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Soldier, 6 'terrorists' killed in Burkina Faso clashes
by Staff Writers
Ouagadougou (AFP) April 12, 2020

A Burkina Faso soldier and six "terrorist" insurgents were killed in clashes in the north of the country Sunday, the army chief said in a statement.

The fighting broke out in the town of Djibo on Sunday morning.

"A gendarmerie unit and a reconnaissance mission team were ambushed. Sadly a soldier was killed during the attack," the military statement said.

The two units managed "to neutralise six terrorists," it added.

Army chief Moise Miningou, in the same statement, said five other troops were killed on Thursday also in the north.

Burkina Faso's northwest border is with Mali, and to the northeast is Niger, with all three countries fighting a long-running jihadist insurgency.

According to UN figures, jihadist attacks in Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger left nearly 4,000 people dead last year, including 800 in Burkina Faso alone.

Some 800,000 people have been displaced since 2015.

The poorly-trained and badly-equipped Burkina security forces have been unable to stem the violence despite help from abroad, notably from France which has 5,100 troops taking part in the Barkhane anti-jihadist force in the Sahel region.


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Watchdog blames Syria for chemical weapons attacks
The Hague (AFP) April 8, 2020
The global chemical weapons watchdog on Wednesday for the first time explicitly blamed Syria for toxic attacks, saying President Bashar al-Assad's air force used the nerve gas sarin and chlorine three times in 2017. The findings came in the first report from a new investigative team set up by the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) to identify the perpetrators of attacks in Syria's ongoing nine-year-long civil war. Western nations and rights groups condemned Syria followi ... read more

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