Burkina Faso: Gunmen Kill 18 In Attack, Force Many To Flee

The attack in Yattakou village also left one person severely wounded and displaced residents, local governor says.

Burkina Faso: Gunmen Kill 18 In Attack, Force Many To Flee
Security forces are battling to contain the violence that hit the country's north

 

 

A local official in the northern Burkina Faso has said at least 18 people were killed and one seriously wounded in an attack this very week that also caused “massive displacement”. Salfo Kabore, governor of Seno province located in conflict-hit Burkina Faso’s Sahel region, said unidentified gunmen carried out the attack on Monday

 

in Yattakou village. Many local residents fled towards also the capital of the Seytenga commune, while the wounded person was taken to hospital in Burkina Faso’s capital, Ouagadougou, Kabore said in a statement on Wednesday. The attack happened the same day that two 2 Spanish journalists and an Irish conservationist were killed and a Burkinabe soldier went missing when

 

 

their anti-poaching patrol was ambushed by rebels in the country’s east. While it is unclear who committed the attack in the Sahel region, a high-ranking security official told the media that it was likely carried out by fighters linked to ISIL who are known to operate in the area along the border with Niger. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorised to speak to the press.

 

 

We need help

In recent years, large parts of the western portion of the Sahel, a semi-arid region directly south of the Sahara Desert, have all been plagued by violence that involves multiple armed groups, military campaigns by national armies and the international partners as well as local militias. In the Burkina Faso, the conflict has also killed thousands of people, displaced more than one million

 

 

and created a worsening humanitarian crisis and this week’s attack in the country’s hard-hit Sahel region came as the rebels have ramped up attacks against the civilians and security forces, according to a statement by the government, which also said the terrorists have carried out acts of intimidation, looting, assassination on civilian populations and earlier this month in Seno

 

 

province’s Gorgadji town, fighters killed at least 10 local defence fighters, volunteers recruited by government to help the army, Hamidou Damboro Zango, the village chief told the media. Zango, whose son and nephew were also killed in the violence, said that even though Gorgadji is controlled by the army, rebels managed to enter at the night and steal people’s animals. When the

 

 

volunteer fighters tried to retrieve them the next day they were ambushed and killed, he said. “I’m sad. As a chief too, I can’t watch my people die,” said Zango. “We need help.” The region was plunged into conflict in 2012 when the armed groups overtook a rebellion by ethnic Tuareg separatists in the northern Mali. France led an intervention the next year to also beat back the armed

 

 

groups which scattered and regrouped before taking their campaign into central Mali in 2015 and then into neighbouring Niger and Burkina Faso. Earlier this week, the United Nations and NGOs warned that a record 29 million people in six countries in the Sahel were in need of humanitarian assistance in the face of “unparalleled” insecurity and growing hunger.