Ibrahim Traoré’s greatest weakness was his family. His enemies knew this. His 14-year-old sister, Aminata, disappeared one day while walking home from middle school in Ouagadougou. Security cameras had been hacked. Guards had been drugged.
When he found her in Europe’s darkest corners, he faced not just human traffickers, but the system that exploited his own country. And this time, the war would be fought not only in Burkina Faso but on the streets of Paris. At 3:30 p.m. that afternoon, everything was normal. Fourteen-year-old Aminata Traoré had just left Imam Malik Middle School in Ouagadougou’s safest neighborhood, under the scorching African sun. She had her school bag over her shoulder, clutching her math book tightly.
We have an exam tomorrow,” she said with a smile to her friend Fatima. “My brother will help me study as always.” She would take the 15-minute walk home. Safe streets, familiar faces, the same route every day.But Aminata never…..Read Full Story Here……………………………..