Twenty-six years ago, Prosper saw Burundian soldiers take
away his brother and nephew. Neighbours told him soldiers had also
discovered his mother in a house where she had...
been hiding. None were ever seen again.
been hiding. None were ever seen again.
This week, the government
opened a mass grave in his neighbourhood. Families mourning long-lost
loved ones were allowed to sift through the crumbling remains.
Prosper—who
asked that only his first name be used to protect him from
reprisals—searched among the jumble of bones and scraps of cloth,
haunted by his inability to remember his mother’s clothes. Suddenly a
woman next to him cried out.
“She recognised the watch
and clothes of her husband,” he said. “I haven’t been able to remember
the clothes or shoes my mother was wearing. Twenty-six years is a long
time.”
Burundi’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission,
known by its French acronym CVR, told parliament this week that it had
identified more than 4,000 mass graves across the country.
The tiny nation has suffered colonial occupation, civil war and decades of intermittent massacres.
The government-run commission was set up in 2014 to investigate
violence from 1885, when foreigners arrived in Burundi, until 2008, when
a stalled peace deal to end the civil war was fully implemented.
It
does not cover most of the rule of the current president, Pierre
Nkurunziza. The UN says hundreds of Burundians have been killed in
clashes with security forces since 2015, when Nkurunziza ran for a
third, disputed term in office.
The UN also warned last year that rights abuses are likely to spike again ahead of May elections.
Burundi’s
population is divided between the Tutsi and Hutu ethnic groups, as is
neighbouring Rwanda, where Hutu extremists slaughtered over one million
Tutsis and moderate Hutus in a 1994 genocide.
Much of Burundi’s civil war—which killed 300,000 people before it ended in 2005—also had ethnic overtones.
So
far, the commission has identified more than 142,000 victims of
violence, commission chairman Pierre Claver Ndayicariye told lawmakers
on Tuesday. Some may never be found.
One of the graves
that was opened lies in the neighbourhood of Kamenge in the capital
Bujumbura. Inside lay the remains of 270 people.
The
commission is preserving the remains for burial, along with weapons like
hoes, machetes, hammers, and knives recovered nearby, said Clement
Ninziza, deputy chairman of the commission.
The
commission has not apportioned blame for the killings, but noted in its
preliminary report that the site lay close to a near a former military
post.
Residents said many people were buried there
after a 1994 massacre by soldiers and a Tutsi militia. Prosper managed
to run away. Neighbours told him of his family’s fate.
“My mother was with many other women who were found hiding,” he said.
“When the army officers came, they killed all of them, saying they were sorcerers. They were then brought to that mass grave.”
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