BUJUMBURA
East African foreign
ministers arrived in Burundi Wednesday following days of deadly
demonstrations against a third term bid by President Pierre Nkurunziza,
the government said.
Ministers from neighbouring Rwanda and Tanzania, as well as Kenya and Uganda, were in the capital Bujumbura for talks.
"They
have come to listen to all parties in the conflict, and to try to
propose ways out of crisis," said Burundi's foreign ministry spokesman
Daniel Kabuto.
Protesters have defied calls to end
demonstrations, after more than a week of running battles in which at
least 13 people have been killed, including police.
Last
week the East African Community (EAC) — the five-nation bloc that
includes Burundi — called in a statement for talks to ease tensions and
to ensure "the realisation of a peaceful, free and fair electoral
process."
The EAC also called on Burundi to "ensure
that the electoral process does not lead to humanitarian crisis", noting
that tens of thousands of Burundians have already fled into
neighbouring nations fearing violence.
The president, a
former rebel leader from the Hutu majority who has been in power since
2005, has come under intense international pressure to withdraw from the
June 26 presidential poll.
Burundi, where a 13-year
civil war between Tutsis and Hutus ended only in 2006, has been rocked
by violent protests since the CNDD-FDD designated Nkurunziza to stand in
what critics say is in defiance of the constitution and the Arusha
accords which ended the war.
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