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This is a list of all the current ambassadors to Burkina Faso.
Sending country | Ambassador | Credentialed | Previous | Embassy Website | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | No mission | Australians should contact Canadian mission | |||
![]() | Carol McQueen [1] | (As of April 2021 [update] ) | List | ||
![]() | No mission | The PRC and Burkina Faso suspended diplomatic ties on February 4, 1994 | |||
![]() | Luc Hallade [2] | 2019 (As of April 2021 [update] ) | |||
![]() | Andreas Michael Pfaffernoschke [3] | 2020 (As of April 2021 [update] ) | |||
![]() | No mission | accredited from Abidjan, Côte d'Ivoire | |||
![]() | Ernst Noorman | Embassy office was opened in 2018 [4] | |||
![]() | Vladimir Baykov [5] | 2016 (As of April 2021 [update] ) | List | accredited from Abidjan, Côte d'Ivoire | |
![]() | No mission | accredited from Abidjan, Côte d'Ivoire | |||
![]() | Shen, Cheng-hong | Diplomatic ties were broken in 1973, reestablished in 1994, and broken in May 2018 [6] [7] | |||
![]() | Iain Walker [8] | 2017 (As of April 2021 [update] ) | Relations are handled by the high commission in Accra, Ghana [9] | ||
![]() | Sandra E. Clark [10] | 2020 (As of April 2021 [update] ) | List |
Burkina Faso has good relations with the European Union, African and certain Asian countries. France, the former colonial power, in particular, continues to provide significant aid and supports Compaoré's developing role as a regional powerbroker.
Tulinabo Salama Mushingi is an American diplomat who currently serves as the United States Ambassador to Angola and is the designate to serve as the United States Ambassador to São Tomé and Príncipe. He previously served as the United States Ambassador to Burkina Faso from 2013 to 2016, and a joint appointment as United States Ambassador to Senegal and United States Ambassador to Guinea-Bissau from 2017 to 2022. He also served in the executive offices of Secretaries of State John F. Kerry and Hillary Clinton. In February 2017, President Donald Trump nominated Mushingi to serve concurrently as United States Ambassador to Senegal and United States Ambassador to Guinea-Bissau. Mushingi had originally been nominated for the position by outgoing President Barack Obama in January 2017. When Trump took office, he withdrew Mushingi's nomination before renominating him for the same position. He was confirmed by the United States Senate by voice vote on May 18, 2017.
Burkina Faso–Taiwan relations referred to the historical relationship between the Republic of China (Taiwan) and Burkina Faso. Taiwan had an embassy in Ouagadougou, and Burkina Faso had an embassy in Taipei. In May 2018, Burkina Faso switched to recognize the People's Republic of China, thus ending diplomatic ties with Taiwan. The last ambassador of Burkina Faso to Taiwan, appointed in August 2017, was Aminata Sana Congo.
Antoine Somdah is a statesman of Burkina Faso and a diplomat. Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of Burkina Faso to the Russian Federation since 2014.
Terrorism in Burkina Faso refers to non-state actor violence in Burkina Faso that is carried out with the intent of causing fear and spreading extremist ideology. Terrorist activity primarily involves religious terrorism conducted by foreign-based organizations, although some activity occurs because of communal frustration over the lack of economic development. Recent attacks are concentrated in the Hauts-Bassins, Boucle du Mouhoun, Nord, Sahel, and Est regions, along the border with Mali and Niger. A series of attacks in Ouagadougou in 2016, 2017, and 2018 by al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb and its affiliates was particularly deadly, garnering international attention.
Margareta Kassangana is a Polish civil servant and diplomat; since 2017 serving as an ambassador to Senegal.
The COVID-19 pandemic in Burkina Faso is part of the ongoing worldwide pandemic of coronavirus disease 2019 caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2. The virus was confirmed to have reached Burkina Faso on 9 March 2020. The death of Rose Marie Compaoré, a member of the National Assembly of Burkina Faso, on 18 March marked the first recorded fatality due to COVID-19 in Sub-Saharan Africa.
A coup d'état was launched in Burkina Faso on 23 January 2022. Gunfire erupted in front of the presidential residence in the Burkinabé capital Ouagadougou and several military barracks around the city. Soldiers were reported to have seized control of the military base in the capital. However, the government denied there was an ongoing coup in the country. Several hours later, President Roch Marc Christian Kaboré was reported to have been detained by the soldiers at the military camp in the capital. On 24 January, the military announced on television that Kaboré had been deposed from his position as president. After the announcement, the military declared that the parliament, government and constitution had been dissolved. The coup d'état was led by military officer Paul-Henri Sandaogo Damiba.