Jean-Baptiste Ouédraogo

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Jean-Baptiste Philippe Ouédraogo (Template:IPA; born 30 June 1942), also referred to by his initials JBO,<ref name="bazie" /> is a Burkinabé physician and retired military officer who served as President of Upper Volta (now Burkina Faso) from 8 November 1982 to 4 August 1983. He has since mediated a few national political disputes and operates a clinic in Somgandé.

Ouédraogo received his early education in Upper Volta before joining the Upper Voltan Army and studying medicine abroad. After working in healthcare, he was appointed chief medical officer of the Ouagadougou military camp. He participated in the November 1982 coup d'état and shortly thereafter assumed the presidency. More ideologically moderate than most of his comrades, Ouédraogo did not command much popular support and governed the country amid an unstable political climate. He was for private ownership of businesses.Template:Sfn A protracted dispute with Prime Minister Thomas Sankara resulted in his removal from power in a coup in August 1983 and imprisonment. He was released in 1985 and resumed medical work. He opened a clinic in Somgandé in 1992, which he still operates. In the 2010s, he acted as a mediator between opposing political factions.

Early life and education

Jean-Baptiste Ouédraogo was born on 30 June 1942 in Kaya, French West Africa.<ref name="lubabu" />He started his education at the École Primaire Catholique de Bam,Template:Efn later attending the minor seminary of Pabré before completing his secondary education at the Lycée de Philippe-Zinda-Kaboré de Ouagadougou.Template:Efn He studied medicine at the University of Abidjan and the School of Naval Medicine in Bordeaux,<ref name="lubabu" /> graduating from the latter in 1974.Template:Sfn He then took courses at the University of Strasbourg,Template:Sfn with a focus in paediatrics.<ref name="lubabu" /> Ouédraogo finished his studies with a doctor of medicine, and degrees in sports medicine and in paediatrics and child welfare.<ref name="karantao">Template:Cite web</ref>

Ouédraogo became the first head of the paediatrics department at the Centre hospitalier universitaire Yalgado-OuédraogoTemplate:Efn in Ouagadougou, serving there from 1976 until 1977.<ref name="karantao" /> Afterwards he interned at a hospital in Mulhouse until 1981.Template:Sfn He married a school teacher, Bernadette, and had three children with her, all of whom became physicians.<ref name="lubabu">Template:Cite web</ref>Template:Sfn

Military career and presidency

Early military career

Template:Quote box Ouédraogo was commissioned as a second lieutenant and medic into the Upper Voltan Army in October 1972. In October 1979 he was promotedTemplate:Sfn to médicin-commandant (equivalent to major).Template:Sfn Three years later he was appointed chief medical officer of the new Ouagadougou military base, Camp Militaire de Gounghin.<ref name="lubabu" /><ref name="karantao" />Template:Efn

1982 coup and assumption of presidency

On 7 November 1982 Ouédraogo participated in a military coup which ousted President of Upper Volta Saye Zerbo.<ref name="lubabu" /> He and his fellow military officers then formed the Conseil de Salut du PeupleTemplate:Efn (CSP). Two days later the council elected him PresidentTemplate:Sfn as a compromise choice between the leftist radicals and conservatives.Template:Sfn He was the first Mossi head of state since Maurice Yaméogo.Template:Sfn According to Ouédraogo, Captain Thomas Sankara was supposed to take power but withdrew at the last minute, leading other officers to choose him to assume the presidency due to his senior rank though, in his words, "against my will".<ref name="lubabu" /> Unlike Sankara, he lacked political experience and popular support, and was quickly regarded by the leftist members of the CSP as conservative and sympathetic to policies of France. Ouédraogo thought of his opponents as "hard-core Marxists" and maintained that he was a "liberal and sincere democrat".<ref name="lubabu" /> Nevertheless, the media viewed Ouédraogo and Sankara as united in goals and dubbed them "Siamese twins".Template:Sfn Shortly after taking power, Ouédraogo told the foreign diplomatic corps in Upper Volta that the new government would uphold a non-aligned foreign policy, respect its international agreements, and defend its territory with "intransigence".<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

On 21 November Ouédraogo declared that the CSP would restore a constitutional, civilian regime in two years time.Template:Sfn Five days later the CSP installed a formal government. Ouédraogo was the only soldier in the cabinet and, in addition to his role as President, was made Minister of National Defence and Veterans Affairs.Template:Sfn On the whole the CSP exercised true control of the government while Ouédraogo served as little more than a figurehead. The freedoms of labour unions and the press, having been restricted under Zerbo's reign, were restored by the new administration.Template:Sfn Ouédraogo attended Mogho Naba Kougri's funeral in December and placed a wreath at the Mossi leader's coffin.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn The CSP elected Sankara as Prime Minister in January 1983,<ref name="sankara" /> in effect instituting a power counterbalance to Ouédraogo.Template:Sfn

