Burkina Faso Cuts Diplomatic Ties with France

AFRICA, 6 Jul 2026

Pavan Kulkarni | Savage Minds - TRANSCEND Media Service

The French Embassy designed by Henri Chomette, in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso in 1966.
Photo credit: Public domain

Ouagadougou Accuses Paris of Backing Terrorism

30 Jun 2026 – The government of Burkina Faso severed its diplomatic relations with France on 26 June, citing the “neocolonial ambitions” of its former coloniser, which it once again accused of supporting terror groups currently ravaging the Sahel.

The decision came just over three and a half years after Capt. Ibrahim Traoré’s government expelled all French troops and the French ambassador from the country in January 2023, a year after the France-backed regime was ousted in a popular military coup.​

In 2024, Burkina Faso expelled three other French diplomats, accused of subversive activities. Nevertheless, it had continued to maintain formal diplomatic relations until Friday, when it announced severing them with immediate effect, citing France’s “active support for subversive networks and terrorists.”

Neighbouring Mali and Niger, also under attack by groups affiliated with Al Qaeda and the Islamic State, have also repeatedly insisted that the terror attacks are in fact a proxy war against their sovereignty, waged by France after its troops were expelled.​

“In the face of these imperialist designs to dominate our country and subjugate our people, we have chosen the path of responsibility and sovereignty,” Burkina Faso’s communications minister, Gilbert Ouédraogo, said in the televised statement announcing the end of diplomatic relations.

“The essential conditions for fostering relations based on mutual respect, reciprocal trust, respect for the principle of non-interference in internal affairs, and national sovereignty are no longer met,” he added.

France, which denies the allegation of supporting terror groups, called the decision to sever all diplomatic ties “hostile and unfounded.”

“Necessary reciprocal measures are currently under review,” its foreign ministry spokesman, Pascal Confavreux, said, expressing concern about the safety of French nationals in Burkina Faso and calling on them to maintain heightened vigilance.​

However, Ouédraogo had already assured their safety in the statement, announcing the end of diplomatic ties. “The government wishes to emphasise that this decision in no way undermines the historic, human, cultural, and social ties that unite the Burkinabe and French peoples. It pertains exclusively to the institutional framework of relations between the two states at the diplomatic level,” he said.​

Reaffirming Burkina Faso’s “hospitality” to foreign nationals and committing to ensure their safety, he called upon “all citizens to act with responsibility, restraint, and civic-mindedness toward French nationals and all expatriates living on Burkinabe soil, in strict compliance with the laws of the Republic.”

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Pavan Kulkarni is a journalist with Peoples Dispatch who covers labor struggles and progressive social movements, mainly on the African continent, but also in India.

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