Burkina Faso military accused of massacre of 223 civilians in village attacks
MILITARY forces in Burkina Faso killed 223 civilians, including babies and many children, in attacks on two villages accused of co-operating with militants, Human Rights Watch said in a report.
The mass killings took place on February 25 in the country’s northern villages of Nondin and Soro, and some 56 children were among the dead, according to the report.
The human rights organisation called on the United Nations and the African Union to provide investigators and to support local efforts to bring those responsible to justice.
“The massacres in Nondin and Soro villages are just the latest mass killings of civilians by the Burkina Faso military in their counterinsurgency operations,” Human Rights Watch executive director, Tirana Hassan, said in a statement. “International assistance is critical to support a credible investigation into possible crimes against humanity.”
The once-peaceful nation has been ravaged by violence that has pitted jihadis linked to al-Qaeda and the Islamic State group against state-backed forces.
Both sides have targeted civilians caught in the middle, displacing more than two million people, of which over half are children.
Most attacks go unpunished and unreported in a nation run by a repressive leadership that silences perceived dissidents.
The HRW report provided a rare first-hand account of the killings by survivors amid a stark increase in civilian casualties by Burkina Faso’s security forces as the junta struggles to beat back a growing jihadi insurgency and attacks residents under the guise of counter-terrorism.
Earlier in April, The Associated Press verified accounts of a November 5 army attack on another village that killed at least 70 people.
The details were similar – the army blamed the villagers for cooperating with militants and massacred them, even babies.