Privacy Rights/History/Country sources/Burkina Faso: Difference between revisions

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|pageLevel=Breakout
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|breakout=Burkina Faso
|breakout=Burkina Faso
|contents=The [[Probable year::1991]]  Burkina Faso Constitution protects privacy rights in Article 6. It reads, “The residence, the domicile, private and family life, [and] the secrecy of correspondence of every person, are inviolable. It can only be infringed according to the forms and in the cases specified by the law” (Constitute Project, “Burkina Faso [[Probable year::1991]]  rev. [[Probable year::2015]]” ).
|contents=The [[Probable year:: 1991]]  Burkina Faso Constitution protects privacy rights in Article 6. It reads, “The residence, the domicile, private and family life, [and] the secrecy of correspondence of every person, are inviolable. It can only be infringed according to the forms and in the cases specified by the law” (Constitute Project, “Burkina Faso [[Probable year:: 1991]]  rev. [[Probable year:: 2015]]” ).


https://constituteproject.org/constitution/Burkina_Faso_[[Probable year::2015]]? lang=en
https://constituteproject.org/constitution/Burkina_Faso_[[Probable year:: 2015]]? lang=en




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}}

Revision as of 22:09, 28 December 2022

What is the oldest written source in this country that mentions this right?

Burkina Faso

The 1991 Burkina Faso Constitution protects privacy rights in Article 6. It reads, “The residence, the domicile, private and family life, [and] the secrecy of correspondence of every person, are inviolable. It can only be infringed according to the forms and in the cases specified by the law” (Constitute Project, “Burkina Faso 1991 rev. 2015” ).

https://constituteproject.org/constitution/Burkina_Faso_2015? lang=en