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News ID: 101021
Publish Date : 14 March 2022 - 22:07

Takfiri Militants Kill Dozens in Burkina Faso

OUAGADOUGOU (Reuters) -- Armed militants killed at least eight people who were collecting water in a town in northern Burkina Faso on Monday morning, its mayor said, bringing the total killed in three days of violence in the restive area above 30.
Monday’s attack took place in Arbinda, in the province of Soum, which has suffered several deadly raids by takfiri militants linked to Al-Qaeda and Daesh that for years have sought to gain control over a swathe of arid terrain where Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger meet.
Mayor Boureima Werem told Reuters insurgents have been targeting water towers and pumps in recent weeks, in an apparent new tactic.
In separate incidents in northern Burkina Faso, at least 15 people, including 13 military police officers, were killed in Namentenga province on Sunday, the military police said, and on Saturday, nine people were killed in an assault on an informal gold mine in the province of Oudalan, a security source said.
A campaign of violence has already killed thousands of people and forced more than 2 million to flee their homes in the Sahel region south of the Sahara Desert. Killings have persisted despite the presence of thousands of foreign troops, undermining faith in elected governments in the region.
Frustration over the lack of government control led to protests in Burkina Faso that culminated in a military coup in January. A military junta in Mali took power in August 2020.
Turmoil in the Sahel started when militants took over Mali’s desert north in 2012, prompting France to intervene the following year in an attempt to push them back. But the insurgents have regrouped in recent years and seized territory.
At least 53 people died in western Ethiopia after an unidentified armed group attacked a civilian convoy and its military escort in a region plagued by ethnic violence, a rights body appointed by the government said on Sunday.
The previously unreported attack occurred on March 2 in Metekel, in the Benishangul-Gumuz region, the Ethiopian Human Rights Commission said.
Eleven more people were killed the following day - including one who was burned alive - as security forces rounded up suspects and carried out summary killings, according to the rights group.
The commission investigated the incident after a video posted on social media on Friday showed armed men, some in military uniforms, using a stick to poke a man back onto a burning pile of bodies after he tried to escape. The government said on Saturday it would act against the perpetrators.