Monitoring Desk
UNITED NATIONS: The UN rights chief called Saturday on the transitional authorities in Burkina Faso to quickly and transparently investigate the killing of 28 people whose dead bodies were found last weekend.
Volker Turk welcomed that local authorities had said they would investigate after the bodies were found northwest of the country.
“I ask them to ensure it is quick, thorough, transparent, and impartial and to hold all those responsible for accounting regardless of rank or position,” he maintained.
“I have sent a letter to the Burkina Faso Minister of Foreign Affairs underlining exactly this message,” the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights said in a statement.
“The victims and their family members are owed no less.”
UN rights office over mass killing in Burkina Paso
The United Nations rights office said its local sources had blamed the killings on a volunteer militia, Volontaires pour la Defense de la Patrie (VDP), created to support the army’s battle.
As per the statement, they said VDP members had attacked the town, killing 28 men, “in apparent retaliation for an earlier assualt on the group’s military base” by suspected members of Jama’at Nasr al-Islam wal Muslimin (JNIM), an Al-Qaeda-linked group.
Burkina Faso is one of the world’s poorest and most volatile nations.
Since 2015, Burkina Paso has been grappling with an insurgency linked with Al-Qaeda and the Islamic State (IS) group that has killed many and displaced nearly two million people.
Attacks targeting civilians and the security forces have increased in recent months, especially in northern and eastern regions bordering Niger and Mali.
The UN rights chief had earlier “raised concerns directly with the authorities about the potential human rights risks associated to recruitment, deployment, and arming of auxiliaries in Burkina Faso,” the statement said.
“Effective supervision by the defence and security forces” was also needed “to ensure transparency and inclusion during their recruitment,” the statement said.