Burkina Faso suspends radio networks for two weeks
OUAGADOUGOU: Burkina Faso has suspended the BBC and Voice of America radio networks from broadcasting for airing a rights report accusing the army of atacks on civilians in its batle against militants.
The British and US radio stations are the latest international media organisations to be targeted since Captain Ibrahim Traore seized power in the West African country in a September 2022 coup.
“The programmes of these two international radio networks broadcasting from Ouagadougou have been suspended for a period of two weeks,” the communications authority (CSC) announced late on Thursday.
It said the decision had been taken because BBC Africa and the VOA had aired and also published a report on their digital plaforms “accusing the Burkina army of abuses against the civilian population.”
The CSC said the report contained “hasty and biased declarations without tangible proof against the Burkinabe army.”
International NGO Human Rights Watch (HRW) said on Thursday soldiers in Burkina Faso’s extremist-hit north had killed at least 223 villagers, including 56 children, in two revenge atacks on Feb.25.
Burkinabe authorities, contacted by AFP, have not commented on the accusations.
The country has been batling atacks from groups linked to Al-qaeda and Daesh since a extremist insurgency swept in from neighbouring Mali in 2015.
Since then, around 20,000 people have been killed in Burkina Faso and around two million have been displaced.
The CSC said it had “directed” Internet service providers to suspend access to the sites and other digital plaforms of the BBC, VOA and HRW from Burkinabe territory.
It also said the “approach” of the BBC and VOA “undermines the cardinal principles of information processing in that it constitutes disinformation likely to bring discredit to the Burkinabe army.”
It said this could also create disturbances to public order.