Ukraine in Arabic | Burkina Faso stormed by protesters

Following days of street clashes, protesters in Burkina Faso have forced the police to withdraw from the parliament building in Ouagadougou

KYIV/Ukraine in Arabic/ Thousands of protesters stormed Burkina Faso's parliament building on Thursday ahead of a highly controversial vote.

About 1,500 people managed to break through a security cordon and were ransacking parliament. Protesters charged through offices, setting fire to documents, stealing computer equipment and burning cars outside. Smoke and fire have also been seen rising from the building.

Protesters angry at plans to allow Burkina Faso's President Blaise Compaore to extend his 27-year-rule have set fire to parliament.

Correspondents say the city hall and ruling party headquarters are also in flames.

A huge crowd is surging towards the presidential palace and the main airport has been shut.

MPs have suspended a vote on changing the constitution to allow Mr. Compaore to stand for re-election next year.

Five people has been killed in the protests, one of the most serious against Mr. Compaore's rule.

The military had earlier fired live bullets at protesters who had stormed parliament, he says.

Mr. Compaore first took power in a coup in 1987, and has won four disputed elections since then.

The opposition has called for a campaign of civil disobedience to demand that he steps down in elections next year.

"October 30 is Burkina Faso's Black Spring, like the Arab Spring," opposition activist Emile Pargui Pare told.

State television has gone off air after protesters stormed the building housing it and ransacked it, Reuters quotes a witness as saying.

About 1,500 people breached the security cordon at parliament and began ransacking the building, AFP reports.

Protesters were setting fire to documents and stealing computer equipment and cars outside the building were also set on fire, it reports.

A massive crowd has also converged on the main square in Ouagadougou, and are marching towards the presidential palace, which is about five kilometers (three miles) away, our reporter says.

A government helicopter flying overhead was firing tear gas at them.

Mr. Compaore's whereabouts are unknown, but he has appealed for calm via Twitter.

The government has been forced to suspend Thursday's parliamentary vote on a constitutional amendment that would have lifted the limit on presidential terms so that Mr. Compaore could run for office again in 2015.

It is not clear whether the government intends to hold the vote at a later stage, correspondents say.

Mr. Compaore is a staunch ally of the US and France, which uses Burkina Faso as a base for military operations against militant Islamists in the Sahel region.

Both France and the European Union (EU) have called on him to scrap the proposed constitutional amendment.

The EU said it could jeopardize Burkina Faso's stability. The US has also raised concern about the proposed amendment.

bbc.com

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