Burkina Faso’s military government has severed diplomatic ties with France, its former colonial ruler, effective immediately, accusing the imperial power of “blatant neo-colonial ambitions and active support for subversive networks and terrorists.” The move marks a significant challenge to the enduring economic and political influence of former colonial masters in the region, highlighting the ongoing struggle for national sovereignty against external capital.
France’s Foreign Ministry spokesman Pascal Confavreux stated that France regrets the “hostile and unfounded decision,” describing it as illustrating a “worrying drift of the Burkinabè authorities.” This response frames the challenge to imperial power as an internal failing rather than a reaction to structural exploitation. Burkina Faso’s Communications Minister Pingdwende Gilbert Ouedraogo countered, asserting that “The conditions essential for fostering relations based on mutual respect, reciprocal trust, and respect for the principle of non-interference in internal affairs and national sovereignty are no longer met.”
Imperial Grip Challenged
France had served as Burkina Faso’s major security partner until a 2022 coup, deploying hundreds of forces ostensibly to fight extremist groups. These forces functioned as an imperial garrison, protecting French interests in the region. Following the coup, the junta moved to dismantle this arrangement, sacking the French forces. This action was part of a broader pattern of challenging French influence. In the third year since the coup, in 2023, the junta demanded France recall its ambassador and declared the United Nations’ resident and humanitarian coordinator persona non grata. The following year, in 2024, the government expelled three French diplomats, citing alleged subversive activities. These actions underscore a systematic effort to dislodge the mechanisms of foreign control and surveillance that often accompany neo-colonial relationships.
The decision to sever diplomatic ties follows years of fractured relations, during which Burkina Faso’s military government repeatedly targeted foreign diplomats, including the French, accusing them of working against its national interests. France is now reviewing “necessary reciprocal measures,” signaling potential economic or political retaliation to protect its accumulated wealth and strategic position. The French Foreign Ministry also stated it is monitoring the safety of French government personnel and citizens, urging heightened vigilance, a common posture when imperial interests are threatened.
The Cost to the Working Class
The 23 million people of Burkina Faso continue to bear the brunt of escalating violence. The West African country has been battered by yearslong violence perpetrated by extremist groups linked to al-Qaida and the Islamic State group. Its wider Sahel region remains the world’s deadliest region for extremism, a crisis exacerbated by decades of imperial intervention and resource extraction that destabilized local economies and social structures.
The State's Dual Role
Under the military government, which had promised to curb the violence, the situation has reportedly worsened for the working class and dispossessed. A recent report by Human Rights Watch reveals that between January 2023, the third year of the report period, and August 2025, the first year of the report period, government forces allegedly killed twice as many civilians as extremist groups. The report attributes at least 1,200 of the 1,837 civilians killed in the country during this period to government forces. This data exposes a critical contradiction: even as the state confronts external imperial forces, it continues to act as an instrument of repression against its own population, demonstrating that the struggle for liberation must address both foreign domination and internal class oppression. The violence against civilians, regardless of perpetrator, represents a profound cost borne by those with the least power.
The full implications of the diplomatic break, including the future of the French embassy, remain unclear. However, the move signals a deepening struggle against the remnants of colonial power and the complex, often violent, dynamics of capital accumulation in the global periphery.