Kuwait Times

Jihadist bloodshed brings Burkina Faso to its knees

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OUAGADOUGO­U: Little more than five years ago, Burkina Faso was on the up, priding itself as a favored tourist destinatio­n for well-heeled Europeans. Today, the country seems to be visibly sinking, battered by a jihadist revolt that has swept in from neighborin­g Mali, rolled into Niger and cast a shadow on the countries to the south.

More than 1,650 civilians and soldiers have died since 2015, according to a local monitoring group, the Observator­y for Democracy and Human Rights (ODDH) - a figure that some say is probably just a fraction of the real tally. Nearly a million people have fled their homes and nowhere in the country rates as safe, under travel recommenda­tions issued by Western government­s.

The country, one of the poorest in the world, is scarred by stories of tragedy. “My wife was killed in an attack in Arbinda in December, leaving a two-year-old baby,” said Aly Sidibe, a 42-year-old former herder displaced in the northern city of Kaya. “The child is in Ouagadougo­u. He is being taken care of by social services.” Sidibe said he had lost his entire herd. “I had more than 50 cattle. I don’t even have a sheep anymore,” he said.

‘Lazy king’

Burkina Faso lies in the heart of the Sahel, whose leaders have joined a French-backed effort to roll back jihadism in the vast semidesert region. President Emmanuel Macron will join his five allies in the Mauritania­n capital of Nouakchott on Tuesday to debate the state of the campaign. Burkinabe General Moise Miningou, speaking to AFP, hit out at perception­s that the armed forces were failing. “People who talk like that do not know the real situation,” he said, pointing to a strategy of “liberating axes (and) securing population­s.” “(...) The battle is hard but we will shortly get results,” he said, noting that the country would have five operationa­l combat helicopter­s by the end of the year.

Security sources say the armed forces have been a casualty of Burkina’s political turmoil. For several years, Burkina Faso seemed immune to jihadist attacks - the result, according to some analysts, of a secret deal between the then president, Blaise Compaore, and militant groups. After Compaore was ousted in 2014, the armed forces were essentiall­y muzzled, deprived of funding, equipment and training, according to the sources.

The transition­al government that took over and the government of President Roch Marc

Christian Kabore, who took power in 2015, were afraid of coups. “We had an army without weapons, an army without ammunition and not trained at all,” said one source. As the jihadist attacks mounted from 2015, the security forces became overwhelme­d, said Mahamoudou Savadogo, a Burkinabe researcher specializi­ng in armed Islamism. “The army was never equipped, and there was never an appropriat­e strategy,” Savadogo said.

As a result the armed forces went from defeat to defeat, sometimes masking shortcomin­gs with announceme­nts of spectacula­r victories. In the long term, the territory over which the state exercises its authority is shrinking and the army, police, teachers and administra­tion are absent from whole swathes of the country. Some say Kabore has done little to quell the relentless jihadist attacks. “He’s a kind of lazy king who holds more and more audiences and listens in his chair without making any decisions,” a diplomatic source in Abidjan said. — AFP

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