
Audio By Carbonatix
Hundreds of residents are fleeing the conflict zone in Bawku and heading for neighbouring communities in Burkina Faso and Togo following sporadic gunshots in the municipality on Monday night.An immigration officer at the Kulungugu Border Post who asked not to be named told the Daily Graphic that majority of those fleeing were women and children, adding that they were mainly of the Moshie ethnic group.The source said those fleeing claimed that they had relatives in those countries and hoped to live there until the situation in Bawku improved.He said people in Kulungugu were currently living in fear and could no longer go about their normal duties freely."My brother, people living in Kulungugu rely on Bawku for everything, be it foodstuffs, hospital or banking services, and given the intensity of fighting, we are afraid to go out there. With the month coming to an end, some of us are worried whether we can go to Bawku for our salaries from the banks," he said."In fact, some of us are living in fear because we live in rented apartments in town, and with the new tactics adopted by the feuding factions, we are virtually living in fear as we do not know when and who next those involve in the fighting would attack," the Immigration officer said.Last Saturday, one Zackaria Abagre, a Mamprusi man, was allegedly stoned to death at Buabula, near Sabongeri, a Kusasi community, after he had gone out in search of his missing horse.This led to the massacre of about a dozen Kusasis in a retaliatory attack by Mamprusis.In the latest development, seven persons, including five children who sustained various degrees of injury have been transferred to the Bolgatanga Regional Hospital. And a man, identified as Issaka Hasmin, 24, a Moshie, was gunned down at a suburb called Zemaasa.On Monday, amidst heavy rains there were sporadic gunshots all over the Bawku township, and, according to a source, the shooting was so intense that people in far away Kulungugu could hear the shots, which triggered the mass exodus of residents.It would be recalled that in May, this year, when there was resurgence in the fighting in Bawku, some people fled to Goulongousi, a town in Togo, to seek refuge. Those who fled, after their houses and shops had been burnt, were mainly Mamprusis from Pusiga.Although some of them are said to have returned others are still seeking refuge in that town.Source: Daily Graphic
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
Millions of iCloud users could claim share of £3bn after Apple case given UK green light
10 minutes -
Argentina’s Alvarez wants to leave Atletico Madrid
20 minutes -
Germany defender Schlotterbeck out of World Cup
30 minutes -
Ex-Wimbledon champion Vondrousova given four-year ban
39 minutes -
Man City close in on appointing Maresca as manager
50 minutes -
World Cup: Fans delayed entry as bad weather affects France-Iraq tie
58 minutes -
From retirement to records – another immortal Messi moment
1 hour -
World Cup: Record-making Messi scores twice as Argentina progress
1 hour -
Madueke’s remarkable season – from petition to World Cup starter
1 hour -
World Cup: Iran leave note asking for peace after Belgium draw
2 hours -
Doku returning to World Cup after birth of first child
2 hours -
WhatsApp to be led by Indian start-up founder as Will Cathcart steps back
2 hours -
Clive Davis, music mogul behind Whitney Houston and Bruce Springsteen, dies aged 94
2 hours -
Red heat alerts issued in France, Italy and Spain as 40C temperatures forecast
2 hours -
Police arrest Israel Kwadwo Akofena Safo and 2 others over Adwoa Safo shooting incident
2 hours