Médécins sans Frontières (MSF) has expressed deep concern about overcrowded and unsanitary living conditions for thousands of Rwandan Hutus who have fled into Burundi fearing persecution at home. ”As each day passes, the situation is growing more precarious for these refugees,” MSF said.
A court has convicted 13 people and given them sentences ranging from the death penalty to two years’ imprisonment for their role in the killing of a senior World Health Organisation (WHO) official in Burundi. Defence lawyers have not indicated whether they will appeal the verdict.
A refugee from the Democratic Republic of Congo was killed and three other people were wounded by a South African United Nations peacekeeper during a food riot at a camp in Burundi, officials said Friday. The UN High Commissioner for Refugees , which runs the camp, condemned the incident but said details were still being investigated.
Burundi’s President Domitien Ndayizeye has ratified the country’s new power-sharing Constitution as the country slowly progresses towards putting behind it an 11-year civil war. The Constitution evens the balance between the majority Hutus and the minority Tutsis who dominated the country since independence in 1962.
Burundi’s last remaining rebel group fired six mortar bombs at the capital overnight, hitting the area around the presidential palace but causing no casualties, the army said on Wednesday. Army spokesperson Major Adolphe Munirakiza said the National Liberation Forces bombarded the Kiriri district with 60mm mortars at around 11pm.
Services in public hospitals across Burundi continued to be paralysed as an indefinite strike by nurses entered its fifth day on Friday. The nurses are demanding better pay and working conditions. Although nurses have been reporting for duty at most hospitals, they have not been working as normal.
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/ 28 February 2005
Burundians lined up on Monday to vote on a Constitution that enshrines Hutu control of Parliament and the government after decades of minority Tutsi dominance. The referendum will determine the fate of a Constitution that reserves 60% of seats in the government and Parliament for Hutus and 40% for Tutsis.
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/ 15 February 2005
Two suspected motorcycle taxi thieves were burned alive and killed on Tuesday in a busy section of the Burundian capital, witnesses said. The two men, who had allegedly recently stolen a motorbike in Bujumbura, were chased down by dozens of enraged motorcycle taxi drivers.
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/ 27 January 2005
Former Burundi president Pierre Buyoya and his wife ordered the killing of a senior World Health Organisation official in Burundi and should be brought to trial, a defence lawyer told a court on Thursday. The Burundian and Ivorian governments should ask for a WHO report on the killing to be made public, said the Belgian lawyer.
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/ 26 January 2005
South African Deputy President Jacob Zuma, chief mediator in attempts to end Burundi’s 11-year civil war, warned the country’s president on Wednesday not to try to amend a provisional Constitution to allow himself to run in upcoming elections. Zuma said any such changes would be contrary to a peace accord signed in Tanzania in 2000.
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/ 25 January 2005
South African Deputy President Jacob Zuma said on Tuesday that Burundi’s neighbours are opposed to any changes in the country’s Constitution that is to be put to a referendum next month. Zuma said the countries of the region do not support President Domitien Ndayizeye’s controversial proposal to modify the Constitution.
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/ 25 January 2005
Burundi will hold a referendum in February on an interim Constitution that needs to be put in place before holding elections, after postponing the vote three times for lack of funds, Burundi’s elections chief said on Monday. The country’s electoral commission now has the money to buy ballot boxes and indelible ink to hold the referendum on February 28.
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/ 20 January 2005
At least five people have died and 105 been taken ill as a cholera outbreak in the northern part of Burundi’s capital has spread since the middle of the month, a United Nations official said on Thursday. A spokesperson for the United Nations Operation in Burundi said 16 new cholera cases were reported on Wednesday.
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/ 9 December 2004
Hundreds of Burundians have been accidentally killed by landmines since December 2002, when a ceasefire agreement was signed between the government and the three main rebel groups. Two years after the ceasefire, a systemic programme to clear landmines is still only an ideal.
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/ 18 November 2004
Burundi has delayed again a referendum on a disputed Constitution to let the electoral commission register potential voters and gather key materials, including electoral cards and ballot boxes, the electoral chief said. Burundians will vote in the referendum on December 22 instead of November 26.
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/ 12 November 2004
Burundian President Domitien Ndayizeye appointed Frederic Ngenzebuhoro (52) on Thursday as his a new vice-president to replace the dismissed Alphonse Marie Kadege. Ndayizeye made the appointment following a session of the Senate and the National Assembly, during which 196 MPs endorsed the choice of Ngenzebuhoro.
