Deadly clashes as UN warns of more violence in Burundi

UN human rights chief urges President Nkurunziza to disarm ruling party’s youth wing, blamed for targeted killings.

Burundi child refugees [ Azad Essa/Al Jazeera]
Thousands of people have fled violence in Burundi [Azad Essa/Al Jazeera]

At least 12 gunmen have been killed in clashes with Burundian government soldiers in a northern region near the border with Rwanda, a regional official has said.

The fighting took place on Friday near Rugazi, 140km
north of the capital Bujumbura and in a thickly forested area on the Rwandan border.

The attack was claimed by rebel Burundian army soldiers who attempted but failed to overthrow President Pierre Nkurunziza in a coup in mid-May. 

The violence in northern Burundi comes as UN human rights chief Zeid Raad al-Hussein warned that security was deterioriating rapidly in the country and that an explosion of violence is close at hand.

He told the UN Security Council that “the risk to human life, and to regional stability and development, is high” as a result of escalating politically motivated violence and Burundi’s history of recurring bloodshed and atrocities.

He said his office has documented dozens of killings in the past two months, most of them shootings of demonstrators and human rights defenders by the youth wing and security forces.

 Burundi has been hit by violence since the April announcement that President Pierre Nkurunziza would run for a third term in presidential elections set for July 15 [AP] 
 Burundi has been hit by violence since the April announcement that President Pierre Nkurunziza would run for a third term in presidential elections set for July 15 [AP] 

The central African nation has been gripped by months of unrest over Nkurunziza’s plan to stand for a third consecutive five-year term, which opposition groups say is unconstitutional and a violation of a peace deal that ended a dozen years of civil war in 2006.

Al Jazeera’s Catherine Soi, reporting from Bujumbura, described the climate as “very tense”.

Hussein urged the government to disarm the Imbonerakure youth wing of the ruling CNDD-FDD party immediately.

Hussein’s comments came as the country’s presidential election was postponed to July 21 from July 15, after African leaders called for a delay in a bid to resolve the political crisis.

One of the poorest countries in the world, the small Central African nation shares both a history of ethnic strife and a border with Rwanda, the scene of a genocide in 1994.

Burundi has been hit by violence since the April announcement that President Pierre Nkurunziza would run for a third term in presidential elections set for July 15.

Protesters say Nkurunziza must go because the constitution limits the president to two terms, but the president’s supporters say he is eligible for a third term because he was chosen by lawmakers – and not popularly elected – for his first term.

Zeid said by videoconference from Geneva that the president’s decision “has undermined a decade of steady progress in building democratic institutions”.

He cited reports of demonstrators opposing a third term being imprisoned and subjected to torture and ill-treatment, as well as extrajudicial killings. He added that refugees fleeing Burundi have reported “targeted campaigns of intimidation and terror,” and say the Imbonerakure militia are “the main threat”.

More than 127,000 Burundians have already fled the country to neighbouring Tanzania, Rwanda and the DR Congo. 

Source: Al Jazeera, News Agencies