Burkina Faso forces killed at least 100 civilians in a March attack,
Human Rights Watch says
[May 12, 2025]
By WILSON McMAKIN
DAKAR, Senegal (AP) — At least 100 civilians were killed by Burkina Faso
government forces in March near the western town of Solenzo, Human
Rights Watch said Monday.
According to victim testimony and videos shared on social media gathered
by the rights group, the attackers were Burkina Faso special forces and
members of a pro-government militia, the Volunteers for the Defense of
the Homeland. The victims were all ethnic Fulani, a pastoralist
community that is widespread across the region, which the government has
long accused of supporting Muslim militants.
An earlier report from Human Rights Watch stated that the government's
involvement was likely, because of video evidence on social media,
although the findings were not definitive. The government issued a sharp
denial when first reports surfaced, saying in a statement it “condemned
the propagation, on social media, of images inducing hate and community
violence, and fake information aimed at undermining social cohesion” in
the country.
“The viral videos of the atrocities by pro-government militias near
Solenzo sent shock waves through Africa’s Sahel region, but they told
only part of the story,” said Ilaria Allegrozzi, senior Sahel researcher
at Human Rights Watch. “Further research uncovered that Burkina Faso’s
military was responsible for these mass killings of Fulani civilians,
which were followed by deadly reprisals by an Islamist armed group. The
government needs to impartially investigate these deaths and prosecute
all those responsible.”

Burkina Faso authorities did not immediately reply to a request for
comment on the group's new report.
The landlocked nation of 23 million people has symbolized the security
crisis in the arid Sahel region south of the Sahara in recent years. It
has been shaken by violence from extremist groups linked to Al-Qaeda and
the Islamic State group, and the governments fighting them.
The military junta, which took power in 2022, failed to provide the
stability it promised. According to conservative estimates, more than
60% of the country is now outside of government control, more than 2.1
million people have lost their homes and almost 6.5 million need
humanitarian aid to survive.
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Burkina Faso President Ibrahim Traore attends the Victory Day
military parade in Moscow, Russia, Friday, May 9, 2025, during
celebrations of the 80th anniversary of the Soviet Union's victory
over Nazi Germany during the World War II. (Sergei Bobylev/Photo
host agency RIA Novosti via AP)

The attack in the western Boucle du Mouhoun region, including
Solenzo and other towns, began on Feb. 27 and lasted until April 2,
involving hundreds of government troops and drones, according to
eyewitnesses quoted in the report.
“The VDPs shot at us like animals, while drones were flying over our
heads. Many women and children died because they could not run,”
said a Fulani herder, 44, from Solenzo, referring to the
pro-government militias.
After the attack, hundreds of Fulani residents fled across the
border into neighboring Mali, the report said.
“Today, in the whole province, there are no more Fulani — they all
fled or were killed or taken hostage,” said a 53-year-old man from
Solenzo. “But the other (ethnic) communities remain.”
After the government forces left, the report said that jihadist
fighters from a group known as JNIM reentered the towns and carried
out reprisal killings against residents, targeting the men whom it
considered to be military collaborators.
“All the men had been executed in front of the health center,” said
a 60-year-old woman who witnessed JNIM abuses in Tiao village, a
town to the northeast of Solenzo on April 5. “I counted up to 70
bodies.”
According to analysts, the junta’s strategy of military escalation,
including mass recruitment of civilians for poorly trained militia
units, has exacerbated tensions between ethnic groups.
It it impossible to get an accurate picture of the situation in the
country since the military leadership has installed a system of de
facto censorship, rights groups said, and those daring to speak up
can be openly abducted, imprisoned or forcefully drafted into the
army.
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