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Ibrahim Traoré

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Revision as of 02:39, 3 December 2024 by Thisguy78 (talk | contribs) (Added info on Ibrahim Traoré/the Burkinabé government.)
Ibrahim Traoré
Born1988
Bondokuy, Burkina Faso
Political orientationAnti-imperialism
Sankarism
Communitarianism


Ibrahim Traoré (born c. 1988) is a Burkinabè military officer who has served as the leader of Burkina Faso since September 2022. He is the youngest current head of state in the world. He has pledged to stop extremism and corruption and completely change the system of government and is inspired by Thomas Sankara.

Traoré led a coup against Paul-Henri Damiba, another military leader who failed to stop jihadism. "Jihadism" has been a long-time excuse for the French to justify continued involvement in the Sahel.[1] Traoré's time in power has seen major rollbacks in French neocolonial influence over the Sahel region. Traoré's government, along with the anti-French coup governments in Niger and Mali, has kicked out French troops[1], made deals with Russian private military contractors (PMCs)[2], and formed an anti-ECOWAS bloc in defiance of French interests in the CFA franc zone.[3] In July 2023, he visited Russia and praised the Soviet Union for defeating Nazi Germany. He appointed Apollinaire Tambèla, an ally of Sankara, as prime minister. Tambèla met with Nicolás Maduro and Daniel Ortega and praised Fidel Castro.[4]

Ibrahim Traoré has pushed for food self-sufficiency in Burkina Faso. [5] This is based upon Thomas Sankara’s principle of "Let us produce for ourselves and consume what we produce." This quote is used explicitly in Burkinabé government sites. [6]

Additionally, Ibrahim Traoré has attacked the bourgeoisie that benefit off of imperialism: "This system, which we will describe as imperialist, only enriches the small minority we call the bourgeoisie and impoverishes the popular masses. So there is an imbalance." [7]

Ibrahim Traoré has also pushed for Burkinabé communitarianism through cooperatives/community enterprises. These enterprises are based on the principle of investing what you can on an entrepreneurial project to get shares in it. It is seen as an alternative to traditional capitalism.[8][9]

This is called popular shareholding and it is used by the Burkinabé authorities to promote workers power/popular power while also promoting employment endogenous development, and food self-sufficiency. [10]

References