No fewer than six people were killed in northern Burkina Faso in several attacks attributed to jihadists, local and military sources have confirmed to newsmen.
Africa Today News, New York had earlier reported that several hundred people took to the streets of Burkina over the weekend to protest the wave of jihadist attacks engulfing the poor West African nation.
‘A terrorist attack cost six civilians their lives in Alga,’ a town in the province of Bam, on Saturday a security source told reporters on Monday morning.
‘The terrorists, who came in large numbers, attacked the (nearby) village of Boulounga and the gold-mining site of Alga’, a resident told newsmen, confirming the same toll.
‘They set fire to houses and looted property on the gold-mining site”, he said, adding that ‘at least four people’ had been injured.
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Residents were leaving the village on Sunday, heading towards the large town of Kaya, some 100 kilometres (60 miles) away, he said.
A second security source said another ‘deadly attack’ also took place on Saturday night in Seytenga, also in the north of the country, near the Niger border.
There were ‘several victims’, the source said, without giving further details.
Africa Today News, New York reports that people in Seytenga fled to Dori, a town in northern Burkina Faso.
A local politician in Dori confirmed ‘the massive arrival of more than 2,000 people in the town”, adding that “the authorities and people are working hard to set up a site to receive the displaced’.
On Thursday, suspected jihadists killed 11 police in Seytenga, the army said.
A gendarme brigade came under a “terrorist attack”, the military said, adding that they died along with “several terrorists”.
One of the poorest countries in the world, Burkina Faso has been gripped by an almost seven-year insurgency launched by jihadists crossing from neighbouring Mali.
More than 2,000 people have died and some 1.8 million people have fled their homes.
Attacks have been concentrated in the north and east of the country.
The nation has been under military rule since January, when colonels angered at failures to roll back the insurgency ousted the elected president, Roch Marc Christian Kabore.
After a relative lull, jihadist attacks resumed, inflicting a toll of more than 200 civilian and military deaths over the past three months.