Gunmen kill 6 in second church attack in Burkina Faso - Action News
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Gunmen kill 6 in second church attack in Burkina Faso

Gunmen killed six people including a priest outside a Catholic church in Burkina Faso on Sunday, a local official said, the second attack on Christians in two weeks in a nation increasingly overrun by jihadists.

2nd deadly attack on Christian worshippers since late April

There has been a sharp increase in the number of jihadist attacks in Burkina Faso over the last two years. (Issouf Sanogo/AFP/Getty Images/file photo)

Gunmen killed six people including a priest outside a Catholic church in Burkina Faso on Sunday, a local official said, the second attack on Christians in two weeks in a nation increasingly overrun by jihadists.

Congregants were leaving church around 9 a.m. local time when about 20men encircled them and shot six dead,according tolocal sources.

The attackers then burned the church, looted a pharmacy andsome others storesand left, DabloMayorOusmane ZongotoldReuters. Dabloin the northern region of the landlocked country. The government statement only mentioned the burning ofa shop and two vehicles.

Burkina Faso, in West Africa,has been beset by a rise in attacks in 2019as groups with links to the group Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) and al-Qaeda based in neighbouring Mali seek to extend their influence over the porous borders of the Sahel, the arid scrubland south of the Sahara.

The government declared a state of emergency in several northern provinces bordering Mali in December because of deadly Islamist attacks.

But violence has only worsened since. Two French soldiers were killed in an operation to rescue four people taken hostage in Burkina Faso last week, France said.

Roughly 55 per centto 60 per centof Burkina Faso's population is Muslim, with up to a quarter Christian. The two groups generally live in peace and frequently intermarry.

Then in late April, unidentified gunmen killed a pastor and five congregants at a Protestant church, also in the north, suggesting the violence was taking a religious turn.