Burundi has suspended some foreign non-governmental organisations for three months for violating a new law.
The
National Security Council secretary Maj Gen Silas Ntigurirwa said on
Thursday that during the period of the ban, which takes effect from
October 1, the government will be verifying "the conformity of the NGOs
with the law".
He did not however name the affected
organisations or the violations but said they would only resume
operations on condition that they comply.
There are 130 foreign NGOs in Burundi, according to the Ministry of Home Affairs.
Burundi
has had tense relations with some civil society organisations since
2015 when President Pierre Nkurunziza, who chairs the National Security
Council, said he would seek a controversial third term. He was
re-elected in the subsequent vote amid protests and crackdown.
A
referendum in May this year approved changes to the constitution that
allow Mr Nkurunziza to stay in power until 2034. He has however said he
would not seek another term.
Jean Claude Karerwa, the presidential spokesman, said on
local radio on Friday that some NGOs were promoting “same sex marriages,
and this is against our culture”.
Earlier this
month, the Burundi Senate gave a six-month ultimatum to NGOs to ensure
that they comply with the law that requires them to hire local staff at
60 per cent Hutu and 30 per cent Tutsi. The law also requires that 30
per cent of the employees be women.
Article 148 of the
constitution states that Burundi's “employment practices are based on
objective and equitable fitness criteria as well as the need to correct
imbalances and ensure broad ethnic, regional and gender representation."
The Home Affairs minister Pascal Barandagiye is expected to meet with the representatives of the NGOs on Monday October 1.
No comments:
Post a Comment