Cape Argus

Burundi ruling party youth trained at military camp

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YOUTHS affiliated to Burundi’s ruling party have been sent to the eastern Congo for military training, according to sources cited by Radio Humura.

“We are taken from various regions of the country to eastern Congo where we are trained to defend the country,” a youth who had escaped the training said.

The ruling party’s youth wing, known as Imboneraku­re, has been classified by the UN as a militia, but Burundi’s ruling party and the government accuse the UN of being enemies of the party and its youth movement.

At least 200 youths are reported to be in the eastern Congo being trained to use weapons.

“When one looks around, it is as if Burundi leaders are preparing to fight. But who will they fight against? That is a question one can ask,” said Mireille Muzaninka, a political analyst.

In 2014, Burundi ruling party youths were also reportedly being trained in eastern Congo before they were chased from their bases there. Burundi’s ruling party has not reacted to the allegation­s yet, but the opposition fears an increase in violence.

More than 1 200 people have been killed in Burundi, according to rights groups, although a government-backed commission says only 720 have been killed since April 2015.

In March, Imboneraku­re were filmed in the northern district of Ntega on the border with Rwanda singing to comrades to rape female opponents, so that they could give birth to more Imboneraku­re.

The ruling party said there would be an investigat­ion into the chant. However, within a month, another group of ruling party youth sang the chant on their way to a meeting.

Muzaninka said that if the youth were not contained, they would cause great harm to the country.

“If tomorrow they become uncontroll­able, even the ruling party officers will be, like many of us, their victims.

The UNHCR says at least 500 000 people will have fled the country by the end of this year. – Independen­t Foreign Service

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