President Blaise Compaore declared a state of emergency in Burkina Faso Thursday after angry demonstrators set parliament ablaze in an uprising against his long-standing regime. Protesters earlier forced the government to scrap a vote on controversial plans to allow Compaore to extend his 27-year rule, with tens of thousands of people joining a mass rally in the capital Ouagadougou calling for the strongman to go.
Hundreds of people stormed parliament and other public buildings including the national television headquarters, ransacking offices and setting fire to cars, despite a heavy police and army presence across the capital.
"A state of emergency has been declared throughout the country," a statement from the presidency read late Thursday. "The army chief of staff is charged with carrying out this decree, which enters into force from this day."
The document was not dated and carried a signature that did not resemble the president's usual one.
The United States, Burkina Faso's former colonial ruler France and the African Union voiced alarm over the unrest gripping the poor west African nation while the UN chief was sending an envoy to help restore calm and the EU called for an end to the violence.
"The army is united with the people," claimed Benewende Sankara, a leading light in the opposition, calling for Compaore to resign to enable peace to be restored.
Army chief Nabere Honore Traore met with retired general Kouame Lougue, a former defence minister being touted by the opposition as a replacement for Compaore, to discuss the crisis.
Tens of thousands of protesters massed on the streets of the capital shouting "Lougue in power!"
One man was killed in the chaos that erupted just before lawmakers were due to vote on the legislation that would allow Compaore - who took power in a 1987 coup - to contest next year's election, AFP correspondents said. The government, facing its worst crisis since a wave of mutinies shook the country in 2011, later announced it was calling off the vote. Police and soldiers, out in force after mass rallies earlier this week, failed to stop the onslaught despite using tear gas against the protesters.
Several hundred protesters also broke into the headquarters of the national television station RTB, pillaging equipment and smashing cars, correspondents said.
Crowds of people later massed near the presidential palace but were being held back by troops from the presidential guard who fired warning shots into the air.
The United States said it was "deeply concerned" about the crisis and criticised the attempts to alter the constitution, while France appealed for calm and said it "deplored" the violence.
UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon dispatched a special envoy to Burkina Faso, with a spokesman saying Ban was "following with great concern the deteriorating security situation in Burkina Faso."
Several thousand protesters marched through the capital on Wednesday, the day after street battles erupted during a mass rally by hundreds of thousands against what they branded a constitutional coup by supporters of the 63-year-old strongman.
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