“I heard heavy detonations around 4:30 a.m. (local and GMT), and there the roads around my house are blocked by military vehicles,” said one of them, living near the presidency.

The origin of these shots remained unknown Friday morning.

Several axes of the Burkinabè capital were blocked in the morning by soldiers, noted AFP journalists.

These soldiers are posted on the main crossroads of the city, in particular in the district of Ouaga 2000 where the presidency and the military camp of the junta in power are located, but also in front of the headquarters of national television, noted one of ’them.

The national television signal was cut Friday morning, with a black screen replacing programs with a message reading “No video signal”.

Burkina Faso is ruled by a military junta that came to power last January in a coup. This putsch, which had overthrown the elected president Roch Marc Christian Kaboré, had started with mutinies in several barracks of the country.

The strong man of this junta, Lieutenant-Colonel Paul-Henri Sandaogo Damiba, had promised to make security his priority, in this country undermined for years by jihadist attacks.

– Many attacks –

But the situation has not improved and the deadly attacks, affecting dozens of civilians and soldiers, have continued.

Again this week, a convoy which was to supply the town of Djibo (north) with food was attacked by suspected jihadists.

11 soldiers died, 28 people were injured and 50 civilians missing, according to the latest official report.

Several cities in the north are even now subject to a blockade by jihadists who blow up bridges with dynamite and attack supply convoys circulating in the area.

Other attacks have particularly marked public opinion, such as the massacre of Seytenga (north) last June where 86 civilians were killed.

And in early September, another supply convoy was blown up by an improvised explosive device, killing 35 civilians, including many children.

Since 2015, recurrent attacks by armed movements affiliated with Al-Qaeda and the Islamic State group, mainly in the north and east of the country, have killed thousands and displaced some two million people.

Since last year, Burkina has become the epicenter of violence in the Sahel, with more deadly attacks than in Mali or Niger in 2021, according to the NGO Acled.

More than 40% of the territory is outside state control, according to official figures.