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/ 11 November 2004
Burundi’s dominant ethnic Tutsi party on Thursday asked President Dominitien Ndayizeye to name an ally of a former military ruler as the new vice-president in line with the country’s fragile power-sharing agreement, officials said. Other political parties representing the Tutsi minority also want the vice-presidency.
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/ 10 November 2004
President Domitien Ndayizeye of Burundi has sacked his deputy, Alphonse-Marie Kadege, the president’s spokesperson said on Wednesday, two days after Kadege said he doubted a crucial constitutional referendum could be held as planned later this month. ”The head of state has sacked his vice-president,” said the spokesperson.
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/ 3 November 2004
Three days after Burundi’s interim Constitution came into effect, fighting among the major political parties has not broken out as many people had feared, and leaders who once advocated violence now agree to submit to the constitutional authority. A referendum on a draft Constitution has been delayed to November 26 this year.
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/ 1 November 2004
War-ravaged Burundi’s transitional President, Domitien Ndayizeye, said on Monday he will retire from politics at the end of his term in office, which is due to expire in April next year. ”The last 18 months have been very tiring. I feel old enough not to continue in politics,” Ndayizeye, who is 52, told reporters.
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/ 1 November 2004
War-ravaged Burundi’s transitional president, Domitien Ndayizeye, said on Monday he would retire from politics at the end of his term in office, which is due to expire in April 2005. ”The last 18 months have been very tiring. I feel old enough not to continue in politics,” Ndayizeye, who is 52, told reporters.
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/ 10 October 2004
More than 1 000 Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) refugees were still stuck on Saturday night in a strip of no man’s land between their country and neighbouring Burundi, despite promises by a DRC official that they would be allowed home. Civilians on the DRC side of the border erected barricades on Saturday.
The army of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) has prevented 1 100 refugees returning home from Burundi, leaving them stuck in no-man’s-land between the two countries, officials said on Thursday. The trucks had been rented privately and the UN’s refugee agency, UNHCR, was not involved in this impromptu repatriation attempt.
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/ 21 September 2004
Burundi’s main Tutsi political parties have presented an alternative Constitution for the Central African nation, saying their basic law is more balanced than the text passed by Parliament last week. The draft Constitution incorporates articles that were proposed in a power-sharing accord signed in Pretoria at the beginning of last month.
The United Nations has suspended mediation talks with a rebel group in the central African state of Burundi after it claimed responsibility for the massacre of 159 civilians in a refugee camp, the UN said on Monday. The FLN, the rebel force of Burundi’s Hutu ethnic group, claimed responsibility for last Friday’s slaughter in a camp at Gatumba in Burundi containing mainly Congolese Tutsis, a rival ethnic group.
The former main rebel group in Burundi said on Tuesday it will resume participation in the transitional government of the central African country, after suspending its membership early in May. The Forces for the Defence of Democracy said the move comes because progress has been made towards peace.
Fighting between Burundi’s army and the Central African country’s last active rebel group, which broke out just a day after both sides agreed to stop attacking each other, ended overnight, rebel and army sources said on Friday. The clash flared up near the capital at about 1pm local time on Thursday.
Burundi’s last remaining rebel groups on Thursday demanded a chance to make their case to the international community about why they took up arms before they will agree to enter into peace talks with the Central African nation’s government. National Liberation Forces leaders also called on government troops to stop attacking their positions.
When the mob came to kill the 1 000 women, children and old people who had come to him for refuge, Evariste Nyatanyi gently told the angry, machete-wielding men that they would have to kill him first. Nyatanyi is one of about 200 men and women being honoured at a Heroes’ Summit in Burundi’s capital, Bujumbura.
South African Deputy President and facilitator of the Burundi peace process Jacob Zuma arrived in the Burundian capital, Bujumbura, on Tuesday for talks with key political stakeholders on the country’s peace process. Zuma said the talks would focus on general elections and on a faction of the Forces Nationales de Liberation rebel group.
Burundian gendarmes on Tuesday arrested the leaders of the two main teachers’ unions in the country after they held a meeting with striking teachers in the capital, Bujumbura, to evaluate the stoppage that began countrywide on January 5. The strike has put at least one million children out of school countrywide.
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/ 15 January 2004
At 24, a single mother, Marie — not her real name — could have expected a better deal in life. But she was given no choice: while working as a housemaid in Kinindo, a residential suburb of the capital, Bujumbura, Marie was raped and subsequently found herself pregnant. Marie would not have dreamed of seeking an abortion, not least because it is prohibited here.