Death of Pierre Claver Damiba, Celebration of Labor Day and celebration of the SNC on the front pages of daily newspapers

Today's publications echo the death of former minister Pierre Claver Damiba, the check for 50 million from LONAB given to the organizing committee of the SNC and the commemoration of the day of May 1 by the unions. 'World Labor Day: unions demand more security' reads Sidwaya on his headline. The state daily reports that the trade union action unit, trade union centers and independent unions invited workers to a march meeting yesterday at the Labor Exchange on the occasion of World Labor Day. The daily L'Observateur Paalga, however, continues that there was certainly the meeting but not the traditional march to hand over the demand platform to the government. Reading the private daily Le Pays, according to union officials, the march was banned by the government. For the private newspaper, in their request, they asked, among other things, for more security for the populations and their property. In another register, the dean of private daily newspapers writes on his front page: 'SNC 2024: LONAB strengthen s the organizing committee by 40 bricks'. The colleague reports that with this jackpot from LONAB, several questions still pending will find the beginning of a solution for the smooth running of the biennial. For its part, the public newspaper indicates that during a visit to the site of the communities' village, the Minister in charge of Culture, Jean Emmanuel Ouédraogo declared that this site constituted historic moments of communion, fraternity and above all of expression of cultural proximity between countries. From another angle, Le Pays headlines on its front page: 'Former minister Pierre Claver Damiba is no more'. The newspaper informs that Pierre Laver Damiba died yesterday at the Bogodogo University Hospital at the age of 87. The Paalga Observer continues that this is a loss for the Damiba family and the great Koupéla but also for Burkina and Africa, judging by the national and international career of the deceased/ As for Sidwaya, he returned to the career of the deceased, moving from his posit ion as Minister of Planning and Public Works in 1966, to his last function, that of international consultant. Source: Burkina Information Agency