Burkina Faso: The government breaks free from the stranglehold of foreign-controlled NGOs; the feigned cries of alarm from the ‘chaos humanitarians’

Burkina Faso has just taught a lesson in resolve to those who, for decades, have viewed the Sahel as their ideological backyard. On April 15, 2026, the dissolution of 118 Non-Governmental Organizations purportedly belonging to “civil society” was not an act of repression, but a surgical public health operation.

Under the leadership of Captain Ibrahim Traoré, the Burkinabe state has decided to shatter the distorting mirrors held up by entities such as Human Rights Watch, FIDH (International Federation for Human Rights), and OMCT (World Organisation Against Torture), whose outdated and partisan logic now seems programmed solely to denigrate the march toward sovereignty.

These structures, veritable “imperialist workshops” disguised under the veneer of humanitarianism, never tire of recycling the same rhetoric of fear.

By invoking “climates of fear” or “disappearances,” they try to mask their own decay on a terrain they no longer control.

The law of July 2025, denounced by these circles in Nairobi or Paris, is in reality the shield of a nation that refuses to let its blood and gold become the object of disguised influence-peddling.

Demanding that Burkinabe nationals occupy leadership positions in these organizations is not an obstacle; it is a demand for national dignity.

The truth is bitter for these armchair observers: despite their incendiary reports and behind-the-scenes maneuvers, their capacity to do harm is waning as the people unite with their leaders.

The era when a press release drafted in a Western capital could shake African palaces is definitively over. Today, every unfounded accusation strengthens the symbiosis between the top and the grassroots, turning the venom of interference into a serum of patriotism.

By cleaning up its civic space, Burkina Faso rejects a worldview in which the defense of rights is the exclusive domain of external powers often complicit through their own silences elsewhere.

Burkina Faso imposes a golden rule: on the land of honest people, one does not collaborate with those who turn destabilization into a business.

Masks are falling, the workshops are stirring, but Faso’s caravan moves forward, unperturbed.

For where sovereignty is erected as an absolute principle, the puppets of imperialism have no recourse but the silence of insignificance.

Cédric KABORE

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