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How CIA, French Intelligence Agency Conspired to Assassinate Thomas Sankara

On April 6, 2022, Burkina Faso’s ex-President Blaise Compaorรฉ was tried, convicted and sentenced in absentia to life imprisonment for murder. It  took 35 years for justice to catch up with him for murdering his revolutionary socialist predecessor, Thomas Sankara (the “Che Guevara of Africa”), in a 1987 right-wing military coup.  How  long will justice take to catch up with the CIA and its French intelligence counterpart, the Direction gรฉnรฉrale de la sรฉcuritรฉ extรฉrieure (DGSE), for what appears to have been their part in masterminding or enabling the plot that overthrew and killed Sankara? As young military officers in Burkina Faso during the 1970s and 1980s, Thomas Sankara and Blaise Compaorรฉ were the best of friends. The two traveled the country playing in a musical band together and Sankara’s parents adopted Compaorรฉ as his parents had died when he was young. In 1983, Sankara and Compaorรฉ launched a coup against Burkina Faso’s military regime by Jean-Baptiste Ouรฉdraog...

Why Town Folks Returning From the Village After Festivities Sneak Back at Night

Many townsfolk usually sneak back under the cover of darkness hastily and unnoticed. (Photo/depositphotos.com)

Finally the festive season craze is over and it is now time for everyone to be rewarded accordingly, now that the much-loathed, 'discipline master' Mr 'Njaanuary' has knocked in.

Take it or leave it, 'Njaanuary' will and must deal with you based on the 'love' you showed to its fellow sister, December, during the festive season. The more 'romantic' you were to December financially, the more Mr 'Njaanuary' shall be hard, dry and lengthy for you.

Take for instance, the town folks whom with all their past experiences of travelling upcountry for the holidays and the nasty financial aftermath that comes with it, still decided to put back their fingers at the very place they have always been bitten. Well, it is payback time folks!

While not wanting to sound like I am demonizing the town dwellers who opted to travel home and spend cool times with their rural relatives during the festivities, the costly aftermath that comes with it, makes those who were left behind to 'guard' the town look like economic and financial geniuses. But why, you ask?

After every December festive season, if you are a keen observer, you may have realised that many town folks usually sneak back under the cover of darkness hastily and unnoticed as opposed to the royally and gaily entry they make to the village when coming home for the same. Below we try and explain this phenomenon.

1. They are usually as broke as a church mouse

With only bus fare left in the majority of these 'fellas' pockets after lavish spending in the village, they do not want anyone to see them and may be request them to leave something 'small' for them now that 'unarudi kwa pesa'.

It is tantamount to blasphemy as deducting a single coin from the pocket would turn the town journey into a nightmare.

2. They do not want to be seen dragging heavy and soily sacks bearing all manner of farm produce

Many town folks while at the village, like to create an impression that they feed on special diets made at high-end restaurants in town. As such, seeing them with soil-stained bags bearing the very things they pretend not to like eating while at the village, would be embarrassing. Nightly travels, therefore, becomes the best option.

Of course, you can guess rightly why they have to carry to town these bags with things enough to last them for until God knows when.

3. To avoid attracting attention in their town neighborhoods

Many do not want to be seen by fellow town folks who refused to travel to the village. After transporting the heavy, soil-stained bags all the way from the village, they want to avoid being seen entering the plot and be asked to share the selfishly-guarded contents.

They are like, "don't these people know that the contents of this sack will be my lifeline till after the 90-day-long Njaanuary?"

Editor's Note: This article was originally published on Hivisasa.com by the same author on 02/01/2020.