Traoré Exposes a Coup-for-Mines Plot - Who Paid for Burkina’s Chaos? | Ibrahim Traore Speech



They called it a coup plot—men in uniform chasing a chair. Traoré calls it something else: a hand reaching for the ground beneath Burkina Faso. Because what the plotters wanted wasn’t an office. It was a signature—the kind that unlocks mines, rewrites contracts, and turns gold and manganese into tribute.

This speech lays out a brutal playbook: create a crack, widen it with money, label it “instability,” then arrive as the “solution” with paperwork already prepared. Traoré warns that modern interference rarely comes with an army. It comes through proxies, consultants, handlers, quiet transfers, and promises packaged as patriotism—so betrayal looks like “saving the country.”

But the message is not panic. It is doctrine: no urgency, no confusion, no rushed signatures. Trace the money. expose the intermediaries. force daylight onto the contracts and the narratives that appear “too quickly” when a nation is shaken. Because when citizens stop watching the drama and start watching the paperwork, the script loses its power.

👇 Question for viewers:
If coups are sometimes about contracts, not power—what should Africans watch first: money trails, media narratives, or mining deals?

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