A constitutional referendum was held in
Burkina Faso on 9 June 1991. It followed the
1987 military coup, and would restore multi-party democracy. The new
constitution retained the
presidential system of government, created a
bicameral parliament, and limited the President to two seven-year terms. It was approved by 92.83% of voters with a 48.8% turnout.[1]
A constitutional referendum was held in
Burkina Faso on 9 June 1991. It followed the
1987 military coup, and would restore multi-party democracy. The new
constitution retained the
presidential system of government, created a
bicameral parliament, and limited the President to two seven-year terms. It was approved by 92.83% of voters with a 48.8% turnout.[1]