Thousands flee from their homes in jihad-hit Burkina Faso

A family, who is among the 300,000 internally displaced because of jihadist violence in northern and eastern Burkina Faso, is pictured on September 17, 2019 in the village of Yagma near Ouagadougou. Jihadist attacks have internally displaced more than 300,000 people including many children who have dropped out of school. FILE PHOTO | ISSOUF SANOGO | AFP

What you need to know:

  • More than 580 people have been killed since the insurgency spilled over from neighbouring Mali, according to an AFP tally.
  • An estimated 300,000 people have been forced to flee their homes following the jihadist attacks in Burkina Faso.
  • "--it's better to be alive here than to stay in Djibo and die." Said Belen Boureima, a 74-year-oldwho fled his village of Gassalpalik with his family of 43 after an attack by armed jihadists.

Yagma, Burkina Faso

"We have nothing," says Belen Boureima, a 74-year-old farmer, as his weathered face contemplates the scrap of land in the remote village he and his family must now call home.

"But it's better to be alive here than to stay in Djibo and die."

Djibo, a dusty town in northern Burkina Faso, has become a byword for suffering in this impoverished country's seven-year-old struggle with jihadism.

More than 580 people have been killed since the insurgency spilled over from neighbouring Mali, according to an AFP tally.

Attacks on emblems of the state, hit-and-run raids on remote villages and brutal interpretation of Islamic law have forced an estimated 300,000 people to flee their homes.

Among them is Boureima, head of a family of 43 people -- seven men, 13 women and 23 children.

They abandoned their village of Gassalpalik, 70 kilometres from Djibo, eventually washing up in Yagma, a village about 30km north of the capital Ouagadougou.

FOREIGN HOMES

Belen said he had spent his entire life in Djibo and had never even left the area until now -- but "when you are lost, you have to end up somewhere."

In this alien landscape, the family have no friends or contacts. The head of the village has appointed a "tutor" to help the family, who are members of the Mossi ethnic group, get their bearings.

"The attackers took everything from us -- cows, sheep, goats... They were armed and came on motorbikes," the patriarch recalled.

JIHADIST ATTACKS

"They went into people's homes and took animals and killed the men. I saw people getting killed. Many of them," he said, adding he was unable to give any accurate figure.

"They also took three men from the village, and we have no news of their whereabouts."

The attack happened despite patrols by the security forces, he said.

"I don't understand," he said. "We don't know what they (the jihadists) want. The teachers fled. The health centre closed. We were afraid. The only way out was to flee."

The family hurriedly bundled up its meagre possessions and the little money it had.

"Everyone in the village fled. It was a free-for-all... We don't know what has become of the village -- nobody lives there now, except perhaps for birds."

He added: "We have absolutely nothing here. We have swallowed our shame.... It's desperate."

DIFFICULT TIMES

Bintou, an older woman member of the group, said the family was at least able to sleep peacefully in their beds, but that was little consolation to what they had lost.

"Before the start (of the jihadist) attacks, we had a happy life, we grew crops, we lived in our own home, we had cattle and we were never hungry," she said.

"Here, we sweep stones to sell to construction sites," she said.

"We sell them at 1,000 CFA francs (Ksh173.53) a pile, but sometimes you have to wait three days before making a sale. We cannot feed the children."

The families are living in homes which have been made available for free by the villagers, but it has no land -- a crucial source of nutrition and income in a place where there is no work.

Nabonswende Zongo, an elderly villager who has been appointed to help the family, said the situation was "difficult."

"If there is peace, they will go back. I am happy to help them. We are all brothers. I hope to do what I can, but have no idea what the future holds. I'm afraid and hope that what happened there won't come here."