Off the wire
Zimbabwe energy minister lauds China for funding power plant expansion  • EU calls for peace after police violence in North Kosovo  • U.S.-listed Chinese firms trade mostly lower amid market woe  • U.S. stocks tumble amid trade worries  • Zimbabwe Human Rights Commission urges government to break impasse with striking doctors  • Tunisia lists products at preferential customs tariffs with Pakistan  • U.S. House Speaker on unofficial visit to Prague  • UK allocates 4.2 billion USD to boost trade ties with Morocco  • U.S. dollar rises as trade tensions ease  • Gold futures fall after four-day rise  
You are here:  

Armed violence displaces 5,000 in northern Burkina Faso in January

Xinhua,March 28, 2018 Adjust font size:

OUAGADOUGOU, March 27 (Xinhua) -- About 5,000 people fled their homes in the northern Soum province of Burkina Faso as of January this year, following the increase in armed violence, humanitarian source said on Tuesday in the capital Ouagadougou.

"Following the increasing number of acts of armed violence in the Soum province, over 800 households, about 5,000 people, had to leave their homes as of January, for more southerly localities", a release from the International committee of Red Cross (ICRC) said.

The ICRC made this public after providing food vouchers to the displaced people in the violence-torn Soum province where it said "livelihood and access to health care are badly affected".

"These displaced households have received vouchers to be exchanged for foods in local businesses", Idrissa Savadogo of ICRC, who took part in the assistance operation, said.

"Maintaining access to healthcare, with the Burkina Red-Cross and in partnership with local authorities, is also at the heart of our priorities", Christian Munezero, the head of ICRC mission in Burkina Faso said.

"What we are most afraid of now is the lean season between June and August. Drought and insecurity may hit these communities", he added.

Northern Burkina Faso is among the poorest regions of the country and it has seen frequent terrorist attacks since 2015. Enditem