New Era

Burkina Faso protesters demand end to attacks

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OUAGADOUGO­U - Thousands of protesters in Burkina Faso on Saturday demanded greater government action to counter jihadist attacks, as the armed forces hailed recent success against militants.

The protesters gathered in Kaya, the capital of Burkina Faso’s Centre-North region, waving placards reading “No to growing insecurity” and “We want to cultivate our fields in peace”.

The latest demonstrat­ion follows an attack on a police unit that claimed the lives of 11 officers last Monday, protest organiser Boukari Ouedraogo told AFP.

“We no longer want planes to bring back the bodies of our husbands,” said Aguiratou Sawadogo, the wife of a soldier. There were reports of similar demonstrat­ions elsewhere, while the opposition on Friday called for marches nationwide to “protest against the deteriorat­ion of the security situation and demand strong measures”.

On 12 June, several thousand people demonstrat­ed in Dori, in northern Burkina Faso, to denounce the inaction of authoritie­s after a massacre in the village of Solhan.

At least 120 people died in the attack during the night of 4 June. Local sources said 160 people died.

The armies of Burkina Faso and neighborin­g Niger had earlier hailed the results of joint operations against jihadist forces that have plagued the impoverish­ed West African region in recent years. In a joint statement on Saturday, the armies said they had killed more than 100 “terrorists” two weeks into a coordinate­d campaign along their common border. Operations involving several hundred soldiers from each army had destroyed around 100 motorbikes and other vehicles used by jihadists, as well as capturing or destroying weapons, they said. “These results have lived up to our expectatio­ns,” said General Salifou Modi, chief of staff of Niger’s army, during a visit to a military camp at Dori, the capital of the Sahel region in northern Burkina Faso. A number of jihadists had also been arrested, he added. The operation has focused on Tera and Torodi in Niger, as well as Dori, Mansia and Diapaga in Burkina Faso.

“In these areas, the population­s will be left in peace - at least for a while,” said General Moise Miningou, chief of staff of the Burkinabe army. “We think that is what is essential.

“We are poor countries and our future lies in being able to pool our meagre resources,” he added.

That way, he said, “we will get much better results. That’s what has been done and we don’t mean to stop so far down the right track.” The two countries have had to contend with repeated attacks from jihadists since 2015, which have claimed hundreds of lives and forced thousands to flee their homes.

The attacks have been attributed to groups affiliated to the Islamic State organisati­on or to Al Qaeda.

 ?? Photo: Reuters ?? Enough… A massacre in northeast Burkina Faso, in which more than 130 people were killed earlier this month,was carried out mostly by children between the ages of 12 and 14, the UN and the government said. Protesters on Saturday demanded greater government action to counter attacks.
Photo: Reuters Enough… A massacre in northeast Burkina Faso, in which more than 130 people were killed earlier this month,was carried out mostly by children between the ages of 12 and 14, the UN and the government said. Protesters on Saturday demanded greater government action to counter attacks.

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