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“Safe haven” for fleeing families hit by attacks in Burkina Faso

Dakar, Senegal
Thomson Reuters Foundation

Deadly attacks on Christians in a “safe haven” for thousands fleeing violence in Burkina Faso mark a new phase of crisis, the United Nations said on Thursday, as jihadis expand their reach.

About 16 people died in three attacks on churches and a religious procession in the last two weeks, threatening to upend traditionally peaceful relations between the Muslim majority and Christians, who make up a quarter of Burkinabes.

Burkina Faso

Girls draw water from a fountain at a dispensary in Nedogo village near Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso, on 16th February, 2018. PICTURE: REUTERS/Luc Gnago

 

FOUR KILLED IN LATEST ATTACK ON CHRISTIANS – REPORT

Four more Christians were killed after a procession was attacked on 13th May – a day after a priests and five others were killed in Dablo, according to a report.

Agenzia Fides reports that the four were among those in a procession returning a statue of Mary to a church in the town of Singa in the country’s north when they were “intercepted by armed men”. Some children were released but four adults were executed and the statue destroyed, according to the report.

The previous day some 20 to 30 armed men attacked a Catholic Church in Dablo, killing six including the priest, Fr Simeon Yampa. Funerals were held for those killed last Monday.

That attack follows earlier attacks on churches in the region including a Protestant church in Silgadji late in April.

“We are really preoccupied because we thought the Centre-Nord was a safe haven for families fleeing attacks,” said Metsi Makhetha, head of the United Nations in Burkina Faso, referring to the region where two attacks took place on Sunday and Monday.

Centre-Nord hosts about one-third of 170,000 people who have fled their homes, Makhetha said, most driven southwards by rising violence in the country’s northern Sahel region, the militants’ stronghold.

“We are now facing a situation where the Centre-Nord is becoming the epicentre of attacks,” Makhetha told the Thomson Reuters Foundation, adding that many people were sleeping in the open due to lack of shelter.

Burkina Faso has been beset by a rise in attacks this year as groups with links to the so-called Islamic State and al-Qaeda based in neighbouring Mali seek to extend their influence over the porous borders of the Sahel, the arid scrubland south of the Sahara.

“Access is withering as armed groups expand. We are entering a critical phase,” said Makhetha.

Only a few displacement camps have been set up, and the vast majority of people are crowding into villages with host families who already struggle to support themselves, she added.

About 9,000 displaced people had taken refuge in the town of Dablo, where six people were shot dead outside a church on Sunday, according to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.

OCHA did not know how many had fled as a result, but Makhetha said each attack prompts new displacement and makes it harder for aid workers to reach people with food and water.

“People are arriving practically every day,” said Antoine Some, a nutritionist for charity Medecins du Monde in the town of Dori, on the edge of the Sahel Reserve.

“It’s people who have lost everything, whether it’s the first or second time they’ve fled,” he said.

The humanitarian crisis is a first for Burkina Faso, which was largely peaceful until three years ago when a local Islamist group, Ansarul Islam, started to gain hold.

 

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