At least 10 killed in militant attack on Burkina village

Children standing in the shadow of a tree at a camp for internally displaced people in Barsalogho, Burkina Faso on Jan. 27, 2020. (AFP)
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Updated 28 January 2020
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At least 10 killed in militant attack on Burkina village

  • The attack was launched on Saturday and militants were still in the area on Monday
  • Extremist groups have killed almost 800 people in Burkina Faso and displaced 600,000 more since the start of 2015

OUAGADOUGOU: At least 10 men have been killed in a major attack on a village in Burkina Faso, which is in the grip of a bloody insurgency, security and local sources told AFP on Tuesday.

“We are talking of between 10 and 30 dead” in in the assault, which targeted the village of Silgadji in northern Soum province, said one of the sources, a security official.

The attack was launched on Saturday and militants were still in the area on Monday, a local resident in nearby Bourzanga town told AFP by phone, citing accounts from those who had fled.

“The terrorists surrounded the people at the village market, before separating them into two groups. The men were executed and the women were ordered to leave the village,” the source said.

The security source said: “Security teams are trying to get to the site but access to the village has probably been booby-trapped with homemade mines, and they are having to proceed carefully.”

Extremist groups have killed almost 800 people in Burkina Faso and displaced 600,000 more since the start of 2015, when extremist violence began to spread from neighboring Mali.

The Sahel country is one of the most impoverished in the world.

Its army is ill-equipped and poorly trained to deal with the threat although in recent months commanders claim to have killed roughly 100 jihadists.

There are 4,500 French troops deployed in the region, as well as a 13,000-strong UN peacekeeping force in Mali, backing the forces of the “G5 Sahel” anti-terror group — Burkina Faso, Chad, Mali, Mauritania and Niger.


UN rights chief: World must not ‘revert to violence as an organizing principle’

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UN rights chief: World must not ‘revert to violence as an organizing principle’

  • ‘The world cannot stand by as the edifice of international humanitarian and human rights law is dismantled before our eyes’
GENEVA: The UN rights chief voiced alarm Friday at the normalization of the use of force to resolve disputes, warning that conflicts create “a human rights wasteland.”
“We must not revert to violence as an organizing principle,” Volker Turk said as he provided an update on rights situations around the world to the United Nations Human Rights Council.
“The world cannot stand by as the edifice of international humanitarian and human rights law is dismantled before our eyes.”