Sahel Edition

Bourkina Faso: 50 insurgents killed in Loroum as they tried to ambush food convoyF

Posted On 1 June 2023

Number of times this article was read : 925

Two civilians and at least 50 “terrorists” were killed in jihadist-hit northern Burkina Faso when a food convoy being escorted by troops was ambushed, the armed forces said on Thursday. The incident happened on Wednesday near Tibou in Loroum province bordering Mali, when the convoy of trucks came under attack by around 100 armed men, it said.

Two military units that had been escorting the convoy counter-attacked, “neutralising at least 50” assailants, it said in a statement. Two civilians who were on the convoy were also killed. The military’s account could not be independently verified.

The landlocked Sahel state is struggling with a seven-year-old jihadist insurgency that began in neighbouring Mali. More than 10,000 civilians and military have died, according to NGO estimates, while more than two million people have fled their homes. Around 40 people were killed at the weekend in two attacks near Bourasso.

Burkina has been ruled since 2022 by a junta led by Captain Ibrahim Traore, who has vowed to recapture the 40 percent of the country’s territory that remains outside the government’s control. He has also promised a return to democracy with presidential elections by July 2024.

On Tuesday Prime Minister Apollinaire Kyelem de Tambela told parliament that the authorities would “never negotiate (with the jihadists), either over Burkina Faso’s territorial integrity or its sovereignty.” “The only negotiations that matter with these armed bandits are those taking place on the battlefield,” he said. But de Tambela suggested that attacks could see the electoral timeframe pushed back. “We cannot organise elections without security. If you have a magic wand to ensure we can hold elections as soon as possible, we’d do it,” he said.

AFP

More on the Sahel

Mali: Russian-linked Forces Under Drone Pressure in Northern Mali

Armed groups in northern Mali are shifting toward repeatable FPV drone strikes against Malian army and Russian-linked Africa Corps positions. Recent attacks in Anéfis and Aguelhok indicate a tactical evolution that challenges the assumption of operational sanctuary in the Kidal region.

West Africa: Jihadist Attacks Intensify in Northern Benin Amid Cross-Border Insurgency Pressure$

Jihadist attacks in northern Benin have intensified in recent weeks, with militants linked to JNIM claiming a deadly assault on a military position near the Niger border and carrying out additional raids on security posts along the country’s volatile frontiers with Burkina Faso and Nigeria. The violence underscores how northern Benin has become part of a wider cross-border insurgency spilling south from the central Sahel, even as authorities bolster Operation Mirador and try to prevent armed groups from entrenching themselves on Beninese soil.