Burkina Faso’s junta leader expresses contempt for “cowardice” of Jihadist rebels
Burkina Faso’s junta leader on Tuesday lashed out at the “cowardice” of the country’s jihadist rebels after local and security sources reported at least 10 civilian deaths in two attacks. ALSO READ: Ghana accused of deporting 500 Burkina nationals: UN agency Residents of Nouna, local capital of Kossi province in the west, contacted by telephone, said […]
Burkina Faso’s junta leader on Tuesday lashed out at the “cowardice” of the country’s jihadist rebels after local and security sources reported at least 10 civilian deaths in two attacks.
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Residents of Nouna, local capital of Kossi province in the west, contacted by telephone, said shells hit the town late Monday.
“The toll is six dead and four wounded,” one resident said.
Nouna has in recent months become a refuge for thousands of people who have fled repeated jihadist assaults on their homes.
A security source confirmed the attack on Nouna to AFP, saying “fragments of rockets were found in the area”.
The same evening some 400 kilometres (250 miles) to the south, Tondoura, near the border with Ivory Coast, also came under attack, a local official told AFP asking not to be named.
JUNTA
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“Terrorists attacked the village,” he said. “Some villagers, armed with rifles, tried to intervene but were quickly overrun.
“We have at least four dead, some wounded and various physical damage.”
Several locals said that for more than a month people have been forced to seek shelter from suspected jihadists in the nearby towns of Niangoloko and Banfora.
Junta leader Captain Ibrahim Traore, who seized power in a coup in September last year, denounced the jihadists for their “cowardice” and admitted “increasingly frequent attacks against civilians”.
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Speaking during a meeting with representatives of women’s associations from across the West African country, Traore also lashed out at the “imperialists” he said “imposed this war”.
An economic structural adjustment programme by the International Monetary Fund, implemented in the 1990s, was “a way of weakening our armies. They succeeded”, he said.
Burkina Faso’s ruling military junta faces a jihadist insurgency that swept in from neighbouring Mali in 2015.
Anger within the military at failures to roll back the insurgency sparked two coups last year.
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More than 10,000 civilians, troops and police have died in the violence, according to an NGO count, while at least two million people have been displaced.
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