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・ Burkina Faso national basketball team
・ Burkina Faso national football team
・ Burkina Faso national rugby union team
・ Burkina Faso national under-17 basketball team
・ Burkina Faso national under-17 football team
・ Burkina Faso national under-19 basketball team
・ Burkina Faso women's national basketball team
・ Burkina Faso women's national football team
・ Burkina Faso women's national under-19 basketball team
・ Burkina Faso women's national volleyball team
・ Burkina Faso–Canada relations
・ Burkina Faso–Denmark relations
・ Burkina Faso–Ghana relations
・ Burkina Faso–Libya relations
・ Burkina Faso–Niger Frontier Dispute case
Burkina Faso–North Korea relations
・ Burkina Faso–Palestine relations
・ Burkina Faso–Russia relations
・ Burkina Faso–Soviet Union relations
・ Burkina Faso–Sweden Friendship Association
・ Burkina Faso–Sweden relations
・ Burkina Faso–Taiwan relations
・ Burkina Faso–United States relations
・ Burkina Sign Language
・ Burkinabe
・ Burkinabin C
・ Burkinabé Americans
・ Burkinabé Bolshevik Party
・ Burkinabé Communist Group
・ Burkinabé constitutional referendum, 1991


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Burkina Faso–North Korea relations : ウィキペディア英語版
Burkina Faso–North Korea relations

Burkina Faso–North Korea relations refers to the current and historical relationship between the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) and the Republic of Burkina Faso. Relations between the countries have historically been relatively close. Neither country maintains an embassy in the other, although the DPRK formerly had an ambassador accredited in the Burkinabé capital Ouagadougou.
Relations were especially close during the Cold War, when the DPRK was as most active in foreign affairs. North Korea provided military equipment to the army of what was then the Republic of Upper Volta in the mid-1970s, during the reign of the military leader Colonel General Sangoulé Lamizana. North Korea also provided agricultural and technical assistance during the Cold War. Military aid continued under the rule of Captain Thomas Sankara, with an accord signed in 1983. Sankara, a marxist revolutionary, visited Pyongyang several times, first as Prime Minister on 13 March 1983 and then as President on 3 September 1985. A DPRK–Burkina Faso Friendship Association reportedly existed during this period.〔
Relations remained close during the early reign of Sankara's successor, Blaise Compaoré, who took power in a 1987 military coup. Compaoré visited Pyongyang in September 1988. In the late 1980s there was several cases of cooperation between the two countries – for example, the DPRK constructed an open-air theatre in Koudougou, and a trade agreement to exchange Burkinabé cotton and minerals for North Korean agricultural machinery was signed. Diplomatic activity quieted down after the Cold War, but some cooperation continued. In 1998 the North Korean government completed the construction of five small water reservoirs in Burkina Faso.
Straying from the traditional relations, Burkina Faso – a temporary UNSC member at the time – voted in favour of United Nations Security Council Resolution 1874 in 2009, imposing further economic sanctions on North Korea. In a statement, the Burkinabé representative said his country's vote was due to its commitment to a nuclear weapon-free world.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Text of United Nations Security Council Resolution 1874 )
==See also==

* Foreign relations of Burkina Faso
* Foreign relations of North Korea

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Burkina Faso–North Korea relations」の詳細全文を読む



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