BUJUMBURA, BURUNDI
Assailants
attacked numerous polling stations in Burundi overnight, disrupting the
start of voting in controversial polls that follow two months of unrest
over the president's bid for a third term.
Armed groups
threw grenades at stations in both the capital Bujumbura and in some
provinces ahead of Monday's parliamentary and local elections, delaying
the start of voting in many of the centres, police and election
officials said.
Voting has not yet begun in many
centres in the capital because election officials are trying to prepare
materials and in almost all of the stations, these arrived late because
of the overnight attacks," Cyriaque Bucumi, the president of the
Bujumbura electoral commission, told AFP.
The
opposition and civil society groups are boycotting Monday's polls,
saying the elections -- which the authorities have refused to delay
despite calls from the international community -- will not be free and
fair.
Burundi has been roiled by weeks of unrest that
has included widespread protests and a failed coup bid and that has
killed more than 70 people and send thousands fleeing the central
African country following President Pierre Nkurunziza's bid for a third
term.
Monday's vote is for local and parliamentary seats, with a presidential election due to follow on July 15.
Burundi
was plunged into turmoil in late April when Nkurunziza launched his
drive for a third consecutive five-year term, triggering widespread
protests.
Opponents say his bid for another term is
unconstitutional and violates a peace accord that paved the way to end
13 years of civil war in 2006.
Several top officials — including the deputy vice-president Gervais Rufyikiri as well as members of the election commission and constitutional court — have also fled the poverty-stricken, landlocked country.
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