By TEA REPORTER
In Summary
- Officials in Uganda, Tanzania and Rwanda yet to publicly comment on the latest unrest.
- In Nairobi, Foreign Affairs Permanent Secretary Karanja Kibichio told Nation FM on Monday evening that he would travel to Burundi on Friday to donate 150 laptops to the Election Commission but refused to be drawn into the third-term debate.
- Six people have been killed since protests broke out on Sunday.
East African Community governments remained quiet Tuesday as
protestors opposed to President Pierre Nkurunziza's bid for a third
term in office clashed with police for the third day in Burundi, and as
the unrest spread to other parts of the country.
Pierre Claver Mbonimpa, a leading human rights activist arrested
on Monday, was released without charge on Tuesday evening as
international pressure grew on authorities in Burundi to allow peaceful
protests.
Officials in Uganda, Tanzania and Rwanda were yet to publicly
comment on the latest unrest in Burundi, despite the number of civilians
fleeing the EAC member state rising to over 20,000.
In Nairobi, Foreign Affairs Permanent Secretary Karanja Kibichio
told Nation FM on Monday evening that he would travel to Burundi on
Friday to donate 150 laptops to the Election Commission but refused to
be drawn into the third-term debate.
"As a friendly country, our role is to support the decision of
the people of Burundi," he said. "Our role is not to interrogate whether
decisions are constitutional or not."
In Gitenga, Burundi's second largest city located 100 kilometres
east of the capital Bujumbura, police fired tear gas and stopped a
planned march by students and other residents in the country's worst
spell of instability since the end of the civil war in 2005.
Violate constitution
UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on Tuesday called for an
investigation into the killings of protestors and said he was sending
his Special Envoy for the Great Lakes Region, Said Djinnit, to Bujumbura
to meet President Nkurunziza and other government officials in an
attempt to defuse the crisis.
Shots could be heard in the capital and several suburbs as
police battled to remove burning barricades strewn across streets
leading into the city centre.
Six people have been killed since the protests broke out on
Sunday, a day after the CNDD-FDD, the ruling party, nominated Mr
Nkurunziza as its candidate for the June 26 election.
Opposition supporters as well as political and civil society
activists say a third term would violate the country's constitution and
the terms of the Arusha Agreement signed to end a decade of civil war in
which about 130,000 people were killed.
Mr Nkurunziza's supporters say his first term, between 2005 and
2010, does not count because he was elected by legislators and not
directly by the population. The government has described the protestors
as an "insurrectional movement", shut down independent radio stations
and arrested hundreds of people.
"Despite the arrests, we will continue," Vital Nshimirimana, a
political activist who has gone into hiding to avoid arrest, told Radio
France International by telephone. He said the protests would continue
until President Nkurunziza renounces his claim for a third term in
office.
US government officials have publicly asked President Nkurunziza
not to seek re-election and the US embassy in Bujumbura said it was
watching the situation closely and would "hold accountable those
responsible for violence against the civilian population".
In a message on its Twitter account
on Sunday, the British High Commission in Rwanda said London "deeply
regrets" the decision to nominate Mr Nkurunziza for re-election.
The European Union also issued a statement on Tuesday calling
for calm and warning that the violence, arrests of human rights
activists and clampdown on the media would undermine the credibility of
the electoral process.
African Union chairperson Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma has also
publicly raised concerns about the political situation in Burundi and
the AU Peace and Security Council was meeting on Tuesday afternoon to
discuss the situation in the country.
Burundians in the diaspora also held small, peaceful protests in Belgium and the Netherlands.
Delicate balance
An estimated 15,000 people have fled the violence, going mostly
into Rwanda, according the UN High Commissioner for Refugees, amidst
fears that the conflict could spill over into the Great Lakes region and
take on ethnic dimensions.
The Arusha Agreement and Burundi's constitution specify a
delicate power-sharing framework in the country, which has a Hutu
majority and a Tutsi minority with a much smaller number of BaTwa
people.
President Nkurunziza is a former leader of a Hutu rebel group,
as is his main political challenger, Agathon Rwasa. Both the government
and the main opposition parties are political alliances across
ethnicities but there are fears that the current instability could
unravel the delicate bridges built over the ethnic divide.
Former President Pierre Buyoya, who led the country between 1987
and 1993, and between 1996 to 2003, has warned that the country could
slide back to civil war if the crisis is not resolved quickly.
The vice president of the ruling CNDD-FDD party on Tuesday
compared RPA, the popular radio station shut down on Monday for
reporting about the protests, to Radio Mille Collines, accused of
fanning the 1994 genocide in Rwanda.
Rwanda has thrown its borders open to civilians fleeing the
unrest in Burundi and granted them prima-facie refugee status but has
warned that it can only accommodate about 50,000.
Additional reporting by Agencies
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