China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Ambush on convoy kills 37 in Burkina Faso

Deadliest attack in five years underscore­s rapidly deteriorat­ing security situation

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OUAGADOUGO­U, Burkina Faso — An ambush on a convoy transporti­ng employees of a Canadian mining company in Burkina Faso killed 37 people on Wednesday, the deadliest attack in nearly five years of extremist violence in the West African country.

The impoverish­ed Sahel country has been struggling to quell a rising extremist revolt that has claimed hundreds of lives since early 2015.

On Wednesday morning, “unidentifi­ed armed individual­s” ambushed five buses carrying local employees, contractor­s and suppliers of the mining company Semafo Inc, said Saidou Sanou, the governor of the country’s Est region.

As well as the 37 civilians killed, 60 were wounded, he added.

That toll does not include an unknown number of the security forces who may have been killed in the attack. The toll was likely to rise as there are a large number of people still unaccounte­d for, according to a local security source.

No one immediatel­y claimed responsibi­lity for the attack, but extremists have staged dozens of attacks on churches and public officials across the north of Burkina Faso in the past few years.

Sylvain Leclerc, spokeswoma­n for the Canadian Foreign Ministry, said there were no reports of Canadian citizens among the casualties. She added that the Canadian government condemns the attack and supports efforts to bring peace to Burkina Faso.

In a statement, mine owner Semafo said the five buses being escorted by the military were approximat­ely 40 kilometers from the Boungou gold mine in Tapoa Province when they were ambushed.

A security source said “a military vehicle that was escorting the convoy hit an explosive device”.

“Two buses carrying workers were then fired upon,” the source said on condition of anonymity.

Burkina Faso’s government said the gunmen had conducted a “complex attack”, adding that defense and security forces had launched a relief operation and were searching the area.

It was the third deadly attack on Canadian firm Semafo, which operates two mines in Burkina Faso, in 15 months.

“We are actively working with all levels of authoritie­s to ensure the ongoing safety and security of our employees, contractor­s and suppliers,” Semafo said in a statement, offering condolence­s to the families of the victims.

The mine itself, it added, remains secure and its operations had not been affected.

Two attacks on convoys carrying Boungou mine employees in August and December last year killed 11 people.

The company blamed “armed bandits” for last year’s attacks, and subsequent­ly reinforced its armed escorts.

The Burkina Faso government this year asked mining companies to make their own arrangemen­ts to transport their employees, according to sources close to the miners.

Burkina Faso’s northern provinces have been battling a nearly fiveyear wave of extremist violence that originates from neighborin­g Mali.

The attacks — typically hit-andrun raids on villages, road mines and suicide bombings — have claimed nearly 700 lives across the country since early 2015, according to an AFP count. Almost 500,000 people have also been forced to flee their homes.

The attacks have been claimed by a range of extremist groups, including al-Qaida and the Islamic State group.

Afflicted by violence

The country’s badly equipped, poorly trained and underfunde­d security forces have been unable to stem the violence, which has intensifie­d throughout 2019 to become almost daily.

The Sahel region, including Burkina Faso’s neighbors Mali and Niger, has been afflicted by the violence despite the presence of the regional G5 Sahel force as well as troops from France and the United States.

Burkina Faso’s previous deadliest attack was in January 2016, when extremists raided the Splendid Hotel and a cafe in the capital Ouagadougo­u, killing 30 people, around half of them foreign nationals.

In August this year, the army suffered its worst attack with 24 soldiers killed in an assault on a base in Koutougou, near the Mali border.

On Monday, an attack on a base in northern Burkina Faso killed at least five armed police officers and five civilians.

The country serves as a southern gateway into coastal West Africa, and regional leaders worry the extremists could be moving into Togo and Benin.

A military vehicle that was escorting the convoy hit an explosive device. Two buses carrying workers were then fired upon.” A Burkina Faso security source says on condition of anonymity

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