Category Archives: Burkina Faso

Exploitation des mines au Burkina Faso….

That’s me way in the upper left corner…. Was an interesting event.  I will blog about it later tonight or tomorrow. Comme quoi, le sous-sol national, contrairement à ce que pensent les gens, n’est pas la vache à lait des … Continue reading

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Karim Wade illegal enrichment case in Sénégal is the thing to watch

Le montant global de la fortune de Karim Wade serait en effet de 694 milliards de francs CFA, soit un peu plus d’un milliard d’euros. C’est en tout cas la somme évaluée par ses accusateurs, et c’est celle sur laquelle … Continue reading

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Chickens of course!

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Can Burkina Faso export masques to come to birthday parties?

At ISO pool today, a birthday party for a kid… Leslie and Sukie saw the whole show while I was playing tennis.  I’ll post a few more pictures later….

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Some say “just business” but to me smells like sulfur

A series of secret contracts seen by Global Witness spell out how BSGR promised Mamadie Touré (sometimes known as Mamadie Conté) millions of dollars and shares in the massive Simandou iron ore concession in return for help in acquiring the … Continue reading

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A good Ouaga Monday

The FAVL team in Ouaga (Michael, Donkoui, Krystle) spent the morning prioritizing our agenda, and then rearranging the office.  Nothing like a little furniture moving to make people feel better about the lives. Well, it works for me.  I went … Continue reading

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A day off in Ouagadougou

Leslie arrived last night.  Donkoui, Sukie and I waited at the airport.  Finally the new terminal seems to be complete… five years? more?  it is pretty nice, except they didn’t have the air conditioning on, so cooler to stand outside … Continue reading

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At L’Etrier, the horse club of Ouagadougou

Sukie and I went to watch the dressage/jumping.  Reminded me of my youth when we would watch my sisters and brothers, out at El Comandante and then later at the place in Isla Grande (must have been where Convention Center … Continue reading

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Strong words from Benewende Sankara, head of opposition party UNIR/PS

The facts seem to be that the health workers declared a 96 hour strike, and a woman died in childbirth, along with her baby, and the government promptly fired the person who should have been the anesthesiologist, and indicated the … Continue reading

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My term as Dept chair….

A Loser who can be suckered into bad bargains is set to become one of the Clueless. That’s why they are promoted: they are worth even more as Clueless pawns in the middle than as direct producers at the bottom, … Continue reading

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French word of the day: frelaté

As in: “Environ 2635 litres de carburant frelaté ont été saisis mercredi tôt dans la matinée le long des principales routes nationales partant de Ouagadougou … “

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It’s called hot… and an hour ago it was 120, but a few clouds came in cooled us down!

About 43, for you centigrade people.  This in the partial shade of our custard apple tree.  Our fans working nonstop.  Nice couscous today.  Sukie chowing down; we had a brief discussion of why anyone would eat at McDonald’s when they … Continue reading

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Me on Voice of America in French!

Ugh… I daren’t actually listen.  But I actually did talk about the sequester in French, to VOA-West Africa.  I come on about half way through.

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Djembe class manqué

Sukie was signed up for djembe class (African drumming) at ISO, but I got the times wrong so we showed up at the end.  It looked fun, and several of her classmates are in the class.  So after we walked … Continue reading

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Ouagadougou Tuesday….

First the Sukie and personal news.  All was good.  We both got really good night sleep; Sukie fell asleep about 9pm reading Mr. Popper’s Penguins and she slept the whole night through, so now her plan tonite is to do … Continue reading

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First day of school in Ouagadougou

Dropped Sukie off at 7am at the International School. Everyone was very welcoming. Her class has 8 other kids. Four girls, four boys. She is the only American! Four of the kids are anglophone Africans, one boy from Holland, one … Continue reading

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Back in Ouagadougou

I’m back for four months.  I think this will be a good trip.  Saw Peter Hochet on the plane; he was returning from Guinea.  He and colleagues in Labo Citoyennetes are doing a big project on land tenure regimes in … Continue reading

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In Burkina Faso, gender still matters in politics

Why do I say that?  A nice article on the opposition parties meeting to coordinate their strategy in the national Assembly (trying to clarify the meaning of official opposition, all that good stuff that political scientists like to talk about).  … Continue reading

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Competition for groundnuts in Senegal….

On termine cette revue de presse au Sénégal. La Chine « déferle dans l’arachide » : c’est le titre choisi par Jeune Afrique dans son édition économique. Au port de Dakar, 53 000 tonnes d’oléagineux étaient en instance de départ … Continue reading

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He didn’t call me?

From The New Yorker review of Justin Timberlake’s new album: Timberlake’s …  “Let the Groove Get In” is… powered by a synthetic kick drum and a sample of vocals and percussion from Burkina Faso…” Maybe because I don’t know a … Continue reading

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