Sahel Edition

Sahel: Attack on army unit in Deou, Burkina Faso claims two troops and JihadistsF

Posted On 14 September 2022

Number of times this article was read : 572

Two soldiers died and a dozen “terrorists” were killed on Monday during an attack against a military detachment in Burkina Faso’s jihadist-hit north, the army said. The landlocked African state is in the grip of a seven-year-old insurgency that has claimed more than 2,000 lives and forced some 1.4 million people to leave their homes. The army said in a statement that a “complex attack targeted the military detachment of Deou” in the Sahel region on Monday morning, when “attackers tried to infiltrate their security apparatus”.

The statement said that after the attack, there were “two fallen soldiers and a dozen wounded… on the enemy side, a dozen soldiers were neutralised, weapons and motorcycles were recovered”. Military statements often use the word “neutralised” to indicate those killed. Although the army statement did not give more details about the attack, the phrase “complex attack” generally refers to the combined use of explosives and weapons. Reinforcements are on the way to the area, the military said.

Burkina Faso has been facing increasingly frequent and deadly attacks by jihadist groups affiliated to Al-Qaeda or the so-called Islamic State, targeting civilians and soldiers since 2015.  Earlier this month at least 35 civilians were killed and 37 wounded when an IED blast struck a convoy carrying supplies between Djibo and Bourzanga in the restive north. The following day at least nine people, seven civilians and two soldiers, were killed in two separate attacks by suspected jihadists. With more than 40 percent of the country outside government control, Burkina’s ruling junta, which seized power in January, has declared the fight against the insurgency a top priority.

AFP

More on the Sahel

Flashpoints: In Southern Chad, A Local Clash Reveals Deeper Fragility$

Clashes near the town of Korbol in southern Chad on January 13, 2026, left soldiers and rebel fighters dead after the army issued a 48‑hour ultimatum to the Movement for Peace, Reconciliation and Development. The incident barely registered internationally, yet it captures a familiar cycle in Chad’s politics: armed groups rejecting disarmament, a government relying on military pressure, and border regions absorbing the costs. Looking at Korbol helps explain how under‑reported local flashpoints quietly sustain instability across the country.

Local Conflicts: State-Imposed Land Pact Struggles to Calm Tensions in Brakna, Mauritania$

Local Conflicts: State-Imposed Land Pact Struggles to Calm Tensions in Brakna, Mauritania$

Authorities in Mauritania’s Brakna region have forced a truce between rival farming communities after deadly clashes over fertile land in the Waalo zone. The agreement, signed in Aleg under the authority of the regional governor, halts direct confrontations and routes all complaints through the administration, but accusations of bias and political interference show that trust in the state’s land governance remains badly shaken.

Niger Airport Attack Deepens Sahel’s Security and Diplomatic Strains$

An overnight assault on the air base embedded in Niamey’s international airport has pushed Niger’s crisis into the capital, wounding soldiers and damaging civilian aircraft. The United States has ordered non‑essential diplomatic staff to leave, while other governments tighten “avoid all travel” warnings, signaling a broader reassessment of risk. As Niamey accuses foreign states and militants claim responsibility, the episode underscores how security, regime politics, and great‑power rivalry now collide in the Sahel.

The North Africa Journal's WhatsApp Group
.
Shield and Alert Sahel