A significant diplomatic rift has emerged between Burkina Faso and the United States over immigration policy. The conflict began when the West African nation’s military government refused a US proposal to accept deportees who are not even Burkinabè citizens. In a swift response, the US Embassy in Ouagadougou suspended all visa services, forcing residents to apply through neighboring Togo.

Burkina Faso’s Foreign Minister Karamoko Jean-Marie Traoré publicly condemned the American request as “indecent” and questioned whether the subsequent visa pause was a form of blackmail. This stance aligns with the ruling junta’s platform of resisting Western pressure. The dispute highlights the Trump administration’s broader strategy of pressuring African nations to assist with its immigration crackdown, a policy that has met with mixed success across the continent.

Share.
Exit mobile version