December 19, 2024

They have already suspended the BBC and US broadcaster Voice of America for reporting on the HRW’s publication

Burkina Faso has suspended yet more foreign media outlets over their coverage of a report accusing its army of killing 223 civilians.

The report, by US-based Human Rights Watch (HRW), said it believed the massacre in February was in retaliation for villagers aiding armed Islamists.

The West African nation’s military government has denied the allegation.

They have already suspended the BBC and US broadcaster Voice of America for reporting on the HRW’s publication.

Burkina Faso is ruled by a military junta, which seized power in a coup in 2022, promising to end the Islamist insurgency.

The violence has however continued to escalate, with more than a third of Burkina Faso controlled by jihadist groups.

On Sunday, Burkina Faso’s communications regulator said broadcasts from French network TV5Monde would also be suspended for two weeks and access to its website blocked, state-owned media reported.

The websites of German broadcaster Deutsche Welle (DW), French newspapers Le Monde and Ouest-France, British newspaper the Guardian, and African agencies APA and Ecofin have also been barred until further notice.

In its report, the non-governmental organisation said that Burkina Faso’s military had killed 179 people in Soro and 44 others in the nearby Nondin, villages in the country’s north.

The alleged killings were the country’s “worst army abuse” in nearly a decade, HRW said.

In a statement published on Saturday, Burkina Faso’s Communications Minister Rimtalba Jean Emmanuel Ouedraogo said: “The government of Burkina Faso strongly rejects and condemns such baseless accusations.”

The minister also expressed his surprise that “while this inquiry is under way to establish the facts and identify the authors, HRW has been able, with boundless imagination, to identify ‘the guilty’ and pronounce its verdict”.

On Monday, DW urged Burkina Faso’s authorities to unblock their website “as quickly as possible”.

“The blocking of dw.com and other media in Burkina Faso means the people there are being deprived of the important right to independent information,” Nadja Scholz, DW’s Managing Director of Programming, said.

“Our coverage in and about Burkina Faso continually provides facts and balanced perspectives.”

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