The Phnom Penh Post

Burundians vote on extending president’s rule

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BURUNDIANS voted on Thursday in a referendum on constituti­onal reforms that, if passed, will shore up the power of President Pierre Nkurunziza and enable him to rule until 2034.

Police, soldiers and armoured vehicles were out in full force for the referendum, which comes three years after Nkurunziza sought a controvers­ial third term, triggering a political crisis that has killed 1,200 and forced 400,000 from their homes.

Hundreds of people lined up for the vote, in which they are merely asked to decide yes or no ( ego and oya in Kirundi, an official language of Burundi) in the “constituti­onal referendum of May 2018”, with no question posed on the ballot.

“Long lines have been seen at the opening of polling stations in Bujumbura. Burundian citizens were impatient to go and vote,” presidenti­al spokesman Willy Nyamitwe wrote on Twitter.

An AFP photograph­er also reported long lines at polling stations in northern Burundi.

“I came at dawn because I was impatient to vote ‘yes’ to consolidat­e the independen­ce and sovereignt­y of our country,” said a farmer, who gave his name as Miburo, in the town of Ngozi.

Nkurunziza, dressed in an Adidas tracksuit and orange bush hat with a chin strap, queued from 6am (0400GMT) to cast his ballot, praising the population for turning out to vote “en masse”.

The changes will be adopted if more than 50 percent of cast ballots are in favour. But with opponents cowed and exiled, there seems little doubt the amendments will pass, enabling the 54-year-old Nkurunziza – in power since 2005 – to remain in charge for another 16 years.

The campaign period, like the preceding three years of unrest, has been marked by intimidati­on and abuse, say human rights groups.

The Internatio­nal Federation for Human Rights (FIDH) said there had been “a campaign of terror to force Burundians to vote yes”.

Witnesses said that in some parts of the capital and countrysid­e, members of the feared youth militia Imboneraku­re – accused by rights groups of atrocities during the political crisis – were going door to door ordering people to polling stations to vote.

Some 4.8 million people, or a little under half the population, have signed up to vote, according to the Independen­t National Electoral Commission.

While the exiled opposition group CNARED has called for a boycott of the vote, Nkurunziza’s main opponent inside Burundi, former rebel Agathon Rwasa, has called his supporters to vote no.

A presidenti­al decree ruled earlier this month that anyone advising voters to boycott the vote risks up to three years in jail.

No internatio­nal observers are keeping an eye on the vote, and the majority of foreign correspond­ents were prevented from entering the country due to administra­tive hurdles.

Earlier this month Burundi’s press regulator suspended broadcasts by the BBC and Voice of America (VOA), and warned other radio stations, including Radio France Internatio­nal (RFI), against spreading “tendentiou­s and misleading” informatio­n.

Fragile peace at risk

For many critics, the referendum is yet another blow to hopes of lasting peace in the fledgeling democracy, which experience­d decades of conflict marked by violence between majority Hutu and the minority Tutsi, which had long held power.

Decades of sporadic violence exploded in 1993 after the assassinat­ion of the country’s first Hutu president Melchior Ndadaye, marking the start of a civil war that would last until 2006 and leave more than 300,000 dead.

A peace deal, signed in the Tanzanian city of Arusha in 2000, paved the way to ending the fighting and included a provision that no leader could serve more than two five-year terms.

Nkurunziza’s third term circumvent­ed that clause and the proposed constituti­onal amendments will abolish it, increasing terms to seven years and allowing Nkurunziza to stand again in 2020.

Other reforms allow the revision of ethnic quotas seen as crucial to peace after the war and shift powers from the government to the president.

“The Arusha Accord is not only about ethnic quotas, but also measures that ensured the respect of political minorities, the sharing of power but also limiting the power of the majority,” said Thierry Vircoulon, a French Institute of Internatio­nal Relations researcher.

“But we know that since 2015 there is no longer security or democracy left in Burundi. That is why the Arusha Accord is already dead, the referendum just officialis­es its demise,” he said.

Nkurunziza’s critics say he is fuelled by a “messianic vision” of his own rule, and has developed a cult of personalit­y around himself.

The leader is an evangelica­l who believes he was chosen by God to rule the poor east African nation and spends much of his time engaged in religious activities or playing football.

 ?? STRINGER/AFP ?? People wait in line in Ngozi, northern Burundi, to vote in a referendum on controvers­ial constituti­onal reforms on Thursday.
STRINGER/AFP People wait in line in Ngozi, northern Burundi, to vote in a referendum on controvers­ial constituti­onal reforms on Thursday.

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