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Joseph Ouédraogo
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Joseph Ouédraogo : ウィキペディア英語版
Joseph Ouédraogo
Joseph Ouédraogo was a Burkinabè trade unionist politician, active during the last years of the French Upper Volta and subsequently in the Republic of Upper Volta.
Educated in Roman Catholic schools, Ouédraogo became a Catholic labor activist and was a member of the Voltaic Union after World War II. In 1954, he was elected Secretary-General of the Catholic ''union nationale locale des syndicats chrétiens de Haute Volta'', out of which grew the ''Confédération africaine des travailleurs chrétiens'' in 1956, which was renamed the Confédération africaine des travailleurs croyants in 1957 to accommodate non-Catholic workers.〔Kourita Sandwidi, 'Syndicalisme et pouvoir politique. De la répression a la renaissance', in René Otayek ''et al.'', ''Le Burkina entre révolution et démocratie, 1983-1993'', pp. 352-352, p. 327〕 He was a member of the Territorial Assembly of Upper Volta from 1952 to 1959, and President of the Assembly in 1952-53. In 1956 he joined the Unified Democratic Party (PDU) as a supporter of Ouëzzin Coulibaly. Ouédraogo was selected to be a member of the Senate of the French Community. He was mayor of Ouagadougou from 1956 to 1959.〔(Site web de la Mairie de Ouagadougou )〕 He was Minister of Finance, 1957–58 and Minister of the Interior, 1958-59. In August 1959 Maurice Yaméogo forced Ouédraogo out of office as mayor of Ouagadougou, and after Yaméogo became President in 1960 Ouédraogo was interned for a while. Ouédraogo was a leader of the syndicalist general strike and 1966 military coup against Yaméogo.
In 1970 Ouédraogo became Secretary-General of the Union démocratique voltaïque (UDV), and he was elected to the new National Assembly in the December 1970 elections. In the early 1970s Ouédraogo and Gérard Ouédraogo (unrelated) were rival leaders of the Union démocratique voltaïque (UDV): an agreement that Gérard would serve as prime minister and Joseph as president of the National assembly broke down in 1974, and in February 1974 the army stepped in to suspend the 1970 constitution and restore military rule.〔Daniel Miles McFarland, 'OUEDRAGAOGO, JOSEPH', ''Historical Dictionary of Upper Volta (Haute Volta)'', 1978, p. 124-5〕
Joseph Ouédraogo gained 16.6% in the first round of the 1978 presidential election, and did not continue to the second round.〔Dieter Nohlen, Michael Krennerich & Bernhard Thibaut, ''Elections in Africa: a data handbook'', 1999, p. 146〕
==References==



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