On 28 February a plot by several army officers to massacre the CSP in assembly and restore Zerbo's regime was foiled when they delayed and were arrested by other officials. One of the leading putschists was a commandant who had been considered for the presidency following the 1982 coup. When questioned about the incident, Ouédraogo told the press, "Since our regime makes many people uneasy, it is quite normal that people should plan this sort of reaction."Template:Sfn He publicly declared his determination to "guarantee order and security" and asserted that "the army will not allow itself to be dissuaded by tribal fights and ideologies".Template:Sfn He also stated that corruption and fraud in the business community had, in part, facilitated the state of "total anarchy" over which the government presided, and announced that the national administration would be restructured to mitigate the disorder.Template:Sfn

Template:Quote box Meanwhile, as Sankara toured various communist and socialist countries, rumors circulated among the Voltaic population that the CSP would assume a radical leftist approach to governing and expropriate small businesses. In an attempt to alleviate concerns, Ouédraogo told members of the National Council of Voltaic Employers that "private initiative will be maintained...you are the primary motor of the country's economic activity".Template:Sfn Sankara concluded his tour with a visit to Libya. A Libyan transport aircraft landed at Ouagadougou Airport shortly after his return, generating rumours of a plot to install a pro-Libya regime in Upper Volta. Ouédraogo assured the populace that it was "a routine visit, a kind of courtesy call and I think that we must not try to see anything beyond that," and stated that "there should be no talk of setting up a Voltaic Jamahiriya".Template:Sfn On 26 March Ouédraogo and Sankara held a meeting in the capital, where differences in their beliefs began to emerge.<ref name="sankara">Template:Cite web</ref> That day the CSP organised a large rally in the city where a moderate speech by Ouédraogo was much less enthusiastically received than Sankara's radical remarks.Template:Sfn From 20 to 26 AprilTemplate:Sfn Ouédraogo and several of his ministers visited Lomé, Togo; Accra, Ghana; and Niamey, Niger.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn President Félix Houphouët-Boigny refused to meet him in the Ivory Coast, advising that he should focus on stemming Libyan influence within his own country.Template:Sfn

Dispute with Sankara and overthrow

File:Maurice Yaméogo, 1960.jpg
Ouédraogo's rehabilitation of former Upper Voltan President Maurice Yaméogo (pictured) generated backlash from some politicians.

As his tenure progressed, Ouédraogo found himself unable to reconcile the conservative and radical factions of the CSP, whose disagreements were leading to a political stalemate.Template:Sfn On 14 May 1983 the CSP convened in the town of Bobo-Dioulasso. A crowd gathered to hear a message from the council. Sankara spoke until dusk, and the crowd mostly dispersed, its members eager to break their Ramadan fasts. Ouédraogo was in turn left without an audience for his speech, as Sankara seemingly intended in an effort to humiliate him.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The following day he met with Guy Penne, a top African affairs adviser of President of France François Mitterrand.Template:Sfn On 16 May he purged his government of pro-Libyan and anti-French elements, disbanded the CSP, and had Sankara and several other important officials arrested.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn Explaining the reasons for the radicals' removal, he said, "It is a problem of ideology...We were following step by step the program of the [Ligue patriotique pour le développement], and that program was to lead us to a communist society."Template:SfnTemplate:Efn He met again with Penne, who promised his government significant financial aid from France.Template:Sfn One officer, Blaise Compaoré, evaded capture and escaped to Sankara's former garrison at where he began to organise resistance.Template:Sfn In the following days large demonstrations occurred in Ouagadougou in support of Sankara.Template:Sfn Ouédraogo's political position was weak; his left-wing opponents were well organised while he did not have reliable connections with the conservative factions he supposedly represented and could only really count on the support of a handful of his former classmates from the Pabré minor seminary. Realising that the use of force was of little recourse, he sought to resolve the situation by appeasing his adversaries.Template:Sfn

On 27 May Ouédraogo delivered a speech, promising a quick return to civilian rule and the liberation of political prisoners. He also announced the drafting of a new constitution within six months, to be followed by an election in which he would not participate.<ref name="sankara" />Template:Sfn He also felt that the increased politicisation of the army was dangerous and compounded the threat of a civil war, so he warned that any soldiers found to be involving themselves in politics would be reprimanded. Stating that the older generation of politicians had been discredited and should retire, he announced that "patriots" and "new men with a sense of responsibility and national realities" should assume leadership of the country.Template:Sfn Ouédraogo finished by expressing his hope that the Upper Voltan youth could avoid the trappings of partisan politics.Template:Sfn Several days later he released Sankara, who was confined under guard to house arrest.Template:Sfn While the situation deteriorated, Ouédraogo accelerated the execution of his goals, liberating many political prisoners held under Zerbo's regime. However, his extension of political rehabilitation to Yaméogo antagonised many politicians whom Yaméogo had repressed.Template:Sfn Sankara was soon rearrested but then released following mounting pressure from Compaoré's troops.Template:Sfn On 4 June Ouédraogo removed a number of pro-Sankara ministers from his government.Template:Sfn

