Sankara, was a Marxist, anti-imperialist revolutionary who in four years in power in Burkina Faso doubled the number of children in schools, reduced infant mortality, redistributed land from feudal landlords to peasants and planted 10 million trees that still help shade Ouagadougou, the capital. His style was different from other African presidents, ordering ministers to trade in Mercedes for more humble Renaults.
Sankara and his followers were hurriedly buried, and his family and many others in Burkina Faso have for years wanted to know how he was killed, and if, in fact, his body is really in the Dagnoen Cemetery, on the eastern outskirts of Ouagadougou.
"We want the truth," many people chanted Monday outside the cemetery, urging the gendarmerie to let journalists in.
"We are here to see who is in the grave and we won't leave until we know the truth," said 20-year-old mechanic Ismael Sawadogo among a crowd of people waiting on dark brown earth outside the cemetery. "I was not born when Sankara died but I heard that he was righteous and loves justice."
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At the time of the 1987 coup, Compaore said troops loyal to him uncovered a plot by Sankara to arrest and then execute Compaore and two other members of the ruling National Revolutionary Council.
When troops entered the government compound, Sankara pulled out a light machine gun and a pistol and died in an exchange of fire, Compaore said in reports from that year.
Workers with pickaxes and shovels were seen starting the exhumation this morning under tents.
"The exhumations have started," Benewinde Sankara, the lawyer for Sankara's family, who is not related to the former president, told The Associated Press by telephone from the cemetery.
He said that in principal they might begin exhuming Sankara's grave on Monday, but "the process is going to take time." Sankara's family will not attend, he said.