National Post (National Edition)

BURUNDI VIOLENCE IN SPOTLIGHT AFTER TEENS FLEE TO CANADA.

BURUNDIANS, FLEEING CRISIS, ARE WELCOMED INTO CANADA

- DAN LEVIN in Ottawa

In the days since six Burundian students slipped away from a robotics competitio­n in Washington, D.C. — with at least two of them making their way across the border to Canada — many have questioned what propelled the teenagers to avoid returning home.

Yet, Justine Nkurunziza is not among those who are wondering.

Like the teenagers and hundreds of other Burundians, Nkurunziza, 57, followed a welltrod path north last year into Canada, the final stop in a desperate journey to escape the violence that is racking their tiny central African nation.

“They are saved,” said Nkurunziza, president of an election monitoring organizati­on in Burundi, who says she was marked for assassinat­ion by government security forces. “Those young people took the opportunit­y to flee from the killings, just like I did.”

Since 2015, around 300,000 people have fled Burundi amid the unrest that followed a decision by the country’s president, Pierre Nkurunziza, to seek a third term in violation of constituti­onal term limits. (Justine Nkurunziza is not related to the president.) Despite protests, a failed coup attempt and an election boycott by opposition parties, Pierre Nkurunziza emerged victorious in a vote that Western observers roundly criticized as rigged.

Over the past two years, the United Nations has documented hundreds of summary executions, assassinat­ions, torture and other crimes. The Burundian government has denied the findings, and responded by becoming the first country to withdraw from the Internatio­nal Criminal Court, The Hague-based tribunal responsibl­e for trying crimes against humanity.

Thousands have fled to refugee camps in Rwanda, Tanzania and Uganda, where they face reprisals from marauding Burundian militias that have carried out targeted killings, human rights groups and refugees say.

The disappeara­nce of the Burundian teenagers, including two who had been found safe in Ottawa, thrust a simmering African crisis into the internatio­nal spotlight and underscore­d Canada’s reception to those seeking refuge from war and political violence.

As the administra­tion of President Donald Trump is seeking to stanch the flow of refugees into the United States, Canada has taken the opposite approach. In May, the Canadian government designated refugee claims from Burundi, along with those from Afghanista­n, Egypt and Yemen, as eligible for expedited processing, allowing authoritie­s to accept the claims without a hearing. The expedited-processing policy, put in place in 2015, also applies to refugees from Syria, Iraq and Eritrea.

Canada’s tight-knit Burundian community of roughly 10,000 has welcomed the stream of new arrivals since the crisis erupted. Over the past two years, Ottawa’s Refugee Protection Division has approved claims from 690 Burundians. Officials at the Burundian Embassy in Ottawa did not respond to interview requests.

Justine Nkurunziza, who led the Civil Society Coalition for Election Monitoring, was a prominent witness to the violent collapse of her nation’s fragile democracy, and she said it was her outspoken criticism of the president’s decision to seek a third term that had thrust her into the government’s cross hairs.

During a trip Justine Nkurunziza made in May, 2015, to the Tanzanian city of Dar es Salaam to lobby the UN and the African Union, a failed coup in Burundi prompted the president to close the borders and label civil society groups as enemies of the republic. Justine Nkurunziza fled with her small suitcase to Rwanda, as did her family, she said.

“All the main civil society leaders, all the intellectu­als, all those who dare to speak the truth, they are targeted,” she said. “They are killed.”

Fearful of possible genocide in Burundi, human rights groups were urging the UN to send in a civilian protection force, and Justine Nkurunziza was scheduled to help make the case in New York last summer. While awaiting an American visa, however, she claimed her life was threatened.

Upon landing in New York, she travelled to the home of relatives in Portland, Maine, and then stayed for three weeks in a shelter in Buffalo, N.Y, before crossing the border at Niagara Falls, Ont.

Asked why she had sought asylum in Canada and not the United States, she paused and took a deep breath. “I wasn’t feeling secure in the U.S. because everyone can have a gun,” she said, recalling the sound of gunshots that traumatize­d her in Burundi.

Most of the Burundians in Canada came in the 1990s, fleeing ethnic massacres between Hutus and Tutsis that spilled over from the genocide in Rwanda. These days, many of the refugees who make it to Canada are young people who were involved in the protests that swept Bujumbura, the Burundian capital, in 2015.

During an interview last week at a government apartment in Ottawa, two of those protesters, both 21, described the climate of terror that had prompted them to flee their homeland. They insisted on not being identified, saying they feared for the safety of family members left behind.

In hushed voices, they recounted carrying anti-government banners amid throngs of young protesters and escaping after the coup attempt and the brutal government crackdown that drove scores of youths into hiding to avoid militias and neighbourh­ood informants.

One of the men got an American visa to attend college in the U.S., but said he had no intention of attending. After arriving in New York, he took a Greyhound bus to Plattsburg­h, New York, and then a taxi to the border.

From there he crossed into Canada, where he told Canadian immigratio­n officials that he was a refugee and that he had an aunt in Ottawa. In the fall, he plans to enrol at the University of Ottawa to study computer engineerin­g.

Even as scores of journalist­s were fleeing Burundi in 2015, Tabitha Mukamusoni, 33, a stringer for Voice of America, stayed behind to cover the mounting violence, despite repeated threats from the militias, she said.

But after she reported on the shooting deaths of a Burundian journalist and his wife and two children by police that October, a phone call from a police official spurred her to escape. “He said, ‘You’ve signed your death warrant,’” she said in an interview last week. “I knew if I don’t leave, they’ll kill me.”

Mukamusoni fled with her son to Rwanda, followed the next day by her husband and daughter; she lived there for a year, covering the refugee crisis before going to Uganda to report on activists who had been attacked by Burundian militias. Invited to speak at a conference in Canada and fearing for her life, she flew to Montreal in October, 2016, and claimed asylum. Today she lives in a house in Ottawa with other female refugees.

But separated from her husband and two young children, who remain in Rwanda, she finds that every day is a struggle.

“Without my family I live here hopeless,” she said, wiping away tears. “I’m safe, but it’s not easy.”

 ?? DAVE CHAN / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Justine Nkurunziza, left, and Tabitha Mukamusoni, asylum seekers from Burundi, walk along the Rideau River in Ottawa last week. Canada is the final stop in many refugees’ desperate journey to escape the summary executions, assassinat­ions and torture...
DAVE CHAN / THE NEW YORK TIMES Justine Nkurunziza, left, and Tabitha Mukamusoni, asylum seekers from Burundi, walk along the Rideau River in Ottawa last week. Canada is the final stop in many refugees’ desperate journey to escape the summary executions, assassinat­ions and torture...
 ?? JEROME DELAY / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? Refugees fleeing Burundi’s violence are seen in May 2015 in Tanzania. Since 2015, 300,000 people have fled the country.
JEROME DELAY / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES Refugees fleeing Burundi’s violence are seen in May 2015 in Tanzania. Since 2015, 300,000 people have fled the country.

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