Tensions continued to increase until 4 August when Compaoré launched a coup.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn Paratroopers mobilised in Pô to march on Ouagadougou. Meanwhile, Ouédraogo consulted his chief of staff, who advised him to negotiate an end to his political conflict with Sankara. Ouédraogo received Sankara at 19:00 at his residence and offered to resign "to facilitate the establishment of a transitional government that would be unanimous".<ref name="jaffre" /> Sankara agreed to the proposal but asked for a few hours' delay so he could discuss it with Compaoré. He departed at 20:30 but was unable to inform Compaoré or the other putschists of the truce. At around the same time the paratroopers infiltrated the capital and began to seize strategic locations throughout. At Ouédraogo's residence, men of the Presidential Guard exchanged heavy fire with the putschists before surrendering. Compaoré arrived on the scene at around 22:00, followed by Sankara an hour later. The latter informed Ouédraogo of the "revolution" and offered to exile him and his family. Ouédraogo replied that he would rather remain in the country under the new regime. He was then taken to the Presidential Palace to spend the night. The following evening he was imprisoned at the military camp in Pô.<ref name="jaffre">Template:Cite web</ref> Sankara became the new President of Upper Volta.Template:Sfn Ouédraogo was officially removed from his post as Minister of National Defence on 23 August and succeeded by Jean-Baptiste Boukary Lingani.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> He was discharged from the army two days later.Template:Sfn Sankara changed the name of Upper Volta to Burkina Faso in 1984, and three years later he was killed in a coup and replaced by Compaoré.Template:Sfn

Later life

Ouédraogo was granted clemency on 4 August 1985Template:Sfn and returned to medical work, taking a job at the Hôpital Yalgado-Ouédraogo.<ref name="lubabu" /> Nevertheless, the Sankara regime monitored his activities and restricted him from reentry into the army.Template:Sfn In 1992 he successfully secured a loan of 250 million West African CFA francs from a French bank and founded a clinic, the Notre-Dame de la Paix,Template:Efn in the Somgandé district, south of Ouagadougou. In 2007 he served between 400 and 500 patients a month.<ref name="lubabu" /> In 2005 Ouédraogo was awarded a gold medal by the Geneva-based Foundation for Excellence in Business Practice. He also won the first prize in the Ministry of the Environment's competition for the best living environment health facilities in the Centre Region.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> That December a street in the Nongr-Massom district of Ouagadougou was named after him.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In 2016 he was the president of the Fédération des Associations Professionnelles de la Santé Privée.Template:Efn<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> As of 2021 Ouédraogo still worked at his medical clinic.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Involvement in politics

Template:Quote box Upon his return to medical work in 1985 Ouédraogo declared that he would not take an active role in politicsTemplate:Sfn and from then on he generally showed little interest in involving himself in public affairs.<ref name="bazie">Template:Cite web</ref> In 1999 he was made a member of the Conseil du Sages,Template:EfnTemplate:Sfn though by 2014 he had left the consultative body.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In November 2012 he delivered a speech on behalf of himself and Saye Zerbo, expressing concern about how corrupt Burkina Faso's administration had become over the preceding years and accusing the country's leaders of inaction on the matter.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

In early 2014 Ouédraogo acted as a mediator between President Compaoré and opposition groups as tensions between the two dramatically rose.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> However, the arbitration failed in April, and Compaoré later resigned and fled the country. In September 2015 members of the military launched a coup. Ouédraogo was asked to mediate, and he attempted to delay the putschists and secure the release of hostages. As the army turned against the coup he made multiple appeals to the plot's leader, Gilbert Diendéré, to surrender.<ref name="nana">Template:Cite web</ref> After seeking refuge in the Vatican embassy, Diendéré was handed over to Burkinabé transitional government authorities and Ouédraogo escorted him into custody at the gendarmerie base in the capital.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In April 2017 Ouédraogo and several other national figures met with leaders of the Coalition for Democracy and National Reconciliation, an opposition coalition formed out of Compaoré's supporters, to discuss political reconciliation.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In 2020 he released a memoir titled Ma part de vérité.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

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