DOZENS DEAD IN ATTACKS ON BURKINA MILITARY HQ, FRENCH EMBASSY
Twin attacks on the French
embassy in Burkina Faso and the country's military headquarters Friday left
dozens dead or wounded, security sources said.
The apparently
coordinated attacks underlined the struggle the fragile West African nation
faces in containing a bloody and growing jihadist insurgency.
The government said
the attack on the military was a suicide car bombing, adding that a regional
anti-terrorism meeting may have been the target.
Eight members of the
armed forces were killed by the blast and the parallel attack on the French
embassy, while 80 were wounded, said Security Minister Clement Sawadogo. The
minister said eight attackers had been shot dead.
"The vehicle
was packed with explosives" and caused "huge damage", Sawadogo
said, adding that it was a "suicide" attack.
Three security
sources, two in France and one in West Africa, told AFP that at least 28 people
were killed in the attack on the military HQ alone.
French government
sources said there were no French casualties and described the situation in
Ouagadougou as "under control".
"Our country
was once again the target of dark forces," President Roch Marc Christian
Kabore said in a statement.
The violence began
mid-morning when heavy gunfire broke out in the centre of the Burkinabe capital
Ouagadougou.
Witnesses said five
armed men got out of a car and opened fire on passersby before heading towards
the French embassy.
At the same time,
the bomb went off near the headquarters of the Burkinabe armed forces and the
French cultural centre, about a kilometre (half a mile) from the site of the
first attack, other witnesses said.
Sawadogo said a
meeting of the G5 Sahel regional counter-terrorism force was supposed to have
been held at the headquarters but had been moved to another room.
"Perhaps it was
the target. We do not know at the moment. In any case the room was literally
destroyed by the explosion," said Sawadogo.
'STRENGTHEN OUR RESOLVE'
Officials from
Burkina Faso, Chad, Mali, Mauritania and Niger were at the meeting,
representing the G5 Sahel nations who have launched a joint military force to
combat jihadists on the southern rim of the Sahara.
The completed force
will be composed of 5,000 troops and aims to be fully operational by the end of
the month.
It has already
carried out operations against jihadist fighters with help from the French
army.
Mahamadou Issoufou,
Niger's president and the current chair of the G5-Sahel, said Friday's attacks
"will only strengthen the resolve of the G5-Sahel and its allies in the
fight against terrorism".
"More than ever,
Africa and the international community must mobilize to stand together against
this barbarity that must be permanently neutralized," added Guinea's
President Alpha Conde in a statement.
French President
Emmanuel Macron telephoned his Burkinabe counterpart Kabore to express
solidarity and send his condolences to the families of the slain security force
members, his office said.
Macron, who made a
high-profile visit to Burkina Faso in November, said the attacks
"illustrate once more the threat weighing on the entire Sahel
region".
Foreign Minister
Jean-Yves Le Drian said damage to the embassy was minor, and the mission would
be able to resume normal operations "in two or three days".
He paid tribute to
the Burkinabe forces defending the embassy: "It's thanks to the courage of
these troops and gendarmes that no one was hurt."
'OVERTONES OF TERRORISM'
There was no
immediate claim of responsibility but Burkina Information Minister Remis
Fulgance Dandjinou said the attack "has strong overtones of
terrorism".
Burkina Faso has a
history of military-backed coups as well as of jihadist attacks.
The insurgency has
caused thousands of deaths, prompted tens of thousands to flee their homes and
dealt crippling blows to economies that are already among the poorest in the
world.
On August 13 last
year, two assailants opened fire on a restaurant on Ouagadougou's main avenue,
killing 19 people and wounding 21. No one has so far claimed responsibility.
On January 15 2016,
30 people, including six Canadians and five Europeans, were killed in a
jihadist attack on a hotel and restaurant in the city centre.
That attack was
claimed by the Al-Qaeda-linked Al-Murabitoun group, which was led by one-eyed
Algerian jihadist Mokhtar Belmokhtar.
A group called
Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) also said some of its militants were
involved.
JOINT SAHEL FORCE
France, the former
colonial power in the Sahel region, has deployed 4,000 troops to support the five-country
G5 joint force.
On February 21, two
members of the French counter-terrorism force were killed by a landmine near
Mali's border with Niger and Burkina Faso. Twelve French soldiers have died
since the campaign, called Operation Barkhane, was launched in August 2014.
The United Nations
also has a 12,000-strong peacekeeping force in Mali called MINUSMA, which has
taken heavy casualties. Four UN peacekeepers were killed by a mine blast on
Wednesday in the centre of the country.
SOURCE: AFP
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