African Heads of State and Government pose for a photo during the Comesa
summit in Lusaka, Zambia, on July 18, 2018. Burundian government
boycotted the summit calling it "illegal. PHOTO | NATION MEDAI GROUP
The Burundian government has boycotted the 20th summit of the
Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (Comesa) that kicked off
Wednesday in the Zambian capital Lusaka, calling it "illegal", Burundian
media reported Wednesday.
The Comesa summit was
relocated to Lusaka from Burundian capital Bujumbura without sound
reasons, Radio Isanganiro Wednesday quoted Alain Diomede Nzeyimana,
deputy-spokesman of the Burundian president, as saying.
"The
relocation should have been decided by three presidents of Burundi,
Ethiopia and Madagascar, members of the Bureau of the Comesa heads of
state summit, but it had not been the case," he said.
Nzeyimana
underlined that participants in the two-day summit went to Lusaka for
their "personal" interests as the Comesa gets over 50 percent of its
funding from the European Union (EU).
The Burundian
government has written to the Comesa secretariat, requesting a refund of
the money used for preparing to host the summit and compensation, he
said.
Burundi will "not acknowledge" conclusions and resolutions from the Lusaka summit, he added.
In May, Comesa secretariat decided to relocate its 20th summit that had been planned to take place in Burundi earlier in June.
The
Burundian government said the decision to relocate the venue of the
Comesa summit was a "lack of respect" to a sovereign state.
The Comesa secretariat later relocated the summit to Lusaka, where its headquartered.
Comesa
is the largest regional economic organization in Africa, with 19 member
states and a population of about 390 million. It has a free trade area
and launched a customs union in 2009.
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