42 Killed As Suspected Jihadists Attack Burkina

No fewer than 32 defence volunteers and 10 soldiers have been confirmed dead after suspected jihadist attacks in insurgency-hit northern Burkina Faso, officials said on Monday.

A detachment of soldiers and civilian volunteers “was the target of an attack by unidentified armed men on Saturday… at about 4:00 pm,” near Aorema village, the Ouahigouya governorate said in a statement.

The army said the death toll was 40 — eight soldiers and 32 defence volunteers, adding that ‘at least 50 terrorists’ were ‘neutralised’ in the counter-attack, including a number killed in air strikes.

Africa Today News, New York reports that on Sunday, there was ‘another attack targeting the military detachment of Kongoussi (Bam province, North Central region)’, according to the same source, who reported “’two soldiers’ killed and ‘about 20 terrorists neutralised’.

The governorate of the northern region said that 33 people wounded in the first attack were “in stable condition” and currently being taken care of in the regional capital.

According to a security source, the detachment targeted by Saturday’s attack was charged with ensuring “the security of the Ouahigouya airfield that was targeted”.

Read Also: Scores Killed In ‘Barbaric’ Burkina Faso Jihadist Attacks

“Heavy fighting did indeed take place yesterday (Saturday) night” for “almost two hours,” said a local.

He also claimed that “several air strikes targeted positions of suspected jihadists” on Friday.

Burkina Faso’s military junta had declared Thursday a “general mobilisation” to give the state “all necessary means” to combat a string of bloody attacks blamed on jihadists affiliated with Al-Qaeda and the Islamic State group.

Details of the plan were not disclosed, though a security source told AFP it would include “a state of emergency for the affected territories”.

Authorities also issued an “advisory” that gives the president “the right to requisition people, goods and services and the right to restrain certain civil liberties”, according to another security source.

On Tuesday, the defence minister called for current and retired military personnel to hand in unused uniforms to help outfit army soldiers.

Recall that last week, 44 civilians were reported killed by “armed terrorist groups” in two villages in the northeast, near the Niger border.

It was one of the deadliest attacks against civilians since Captain Ibrahim Traore came to power last September, after 51 soldiers were killed in February at Deou, in the far north.

Africa Today News, New York

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