International Burkina Faso Suspends BBC and Voice of America after covering report on mass killings

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BY JESSICA DONATI
Updated 6:51 AM BRT, April 26, 2024


DAKAR, Senegal (AP) — Burkina Faso suspended the BBC and Voice of America radio stations for their coverage of a report by Human Rights Watch on a mass killing of civilians carried out by the country’s armed forces.

Burkina Faso’s communication spokesperson, Tonssira Myrian Corine Sanou, said late that Thursday that both radio stations would be suspended for two weeks, and warned other media networks to avoid reporting on the story.

According to the report published by Human Rights Watch on Thursday, the army killed some 223 civilians, including 56 children, in villages accused of cooperating with militants. The report was widely covered by the international media , including the Associated Press.

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“VOA stands by its reporting about Burkina Faso and intends to continue to fully and fairly cover activities in the country,” the network said in a news article reporting on its suspension.

The BBC did not respond to a request for comment.

https://apnews.com/article/burkina-faso-killing-media-radio-4905ce1a72bddb39f52d55acd1907482

Burkina Faso soldiers massacred 223 civilians in one day, finds rights group​

Human Rights Watch demands investigation into killings in two villages just weeks after Russian troops fly in, amid intensifying conflict

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Burkina Faso’s military summarily executed 223 civilians, including at least 56 children, in a single day in late February, according to an investigation into one of the worst abuses by the country’s armed forces for years.

The mass killings have been linked to a widening military campaign to tackle jihadist violence and happened weeks after Russian troops landed in the west African country to help improve security.

The massacre may amount to crimes against humanity, according to a report by Human Rights Watch (HRW), which urged Burkinabè authorities to launch an urgent UN-backed investigation.

Collating witness testimony and verifying videos and photographs, HRW researchers found that on 25 February, soldiers killed 179 people, including 36 children, in Soro village and 44 people, including 20 children, in nearby Nondin village, in northern Yatenga province.

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The findings come days after UN officials and African leaders met in Nigeria to discuss solutions to counter the growing threat of terrorism on the continent, a conference that officials from Burkina Faso did not attend.

Experts noted that the killings occurred while US counter-terrorism strategy in the region was faltering, as the country increasingly pivoted towards Russia for its security strategy.

Burkina Faso’s military backed president, Ibrahim Traoré, hopes the alignment with Moscow will reshape the country’s near decade-long conflict with insurgents linked to Islamic State and al-Qaida.

A month before the killings, the first significant deployment of Russian troops arrived in the country, though there is no suggestion they were involved in the massacre.

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Witnesses said it was beyond doubt that the atrocities were part of a long-running counter-terrorism campaign targeting civilians accused of collaborating with Islamist militants.


“The Burkinabè army has repeatedly committed mass atrocities against civilians in the name of fighting terrorism, with almost no one held to account,” said Tirana Hassan, executive director of HRW.

“Victims, survivors and their families are entitled to see those responsible for grave abuses brought to justice.”

Villagers said that on 25 February, military forces stopped in Nondin and then Soro, 5km away, and accused residents of being complicit with the jihadists.

“They said we do not cooperate with them [the army] because we did not inform them about the jihadists’ movements,” a 32-year-old female survivor from Soro, who was shot in the leg, told HRW.

In Soro, villagers described soldiers shooting people who had been rounded up or tried to hide or escape.

“They separated men and women in groups,” a 48-year-old farmer told HRW.
“I was in the garden with other people when they [soldiers] called us. As we started moving forward, they opened fire on us indiscriminately. I ran behind a tree, and this saved my life.”
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Witnesses in Nondin said soldiers went door to door, ordering people to come out of their homes and show their identity cards. They then rounded up villagers in groups before opening fire on them. Soldiers also shot at people trying to flee or hide.

The Burkina Faso government has been approached for comment.
https://www.theguardian.com/global-...faso-human-rights-watch-killings-two-villages
 
Wagner probably too busy right now to do massacres in africa

Heres a vid of wagner burying corpses near french base in mali back in day, part of games they played with french

 
Anti-Western chuds will call it interfering in the politics of African countries for covering this. Based military dictatorships kicking America out so that they can repress their own!
 
I believe it was JNIM (AQ in Sahel) that was first in bringing to the light these massacres commited by the military of Burkina Faso.
 

Burkina Faso suspends BBC and Voice of America after they covered a report on mass killings​


BY JESSICA DONATI
Updated 12:15 PM BRT, April 26, 2024


DAKAR, Senegal (AP) — Burkina Faso suspended the BBC and Voice of America radio stations for their coverage of a report by Human Rights Watch on a mass killing of civilians carried out by the country’s armed forces.

Burkina Faso’s communication spokesperson, Tonssira Myrian Corine Sanou, said late Thursday that both radio stations would be suspended for two weeks, and warned other media networks to avoid reporting on the story.
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According to the report published by Human Rights Watch on Thursday, the army killed 223 civilians, including 56 children, in villages accused of cooperating with militants. The report was widely covered by the international media, including the Associated Press.

