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JUST IN: Military Coup Takes Place In Burkina Faso As Soldiers Arrest President 

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President Roch Kabore of Burkina Faso has reportedly been detained by mutinying soldiers.

The mutinying soldiers were also said to have also surrounded the state television headquarters.

According to the BBC, the soldiers were said to have demanded the sacking of the country’s military chiefs and asked for more resources to fight Islamist insurgents.

Heavy gunfire was reportedly heard on Sunday night near the presidential palace and at several barracks in Ouagadougou, the country’s capital.

President Kaboré was detained at a military camp by mutinying soldiers, foreign media reports say.

Video from the capital appears to show armoured vehicles – reportedly used by the presidency – peppered with bullet holes and abandoned in the street.

But the government denied the rumour that a coup was underway and that the president had been arrested.

Bathelemy Simpore, the country’s defence minister, denied the rumour that Kabore had been detained.

“The head of state has not been detained; no institution of the country has been threatened,” Simpore was quoted to have said on national television.

“For now, we don’t know their motives or what they are demanding. We are trying to get in contact with them,” he said, adding that calm had returned to some of the barracks.”

The Burkina Faso authorities later declared a curfew from 8pm to 5:30am until further notice.

Schools across the country were also directed to be closed for two days (Monday and Tuesday).

The incident comes a day after protesters took to the street to demonstrate against the government’s inability to stop attacks and killings of civilians by militants.

The protesters also asked Kabore to resign.

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