At least 11 Burkinabe police officers have been killed in a large-scale jihadist assault in the country’s eastern region, security sources said, underscoring the persistent insecurity facing the junta despite repeated claims that the state is regaining control of territory.
Security sources told AFP that “several hundred jihadists” attacked a police detachment in Balga, a locality in Gourma province in Burkina Faso’s East Region. Seven officers were killed at the scene, while four others later died from their wounds, according to the same sources.
The Al-Qaeda-linked Group for the Support of Islam and Muslims (JNIM) claimed responsibility for the assault on the day it took place, the sources said.
In a sign of the heightened operational pressures in the area, the victims were buried on site in Balga under a new military directive, rather than being transported to urban centres for funerary rites, the report said. After the attack, police forces withdrew from the area to Diapangou, according to the same security briefing.
Burkina Faso’s military leadership, headed by Captain Ibrahim Traoré—who seized power in a 2022 coup—has increasingly restricted the detail released about major attacks, while publicly maintaining that security forces have “reconquered” large portions of the country.
However, the Balga attack highlights how armed groups remain capable of mounting complex operations, particularly in zones near the country’s borders and in parts of the wider Sahel corridor where jihadist factions operate across national lines.
Burkina Faso has been trapped in a widening conflict since 2015, with attacks attributed to armed groups aligned with Al-Qaeda and the Islamic State. The violence has killed tens of thousands of civilians and security personnel and driven mass displacement, according to the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project (ACLED), which says more than half of the recorded deaths occurred in the last three years.
The latest incident is expected to intensify pressure on authorities to demonstrate improved security outcomes in the east, even as analysts warn that the conflict’s trajectory continues to challenge state capacity and civilian safety across multiple regions.



















