BFF-26 In Burkina Faso, ‘poor man’s bomb’ reaps a bloody toll

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BURKINA-UNREST-BOMBS

In Burkina Faso, ‘poor man’s bomb’ reaps a bloody toll

OUAGADOUGOU, Dec 18, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – They are cheap, made from components
that are easily obtained — and murderously effective.

Security experts say that in the arsenal of jihadist groups whose
insurgency is shaking the Sahel state of Burkina Faso, the improvised
explosive device (IED) is one of the deadliest weapons.

“With 15,000-20,000 CFA francs ($25 / 23 euros to $34 / 30 euros), you’ve
got an IED that can destroy something worth a thousand times more,” a
security source said.

“It’s a poor man’s weapon in an asymmetrical war.”

Thousands of civilians and soldiers have died in violence across the Sahel
which began when armed Islamists revolted in northern Mali in 2012.

The conflict has since spread to neighbouring Burkina Faso as well as
Niger, two of the world’s poorest and most fragile countries.

“IEDs appeared in (Burkina Faso) in mid-2018. Since then, we have recorded
33 attacks with IEDs, claiming 133 lives,” said Italian researcher Roberto
Sollazzo.

Hidden in plastic to thwart metal detectors, packed with nails for a
shrapnel effect, the IED is increasingly used in roadside ambushes.

On November 6, an attack on a convoy of Canadian mining company Semafo
killed 38 people. The IED blew up a military escort vehicle before jihadist
forces emerged from behind cover to machine-gun the buses.

– Motorbike parts –

“The point of an IED is that it has to be made cheaply, using locally
available materials,” Sollazzo said.

“Burkina is a nation of mopeds,” he said, referring to a light motorcycle
also known as a mobylette.

“There are 300,000 of them in the country. So many components of an IED can
be taken from them without attracting the attention of the security forces.”

Mopeds are cannibalised for their rubber tyres, which are used in parts of
a simple pressure-plate switch that activates the bomb when a vehicle passes
over it, and for their batteries, which ignite the detonator.

For fuses and detonators, the jihadists go to the same suppliers as
artisanal gold-diggers who buy the materials to blast rocks at mining sites.

“A box of 166 detonators costs 600,000 CFA francs, which is 3,500 CFA
francs for one detonator. It’s 300,000 CFA for 250 metres (820 feet) of fuse
wire. When you buy this stuff, nobody asks any questions,” Sollazzo said.

“There’s trafficking from Ghana for the gold-diggers. They can buy a
package of dynamite, fuse and detonator for 5,000 CFA francs.”

– Dynamite or fertiliser bomb –

Such kits are enough for the miners, who lack the means to buy in bulk.

“But what interests the jihadists most is the detonator,” the security
expert said.

The non-profit International Crisis Group (ICG) warned in a report in
November that jihadist groups are taking a growing interest in artisanal
mines as a “new source of finance, even a recruiting ground”, with potential
for training in the handling of explosive materials.

Apart from dynamite, IEDs may also use a mix of ammonium nitrate — a
chemical found in fertiliser that is sold in Burkina Faso for 20,000 CFA
francs for a 50-kilogramme (110-pound) bag — and fuel oil, which again is
scavenged from mopeds.

Sollazzo says that “the most complicated” aspect for bomb makers is
getting the IED to explode.

“Mostly it’s done with wire and a manual trigger,” he said, while the
security expert said Chinese-made remote-control devices were emerging that
appear to have been brought in from neighbouring Mali.

BSS/AFP/RY/11:48 hrs