, a former top Compaore aide, has
said that date is too soon.
The coup was swiftly condemned by former colonial
power France, the United States, the United Nations
and the African Union, which suspended Burkina
Faso on Friday.
Also Read: Senegal, Benin presidents to mediate
in Burkina Faso after coup
The AU gave coup leaders 96 hours, or until
September 22, to restore the transitional
government or face travel bans and asset freezes.
The military released a statement on Friday saying
that it had released Kafando from military custody
but the interim prime minister remained under
house arrest.
Hundreds of protesters burned tyres and erected
barricades in the streets of Ouagadougou on
Saturday in a third day of unrest to demand a
return to civilian rule.


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