Protesters killed in anti-coup demonstrations in Burkina Faso
Commuters flee from burning baricades during protests against a coup in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso, 17 September 2015 (EPA Photo)


A general close to ousted strongman Blaise Compaore took the lead in a Burkina Faso coup Thursday and promised elections would be held "soon," as the death toll from gunshots fired at protesters rose to three.The latest unrest hit the landlocked west African nation just weeks ahead of presidential and legislative elections slated for Oct. 11 – the country's first since veteran leader Compaore was forced out last year. The power grab began on Wednesday when soldiers from the elite presidential guard (RSP) burst into a cabinet meeting and seized interim President Michel Kafando and Prime Minister Isaac Zida.The move plunged the country into fresh uncertainty but coup leader General Gilbert Diendere – Compaore's former chief-of-staff – insisted he still wanted elections to take place. "Our wish is to reorganize ourselves and to move towards elections soon," General Gilbert Diendere told AFP hours after seizing power, while refusing to give a date for a vote. "But we plan to discuss all that with the concerned actors, notably the political parties and civil society organizations to establish a timetable that allows us to move towards presidential and parliamentary elections," he added.Wednesday's coup triggered immediate street protests outside the presidential palace where the leaders were being held, with presidential guard officers firing shots to disperse demonstrators. Doctors at the main Ouagadougou hospital said three people had died from gunshot wounds since Wednesday, while at least 60 others were admitted for various injuries.On Thursday, presidential guard officers positioned their armored vehicles in front of the presidential palace and more shooting was heard around the complex. But Revolution Square – the epicenter of last year's protests against Compaore – was empty apart from military patrols, and the streets of the capital were mostly deserted. Elsewhere in the former French colony, angry residents erected barricades in several towns and cities in protest at the coup.In the second city of Bobo-Dioulasso, shops were closed and soldiers remained in their barracks, residents said, while a taxi driver said the home of a member of Compaore's party had been torched. After dissolving the country's political institutions, the guards immediately announced the establishment of a "National Democratic Council" which they said would end "the deviant regime of transition" and create a government which would organize "inclusive" elections.International condemnation of the coup was swift, with the United Nations Security Council, the United States and the European Union, one of the main donors to the poverty-stricken country, demanding the release of Burkina's transitional leaders. U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has described the coup as "a flagrant violation of Burkina Faso's constitution" and said on Thursday that the country's military should "exercise restraint." In a joint statement, the U.N., African Union and 15-nation Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) demanded "the immediate and unconditional release of the hostages." ECOWAS chief, Senegal's President Macky Sall, will visit Burkina Faso on Friday, an official source said on condition of anonymity.Compaore fled into exile in Ivory Coast after a popular uprising in October last year, sparked by his attempt to extend his 27-year rule. A transitional government had been charged with running the country until the elections but Compaore supporters were banned from standing under a controversial law passed in April that made anyone backing "unconstitutional change" ineligible.