A Canadian kidnapped this week in a restive region of Burkina Faso has been found dead, a spokesman for the security ministry said on Thursday, drawing condemnation from Canadian and Burkina Faso foreign ministers.


Kirk Woodman was abducted on Tuesday night by a dozen gunmen on a mining site owned by Vancouver-based Progress Minerals in the northeast near the border with Niger, an area that the government says is under growing threat from armed jihadists. Woodman was an employee of the company.


“It’s the Canadian that was found last night in the province of Oudalan,” spokesman Jean Paul Badoum said.


“Canada condemns those responsible for this terrible crime,” Canadian Foreign Minister Chrystia Freeland said in a statement. “We are working with the government of Burkina Faso and other international partners to pursue those responsible and bring them to justice.”


Burkina Faso Foreign Minister Alpha Barry offered his condolences, condemned the killing and said there will be an investigation to find and punish those responsible.


Barry said in a statement Woodman’s body was found on Wednesday afternoon in the district of Gorom Gorom and was subsequently identified by colleagues.


The death will fan concerns that the influence of violent groups with links to al Qaeda and Islamic State has spread uncontested into Burkina from neighbouring Mali and Niger.


Attacks by Islamist militants have surged in the West African country in recent months. A state of emergency in several northern provinces has been in effect since Dec. 31.


“Kirk was a loving and hardworking husband, father, son and brother.” his son Matt Woodman said in a statement. “Not a day will go by that he won’t be missed,” the statement added.


Earlier this month another Canadian man and an Italian woman went missing in Burkina, the security minister said. There has been no word since then on their fate.


Security has deteriorated over the last few years across the remote and arid Sahel region just south of the Sahara Desert. In response, the United States, France and other European powers have sent troops and equipment to help stamp out the threat.


Tuesday’s kidnapping occurred on the third anniversary of an attack at a hotel in the centre of the capital, Ouagadougou, that killed dozens, shocking a country that until then had largely been spared the violence that plagued its neighbours.


That attack was claimed by Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb.