OUAGADOUGOU, Burkina Faso — Burkina Faso will vote in presidential and legislative elections on Sunday, amid escalating extremist violence that's killed more than 2,000 people this year and displaced some one million people from their homes.
Speaking at a packed rally on his campaign tour in Bobo-Dioulasso town this month, President Roch Marc Christian Kabore promised, if reelected, to keep fighting until the country was secure.
"We will not give up, we will keep fighting until we will have peace and victory on our soil," he said.
But Kabore, who is seeking a second five-year term, is being accused by the dozen opposition candidates vying for his position, for failing to secure the once peaceful West African nation, which has plunged into a humanitarian crisis and been overrun by jihadist attacks linked to al-Qaida and the Islamic State since taking office in 2015.
Leading the charge against him is Eddie Komboigo, head of the Congress for Democracy and Progress (CDP), the party of former President Blaise Compaore who was ousted by a popular uprising in 2014. Komboigo told the AP that Burkina Faso was in a "catastrophe" and blamed Kabore for being unwilling to pursue a more diplomatic approach with the jihadists.
"I don't think that terrorism can be overcome only with weapons but with intelligence, dialogue and diplomacy. Nowhere in the world was terrorism overcome with weapons," he said.
The other main rival, Zephirin Diabre, candidate for the Union for Progress and Change party (UPC), is running against Kabore for the second time, under the slogan, "let's save the country". Diabre told the AP the fractured nation, once known for its social cohesion, needs to reconcile and present a united front against the gunmen because "you can't fight the war and win it if you're not united and together," he said.
Kabore is expected to be re-elected and needs more than 50% of the vote to win in the first round. The opposition, however, hopes to split the vote, deprive the President of an outright win and form a coalition behind the strongest candidate for round two. Election results should be announced within 48 to 72 hours, said a representative from The National Independent Electoral Commission (CENI).