Ouagadougou – Twenty-eight bodies were found in northwest Burkina Faso at the weekend, the government said, as rights campaigners blamed a volunteer militia created to support the army’s battle against jihadists.
Attacks targeting the security forces and civilians have increased in recent months, especially in northern and eastern regions bordering jihadist-torn Mali and Niger.
“The government was informed of an incident at Nouna… during the night of December 30-31,” a government statement said late on Monday.
Preliminary reports “indicate 28 people killed,” it said, adding that an investigation had been opened in order to shed “full light” on what had happened, and urging calm.
But a rights group called the Collective of Communities against Impunity and Stigmatisation (CISC) pointed the finger at the Volunteers for the Defence of the Fatherland (VDP) – a civilian auxiliary force that supports the military in its seven-year-old fight against jihadists.
“Armed civilians claiming to be” VDP have been “freely carrying out organised looting and abuses targeting civilian populations on the basis of appearance and stigmatisation,” the CISC said.
The public prosecutor in Nouna, Armel Sama, said in a statement that “most of the victims, all of them males, were shot dead.”
The landlocked West African country is one of the poorest and most volatile nations in the world.
Since 2015, it has been grappling with an insurgency led by jihadists affiliated with Al-Qaeda and the Islamic State group that has killed tens of thousands and displaced around two million people.
Volunteer force
The VDP, set up in December 2019, comprises civilian volunteers who are given two weeks’ military training and then work alongside the army, typically carrying out surveillance, information-gathering or escort duties.
Commentators have long worried that the poorly-trained volunteers are easy targets for the jihadists — and may also dangerously inflame ethnic friction without proper controls.
The CISC said the weekend events in Nouna had begun with a reported “terrorist attack” on a local VDP headquarters.
Armed men then carried out “deadly attacks in reprisal,” it said. Victims said the assailants were VDP who were members of a traditional hunting community called the Dozo, according to the CISC.
CISC Secretary Daouda Diallo called on the authorities to pay “special attention” to the situation.
“Armed terrorist groups exploit these kinds of transgression to attract recruits among the public,” Diallo warned.
Three incidents of abduction and extrajudicial killings allegedly involving Dozo or VDP had occurred in the runup to the events at the weekend, CISC said.
Government spokesman Jean Emmanuel Ouedraogo said the “drama” at the weekend “unfolded at a time when Burkina Faso has launched an operation to mobilise the entire population in a united action in the fight against terrorism.”
In November, the authorities, backed by a patriotic campaign, launched a drive to recruit 50,000 VDP — 90,000 signed up.
The government is “fundamentally opposed to all forms of abuse or violations of human rights for whatever reasons,” the statement said.
Turmoil
The VDP has been in the brunt of losses suffered by the security forces in the face of the jihadist campaign.
Hundreds of volunteers have died, especially in ambushes or explosions caused by improvised explosive devices (IEDs) planted along roadsides.
The escalating toll among the army, police and VDP unleashed two military coups last year, launched by officers angered at failures to stem the bloodshed.
The latest strongman is Captain Ibrahim Traore, who on September 30 ousted Lieutenant-Colonel Paul-Henri Sandaogo Damiba.
Damiba had seized the helm in January 2022 from the last elected president, Roch Marc Christian Kabore.
On December 29, military prosecutors said they were probing a new attempt to “destabilise” the country.
They said they had arrested a chief warrant officer and a sergeant who according to a whistleblower had been in contact with Lieutenant-Colonel Emmanuel Zoungrana – a prominent officer who had been arrested in January 2022 and released in December.
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Source: AFP
Picture: Twitter/@macronniefafi
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