Al Qaeda affiliate claims responsibility for Burkina attack
15/5/2025 6:17
Al Qaeda affiliate JNIM has
claimed responsibility for an attack targeting a military post
in Burkina Faso's northern Loroum province in which the group
said 60 soldiers were killed, the SITE Intelligence Group said
on Tuesday.
The U.S.-based non-governmental organization, which tracks
online activity of Islamist militants, said JNIM had posted
messages on Monday and Tuesday in which it took credit for four
assaults in Burkina Faso and Mali.
The attacks highlight the difficulties the three Sahel
nations of Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger, ruled by military
leaders, are facing in containing the insurgents.
Burkina authorities have not commented on the latest
attacks.
The most notable attack occurred in the Burkina town of
Sole, where JNIM fighters raided the army military post and
killed soldiers, SITE Intelligence said, without specifying on
which day it took place.
Another Burkina attack killed 10 members of a pro-government
militia known as VDP in eastern Gnagna province, SITE added.
In a separate statement, SITE said Ousmane Dicko, head of
Jama'a Nusrat ul-Islam wa al-Muslimin (JMIN) in Burkina, had
appeared in a video urging residents of Djibo, located in the
north of Burkina Faso, to leave the town for their own safety.
An army base in Djibo came under attack on Sunday morning,
and a police station and market were also targeted, security
sources told Reuters.
Three Djibo residents described an intense assault involving
hundreds of fighters on facilities housing soldiers and
pro-government militiamen. Although there was no official toll,
the witnesses said dozens of soldiers and civilians were killed.
"The population saw soldiers burnt in the flames of
explosions. Multiple military arsenals were taken and civilians
were killed by gunfire," a teacher in Djibo, told Reuters.
A series of videos on social media on Wednesday showed
unidentified insurgents on foot and motor-bikes roving around
the eastern town of Diapaga near the border with Niger and Mali.
Gunfire rang in the air and black smoke billowed at a
distance in one video, while in another, the insurgents posed
for pictures and tore down flags of junta-led countries and
Russia.
Reuters could not verify the authenticity of the videos.
"JNIM is demonstrating that it can seize major towns with
little deterrence from security forces, and it is likely to
continue mounting such attacks in its strongholds," said Beverly
Ochieng, senior analyst at Control Risks.
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