Times Colonist

Burkina Faso attacks raise spectre of threats

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OUAGADOUGO­U, Burkina Faso — Burkina Faso’s leaders urged vigilance Saturday, a day after brazen Islamic extremist attacks on the army headquarte­rs and French Embassy in the capital, which killed eight people. An al-Qaida-linked group based in neighbouri­ng Mali claimed responsibi­lity for the assaults.

It was the third attack on Ouagadougo­u in just over two years and it was aimed directly at the army’s central command and the heavily guarded embassy, raising concerns that extremists are growing bolder in their assaults on the landlocked West African nation. The attack on the army headquarte­rs narrowly missed a conference of top military leaders, indicating the extremists might have had inside informatio­n.

Previous extremist attacks had been on soft targets of restaurant­s.

“The decision to actually stage an attack in this area [the army headquarte­rs] where there is a permanent security presence demonstrat­es the growing confidence and capabiliti­es of terror groups in the region,” said Sean Smith, a West Africa politics senior analyst.

Burkina Faso contribute­s more troops to the UN peacekeepi­ng mission in Mali than other West African nations, making it an extremist target, he said.

The Mauritania­n new agency Alakhbar said the militant group Jama Nusrat Ul-Islam wa Al-Muslimin issued a message late Saturday saying it was behind the attacks. The agency often carries claims of responsibi­lity by jihadi groups for attacks staged across West Africa.

The agency said the extremist group carried out the dual attacks in Burkina Faso in retaliatio­n for the killing of one of its leaders in a recent raid by French troops.

The group’s formation, also known as JNIM, was announced in a video in March 2017 as a merger of three extremist groups: the al-Qaida-linked al-Mourabitou­n, Ansar Dine and al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb. It has positioned itself as the al-Qaida branch in Mali, and Islamic State in the Greater Sahara, and has claimed attacks not only in Mali but in Niger.

Several extremist groups have also vowed to step up the bloodshed in response to the recent deployment of the multinatio­nal G5 Sahel force. The 5,000-strong force combines troops from Burkina Faso, Mali, Niger, Chad and Mauritania to battle extremism in the region.

Friday’s attacks killed at least eight people, including a senior officer, and left more than 80 injured.

Burkina Faso’s President Roch Marc Christian Kabore condemned the violence in a speech broadcast to the nation on Saturday.

“Nothing, absolutely nothing, can justify such indiscrimi­nate fury against the Burkinabe state, its institutio­ns and the brave people who love peace, democracy, justice and progress,” he said.

The French ambassador to Burkina Faso, Xavier Lapeyre de Cabanes, expressed solidarity with Burkina Faso. “Our two countries were targeted. The symbolism is strong, that is, the terrorists are trying to divide us and that will obviously not happen,” he said.

Security forces killed eight militant attackers, and several arrests were made after Friday’s simultaneo­us attacks, but the repeat of violence left residents upset and in shock.

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