Another Coup Attempt Against the President of Burkina Faso, Ibrahim Traoré

Capitaine President Ibrahim Traore (Source: sig.gov.bf)

In the wee hours of 2026, while our eyes were focused on Venezuela and the consequences of the American actions in the country, another event, just as earth-shattering was taking place on the African continent. There was another coup attempt on President Ibrahim Traoré in Burkina Faso which did not succeed. The government of Burkina Faso has announced that it has thwarted yet another plot aimed at killing the country’s leader, Captain Ibrahim Traoré, and disable a drone base. Burkinabes have taken to the streets in support of Traoré.

On January 6, Burkina Faso’s Minister of Security, Mahamadou Sana, disclosed that the planned coup, which was expected to be carried out late on January 3, was neutralized “thanks to the professionalism of the intelligence services.” The operation were to “[begin] with the neutralization of Comrade Captain Ibrahim Traoré, Head of State and President of Faso, either at point-blank range or through an operation to mine his residence,” … “there were to be efforts to put the drone base out of service, and a ground military intervention by external forces.” “Our intelligence services intercepted this operation in the final hours. They had planned to assassinate the head of state and then strike other key institutions, including civilian personalities,” Sana stated.

Flag of Burkina Faso

From what we have learned, the operation was financially supported from neighboring Côte d’Ivoire. The sophisticated plan had been hatched by Lt Col Paul Henri Sandaogo Damiba, the military officer and former transition president ousted by Traoré in September 2022, the security minister said in a late-night broadcast.

Capitaine Thomas Sankara

The western media say that Ibrahim Traoré and his government are lying, or fabricating this story to gain popularity; they talk of “alleged coup”, using verbs like “claim”, or like BBC wrote, “Plot to kill Burkina Faso leader foiled, says junta [why are they still calling it a junta after 4 years? When Damiba was there, they never called it such].” This would not be the first time that the government of Côte d’Ivoire would have hands in the destabilization of Burkina Faso. It was through the Côte d’Ivoire channel and government, with help from Liberia, that our brother Thomas Sankara was taken out by France. Now, it would seem to be coming from Damiba, via Côte d’Ivoire, Togo, for the interests of France; as we know Damiba is the front-man for the foreign forces who want to destabilize the country. The goal being to decapitate Burkina Faso, and therefore the AES alliance which includes Niger and Mali.

For more, check out: Newsclick, BBC, AfricaNews, and countless others.

Large Gold Deposit found in Ivory Coast

Flag of Cote D'Ivoire
Flag of Cote D’Ivoire

In Ivory Coast, the Australian company Resolute Mining announced on Monday, June 16, the discovery of a significant gold deposit in the department of Doropo, in the northeast of Ivory Coast, near the border with Burkina Faso. This new deposit has large reserves which are estimated at over 100 tons of gold, and represents a major advancement for the Ivorian mining sector.

During a meeting with Ivorian Prime Minister Robert Beugré Mambé, the CEO of Resolute Mining, Chris Eger, specified that the construction of the mine will begin in the first quarter of 2026, for a duration of two years. The planned investment amounts to 300 billion CFA francs (approximately 530 million USD).

Map of Cote d'Ivoire
Map of Cote d’Ivoire

Hummm, Isn’t it a bit suspicious that this large deposit is right near the border with Burkina Faso? We all know that these people plan over decades, so what if the location of the mine in the northeast is not only used for gold extraction, but also as a base for attacks in the neighboring country (U.S. military posture in Africa shifts while terrorist threats intensify)? It is no secret that Côte d’Ivoire is being used as a Western base against the countries of the AES (Mali, Burkina Faso, Niger). Moreover, for many years, people have mentioned the geological survey conducted by the UNESCO (or one of the UN-organization) on Africa which was never made public to African countries. Are we to think that the same Resolute Mining which owns the Syama gold mine in Mali or the Mako gold mine in Senegal, with mining permits in Guinea, never did a geological survey into neighboring Côte d’Ivoire before? Lastly, this is the same Resolute Mining which refused to pay taxes to Mali for years Mali wins $160m in Gold Mining Dispute; Has Côte d’Ivoire negotiated well, or were they too excited by the gold findings? Again, this is where unity would significantly help our countries… here Resolute Mining is signing in Côte d’Ivoire, if they were to sign with a smaller country, less developed, the government maybe so happy that they sign anything or do not negotiate well enough for their populations to benefit from this manna… and these contracts lasts for many many years!

Anyways, we applaud the findings in Côte d’Ivoire, and wish that the government would think of opening a refinery in their own country as well, and train its youths, like in Mali… oh wait… the government of Côte d’Ivoire does not like the Mali of Assimi Goïta!