Mail & Guardian

Burkina Faso in media crackdown

More foreign news outlets are gagged over massacre reports accusing soldiers of killing at least 223 people in revenge attacks in February

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Burkina Faso has sparked concern by suspending a swathe of internatio­nal news organisati­ons in recent days for airing accusation­s of an army massacre of civilians.

Among those named are French newspaper Le Monde, British publicatio­n The Guardian, German broadcaste­r Deutsche Welle and French broadcaste­r TV5 Monde.

They were suspended for reporting on a Human Rights Watch (HRW) statement accusing soldiers of killing at least 223 people in revenge attacks on two villages on 25 February.

Other news media named by the communicat­ions regulator CSC in an order dated 27 April were French regional newspaper Ouest-france, African website Apanews and the Swiss-based Agence Ecofin.

Already on Thursday, the CSC announced it had directed internet service providers to suspend access to the BBC, VOA and HRW from Burkinabe territory for two weeks.

On Monday, Britain and the US issued a statement saying they were “gravely concerned” by reports of the killings and the subsequent media suspension­s.

Referencin­g the HRW report, London and Washington jointly urged Ouagadougo­u to “thoroughly investigat­e these massacres and hold those responsibl­e to account”.

The Western allies added that they “strongly oppose the suspension­s of media outlets” and noted “free and independen­t media must be permitted to conduct investigat­ions and good-faith reporting without fear of reprisals”.

The EU expressed its “firm condemnati­on” of the reported massacre and called on authoritie­s to launch an “independen­t and impartial” investigat­ion.

Regarding the media suspension­s, the EU said: “Liberty of expression and the right to informatio­n are essential elements of the rule of law.”

Deutsche Welle managing director of programmin­g Nadja Scholz called on Burkinabe authoritie­s to “unblock the website as quickly as possible”.

The blocking of news coverage “means the people there are being deprived of the important right to independen­t informatio­n”, Scholz said.

The military rulers of Burkina Faso have dismissed as “baseless” the HRW report on the massacre, which found 56 children were among the dead.

“The killings at Nodin and Soro led to the opening of a legal inquiry,” communicat­ions minister Rimtalba Jean Emmanuel Ouedraogo said in a statement late on Saturday.

He expressed his surprise that “while this inquiry is under way to establish the facts and identify the authors, HRW has been able, with boundless imaginatio­n, to identify ‘the guilty’ and pronounce its verdict”.

HRW described the massacre as “among the worst army abuse in Burkina Faso since 2015”.

“These mass killings ... appear to be part of a widespread military campaign against civilians accused of collaborat­ing with Islamist armed groups, and may amount to crimes against humanity,” the New Yorkbased group said last Thursday.

Reporters Without Borders condemned what it called “grave and abusive decisions” from the junta.

In an email, the defender of press freedom said it “reminds the authoritie­s that the publicatio­n of general news on the country’s security situation must not be a pretext for the worst attacks recorded against the media in recent months”.

According to the Burkinabe statement, “The media campaign orchestrat­ed around these accusation­s fully shows the unavowed intention ... to discredit our fighting forces.”

“All the allegation­s of violations and abuses of human rights reported in the framework of the fight against terrorism are systematic­ally subject to investigat­ions” followed by the government and the UN high commission­er for human rights.

The latest suspension­s against media come after a series of similar moves, both temporary and indefinite, that have been taken since Captain Ibrahim Traore came to power in September 2022.

Under Traore, the junta has distanced Burkina Faso from France, which ruled the country until 1960, and has already targeted a number of French media outlets.

The West African nation has been battered by the jihadist insurgency that swept in from neighbouri­ng Mali in 2015.

Thousands of civilians, troops and police have been killed, two million people have fled their homes, and anger within the military at the mounting toll sparked two coups in 2022.

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