The Free Press Journal

TUTSI GENERAL KILLED IN BURUNDI ATTACK

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A Tutsi general and security advisor to Burundi's vice president was killed on Monday in an attack by heavily-armed men, along with his wife and daughter, a security source said.

It was the latest bloodshed to hit a country which has been engulfed by a political crisis which erupted in April 2015 when President Pierre Nkurunziza decided to run for a third term in office, which he won in July.

The resulting violence has left at least 500 people dead, while more than a quarter of a million others have fled the country, prompting the Internatio­nal Criminal Court's chief prosecutor to announce today she was opening a preliminar­y probe into the crisis.

The latest attack took place in the capital Bujumbura as General Athanase Kararuza was dropping his daughter off at school in the northeaste­rn Ghosha district, the high-ranking security source said. He had been recently named as advisor to Vice President Gaston Sindimwo, also a Tutsi. Under the constituti­on, the vice president must always be from a different ethnic group and a different party than the head of state.

Kararuza also served as deputy commander of the African Union-led peacekeepi­ng force in Central African Republic from December 2013 until late last year.

“They attacked him with rockets and grenades, his security detail tried to respond but unfortunat­ely General Kararuza and his wife were killed,” the source told AFP, speaking on condition of anonymity.

“His daughter succumbed to her injuries in hospital although the doctors did everything to save her.” Several other security sources and the main spokesman at the presidency confirmed the attack and death of Kararuza, who served in the former Tutsi-dominated army. Shortly after the attack, the ICC chief prosecutor confirmed she was opening a preliminar­y probe into the violence in Burundi.

“Those who killed my colleague General Kararuza and (perpetrate­d) other similar attacks are trying to sow divisions in the army and the police,” presidenti­al spokesman Willy Nyamitwe wrote on Twitter.

Under an Arusha peace deal which paved the way for the end of the 1993-2006 civil war that pitted the then Tutsi-dominated army against Hutu rebels, killing an estimated 300,00 people, there was to be strict parity between the two ethnic groups. —AFP

 ??  ?? A Burundian policeman stands next to the shrapnel-riddled vehicle in which Tutsi General and security advisor to Burundi's vice president Athanase Kararuza was killed on Monday in Bujumbura.
A Burundian policeman stands next to the shrapnel-riddled vehicle in which Tutsi General and security advisor to Burundi's vice president Athanase Kararuza was killed on Monday in Bujumbura.

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