The Phnom Penh Post

Burundi opposition rejects result of referendum

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THE coalition led by Burundi’s main opposition leader Agathon Rwasa said Saturday it did not recognise the result of a referendum on constituti­onal reforms that could leave President Pierre Nkurunziza in power until 2034.

With provisiona­l returns from all but one of the country’s 18 provinces showing support for reforms that could see Nkurunziza, already serving a controvers­ial third term, start two seven-year terms in 2020, former rebel Rwasa slammed the exercise as a charade.

“The electoral process has been neither free nor transparen­t, nor independen­t and still less democratic,” Rwasa said in a statement issued by his Amizero y’Aburundi coalition.

He added that he “rejects the fantasist results that could be proclaimed following this supposed vote.”

The electoral commission (Ceni) has yet to confirm the result of Thursday’s vote but a group of 15 public and private radio stations put the “yes” votes from the 17 declared provinces as all topping 50 percent, rising as high as 85 percent.

Rwasa’s coalition renewed allegation­s of “intimidati­on and harrassmen­t” of its voters by the ruling CNDD-FDD party. The party officially managed a majority even in traditiona­l opposition stronghold­s amid claims the CDDDFDD’s Imboneraku­re youth wing had forced opponents to vote ‘yes’.

The United Nations regards Imboneraku­re as a militia group that spreads terror among the population.

Amizero alleged that four of its monitors had been abducted and that others had been chased out of polling stations, threatened or jailed.

“The vote was neither secret nor fair across the republic – voters were accompanie­d to the booths and were urged to vote ‘yes’ by bureau officials and Imboneraku­re,” Rwasa charged.

Critics say the referendum has struck a death blow to the Arusha peace deal which ended a 1993-2006 civil war and ushered in measures to ensure power would not be concentrat­ed in either the hands of the majority Hutu or minority Tutsi, after decades of violence between the communitie­s.

As well as allowing Nkurunziza to prolong his rule, the proposed changes also weaken constituti­onal constraint­s over the feared national intelligen­ce agency and allow the revision of ethnic quotas seen as crucial to peace. The new Constituti­on would also scrap one of two vice-presidents and shift powers from the government to the president.

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