Burkina Faso: The Transitional Legislative Assembly confronts the scourge of slander

A well-crafted rumor can destabilize a country at war more effectively than a defeat on the battlefield. For several days, a viral post has claimed to expose a “state lie” regarding the salaries of members of the Transitional Legislative Assembly of Burkina Faso. The method is familiar: approximate figures, carefully orchestrated outrage, and the staging of moral betrayal. The goal is to erode trust and fracture the already strained bond between the nation and its institutions.

In a context where collective effort has become a vital necessity, manipulating public opinion is no simple exercise of free expression. It is a crime against the public spirit.

Those orchestrating this narrative of predation without any official source or budgetary rigor are not seeking truth.

They are seeking chaos. By substituting emotion for analysis, they attempt to symbolically disarm the state before its citizens at the very moment the front demands unwavering cohesion.

These individuals must be called what they are: deserters of truth, ready to stab national cohesion in the back to serve obscure interests.

By deliberately blurring the line between salary and operating allowances, they turn a combat institution into a carnival target.

Exploiting the social fatigue of a suffering people in order to sabotage the architecture of the Transition is not criticism; it is a strategy of subversion.

In asymmetric warfare, confusion is the enemy’s best ally. Circulating these unverified figures without cross-checking makes one, consciously or not, an active accomplice in destabilization.

These purveyors of lies are not observers; they are saboteurs shooting in the backs of those holding the country together.

It is necessary to name things precisely. Spreading unverified information, amplifying isolated testimonies without corroboration this is participating in a campaign of weakening.

Those who engage in it are not simply critical observers. They become, knowingly or not, vectors of destabilization. Civic vigilance cannot be confused with the dissemination of sloppy narratives.

The demand for transparency remains legitimate. It should even be strengthened. But it requires method, rigor, and responsibility. Failing that, it turns against the collective interest it claims to defend.

At a time when Burkina Faso faces existential challenges, public discourse must rise to the level of the stakes. For a nation defends itself not only with weapons, but also with the solidity of its truth.

Hadja KOUROUMA

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