The government has also frozen the assets of Diendere and 13 others suspected of ties to the coup or political parties linked to former president Blaise Compaore.
Burkina Faso's
powerful presidential guard is resisting efforts to disarm it after
carrying out a short-lived coup against a transitional government this
month, the army's chief of staff said on Monday.
The government, restored to power by popular protests and international pressure, disbanded the Presidential Security Regiment (RSP) on Friday after it had arrested the president, taken the prime minister hostage and named General Gilbert Diendere as head of state.
The
coup, which lasted just over a week, spurred waves of protests
throughout the landlocked West African country, during which at least 11
people were killed and 271 injured.
"The
disarmament process ... has found itself at an impasse since Sunday
Sept. 27, 2015, marked by the refusal of officers from the former
Presidential Security Regiment to follow disarmament," the statement said.
Members
of the presidential guarded have "started incidents" and intimidated
personnel in charge of the disarmament mission, said the statement,
which also accused General Diendere of behaving "ambiguously".
Transitional President Michel Kafando formed a commission to identify people to be prosecuted for the attempted putsch.
The
government has also frozen the assets of Diendere and 13 others
suspected of ties to the coup or political parties linked to former
president Blaise Compaore.
Diendere, Compaore's
former right-hand man and spy chief, said he led the coup because of
plans to disband the elite guard and exclude Compaore allies from
participation in upcoming presidential elections, originally scheduled
for Oct. 11.
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