Chae Hui Chol has been approved as ambassador to West African country
Burkina Faso plans to resume diplomatic relations with North Korea, the country’s Foreign Ministry announced Wednesday.
The decision will allow the two countries "to maintain exemplary bilateral cooperation in several areas," Foreign Affairs Minister Olivia Rouamba said at the end of a Council of Ministers meeting.
The West African nation suspended relations with North Korea in 2017 to conform to UN Security Council sanctions over Pyongyang’s nuclear weapons program.
Rouamba said the governments of Burkina Faso and North Korea will reportedly be focusing on military equipment, mining, healthcare, agriculture and research
The Burkinabe government has also approved the appointment of a North Korean ambassador to Burkina Faso.
Chae Hui Chol, has been approved as Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) to Burkina Faso, with residence in Dakar, Senegal, according to a statement from the Ministerial Council.
In the past, Burkina Faso has maintained "very good relations with this country, which was a privileged partner during the period of the August 1983 Revolution," said Rouamba.
The government officially cut off relations in 2017 using a provision recommended by the United Nations to all its member states in its sanctions resolution against Pyongyang.
Faced with a security crisis fueled since 2015 by terrorist attacks, Burkina Faso, under the leadership of Capt. Ibrahim Traore, the leader of the ruling junta, decided to diversify its partnerships to strengthen the fight against terrorism. In January, the transitional authorities broke a military agreement with France, its former colonist.
This is "a way of asserting its authority by contracting diplomatic relations with countries unconsidered by France," Regis Hounkpe, a pan-African expert in geostrategy, told Anadolu.
The fight against terrorism and the need to face it by its own means or military cooperation is only an additional element of the distancing from France, he said.
From what I understand, they are relatively hostile to France, but their policies end there and fighting the ongoing 'Mali war'... seeing some sources say that 40% of Burkina Faso is currently occupied by "Jihadist" terrorist groups... so it seems like they need the help, anyway.
According to what I've been able to find, Traoré is allegedly not looking to be a political leader but a military one: end the war, then begin a transitional government. Suppose we'll have to wait to see what happens.