Long-time President
Blaise Compaore was forced to resign on 31 October 2014 due to unrest related to his moves to eliminate term limits so that he could run for President again. Initially, the military under Lieutenant Colonel
Isaac Zida took power, but it faced international pressure to hand over power to civilian authorities. On 17 November 2014, Kafando was appointed as transitional President of Burkina Faso by the designation council. and he appointed Zida as Prime Minister on 19 November. In the transitional government, appointed on 23 November, Kafando held the foreign affairs portfolio. On 19 July 2015, amidst tensions between the military and Prime Minister Zida, Kafando stripped Zida of the defense portfolio and took over the portfolio himself. He also took over the security portfolio, previously held by Zida's ally
Auguste Denise Barry. As part of the same reshuffle, he appointed
Moussa Nébié to replace himself as Minister of Foreign Affairs. On 16 September 2015, two days after a recommendation from the National Reconciliation and Reforms Commission to disband the
Regiment of Presidential Security (RSP), members of the RSP
detained President Kafando and Prime Minister Zida. The military chief of staff, Brigadier General
Pingrenoma Zagré, called on members of the RSP to lay down their arms, promising in a statement that they would not be harmed if they surrendered peacefully. Kafando was believed to remain under house arrest until 21 September, when he was reported to have arrived at the residence of the French ambassador. The regular army issued an ultimatum to the RSP to surrender by the morning of 22 September. Kafando was reinstalled as President at a ceremony on 23 September in the presence of
ECOWAS leaders. == Post-presidential career ==