Burkina Faso, a once-peaceful nation, has been ravaged by violence that has pitted jihadis linked to al-Qaida and the Islamic State group against state-backed forces. Both sides have targeted civilians caught in the middle, displacing more than 2 million people, of which over half are children. Most attacks go unpunished and unreported in a nation run by a repressive leadership that silences perceived dissidents.

Earlier in April, the AP verified accounts of a Nov. 5 army attack on another village that killed at least 70 people. The details were similar — the army blamed the villagers for cooperating with militants and massacred them, even babies.

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“VOA stands by its reporting about Burkina Faso and intends to continue to fully and fairly cover activities in the country,” the network said in a news article reporting on its suspension.



The BBC didn’t respond to a request for comment.

On Friday, the United Nations called on Burkina Faso to reverse the suspension of the two international broadcasters.

“Restrictions on media freedom and civic space must stop immediately. Freedom of expression including the right of access to information is crucial in any society, and even more so in the context of the transition in Burkina Faso,” it said in a statement.

In the same statement, the U.N. said it had received additional reports that large numbers of civilians, including children, had been killed in several villages in the Yatenga and Soum provinces of northern Burkina Faso. The AP couldn’t immediately verify those reports.
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More than 20,000 people have been killed in Burkina Faso since jihadi violence linked to al-Qaida and IS first hit the West African nation nine years ago, according to the Armed Conflict Location and Event Data Project, a U.S.-based nonprofit group.

Burkina Faso experienced two coups in 2022. Since seizing power in September 2022, the junta led by Capt. Ibrahim Traoré has promised to beat back militants. But violence has only worsened, analysts say. Around half of Burkina Faso’s territory remains outside of government control.

Frustrated with a lack of progress over years of Western military assistance, the junta has severed military ties with former colonial ruler France and turned to Russia instead for security support.

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https://apnews.com/article/burkina-faso-killing-media-radio-4905ce1a72bddb39f52d55acd1907482
 
The UN took no interest in the Sudan...... sad but this is a blip on the radar.
 

Burkina Faso bans more media over coverage of alleged massacre​

The Guardian and Le Monde among latest outlets blocked, following on from BBC and VOA last week

Authorities in Burkina Faso have suspended further foreign media over their reporting of an alleged massacre of hundreds of civilians by the Burkinabe army.

The decision was announced in a statement over the weekend, days after the military government suspended the BBC, Voice of America and the international watchdog Human Rights Watch (HRW), halting broadcasts and blocking websites, after the latter’s scathing report on Thursday.


HRW accused troops of killing at least 223 people in attacks on two villages in the west African country’s north, near the Mali border, on 25 February. As many as 56 of the victims were reportedly children.

A statement by the Burkinabe authorities said on Monday: “The media campaign orchestrated around these accusations fully shows the unavowed intention … to discredit our fighting forces.”

The Guardian was named in the latest round of suspensions, alongside half a dozen other organisations including the French outlets Le Monde and TV5Monde, the German broadcaster Deutsche Welle and the Swiss-based Agence Ecofin. Access to their websites had been blocked until further notice, the statement said.

Reporters Without Borders (RSF) called the suspensions “grave and abusive decisions”.

HRW had said in its report on Thursday that “these mass killings … appear to be part of a widespread military campaign against civilians accused of collaborating with Islamist armed groups, and may amount to crimes against humanity”.

It said villagers had said the killings were reprisals for an attack by jihadists at a military camp close to the villages earlier on 25 February.

Late on Saturday, the Burkinabe communications minister, Rimtalba Jean Emmanuel Ouedraogo, said the report was baseless and accused HRW of “boundless imagination”.

The suspensions are the latest media restrictions to be imposed by the junta led by Ibrahim Traoré, the 36-year-old who became Africa’s youngest leader after a coup in September 2022.
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French media have been particularly targeted as relations between the former colonial power and French-speaking Africa continue to sour.

Traoré’s ascendancy to power came against the backdrop of insurgent violence that began seeping in from neighbouring Mali in 2015 and has precipitated political instability across the Sahel region.

More than 2 million people have been displaced and thousands of civilians and security personnel have been killed in Burkina Faso. Not even the change of political order has extinguished the conflict: there was an uptick in violence in 2023, with 8,000 deaths that year, data from the Armed Conflict Location and Event Data Project (Acled) shows.

This has led to a war against armed non-state actors, and led to the army and state-backed vigilantes reportedly torturing or killing villagers believed to be harbouring or aiding the rebels.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2...tlets-over-coverage-of-alleged-massacre#img-1
 
If this was a Facebook post, you would've read comments like ''what about the school shootings in the US?''
 
If this was a Facebook post, you would've read comments like ''what about the school shootings in the US?''
- I stoped reading facebook when they made obrigatory to creat a account. But yeah. Here in Brasil used to hurt reading. People from a state celebrating natural disasters because my state voted on Bolsonaro, people from here celebrating deaths in the North becsuse they voted Lula.

A teacher celebrating a bank assault becsuse he is a comunist.
 
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