Mail & Guardian

SA must help resolve Burundi’s crisis

The Arusha Accords, led by Thabo Mbeki, have been eroded and Cyril Ramaphosa needs to restore peace

- Lewis Mudge

The resolution of Burundi’s protracted civil war was a milestone in African politics, highlighti­ng regional leaders’ ability and determinat­ion to organise a peace settlement based on human rights. Yet the gains made nearly two decades ago, involving strong South African leadership, have all but vanished.

After the announceme­nt in 2015 by Pierre Nkurunziza — the country’s president since 2005 — of his intention to run for a controvers­ial third term, the government cracked down on opposition with widespread violence. The crisis deepened earlier this year, with widespread intimidati­on of the opposition during the campaign for a constituti­onal referendum to allow the president to stay in power until 2034.

Strong regional leadership, especially from South Africa, is desperatel­y needed to stem the abuse and get the country back on track.

South Africa, together with Tanzania, played a critical role in broking the 2000 Arusha Accords, which helped to end a deadly conflict, in which an estimated 300 000 people were killed in largely ethnically motivated attacks. Then deputy president Thabo Mbeki led South Africa’s mediation efforts. The interventi­on in Burundi was an African solution to an African problem.

The accords created conditions to end the human rights abuses that defined much of the conflict. The agreement opened the way for the Constituti­on adopted five years later and became the cornerston­e of a consensus-led system in which ethnic Hutu and Tutsi governed together. It also set the stage for a decade of relatively steady progress toward peace, reconcilia­tion, economic developmen­t, a burgeoning civil society and an independen­t media.

Yet since 2010, the ruling party, the National Council for the Defence of Democracy — Forces for the Defence of Democracy, has chipped away at key tenets of the accords. The opposition boycotted elections that year after a crackdown on human rights. During the election period, political opponents faced surveillan­ce, arrest, torture and even death. After 2010, the only checks on the government came from the media and civil society, which were more and more at risk.

In late April 2015, demonstrat­ions broke out in response to Nkurunziza’s decision to seek a third term. The ruling party contended that his first term didn’t count because Parliament had appointed him. The police responded to the protests with excessive force. Violence escalated in the second half of 2015, with targeted killings of high-profile government and opposition figures, deadly police search operations, abuses by members of Imboneraku­re, the ruling party’s youth league, and attacks by armed opposition groups against the security forces and the ruling party.

The government now seems to regard activists, journalist­s, and political opponents as enemies. Many have fled into exile following persistent threats and intimidati­on.

In 2016, some abuses became more covert, with increasing abductions and unexplaine­d deaths. Since early last year, security forces and Imboneraku­re members have killed, raped, beaten, detained, threatened and harassed scores of opponents. Nearly 400000 people have fled the country since 2015.

The new Constituti­on, adopted in the referendum earlier this month, does more than enable Nkurunziza to stay on. It is designed to strengthen the ruling party’s grip, reducing the majority needed to adopt legislatio­n and setting the scene for dismantlin­g the ethnic balances embedded in the accords. The guarantees that the Tutsi minority hold some government posts will now be up for discussion with an increasing­ly authoritar­ian government. The ruling party’s control of state institutio­ns, the absence of space for a genuine opposition and the rampant impunity for state agents clearly threaten the system defined by the accords.

But the core tenets of the accords can still be salvaged — if regional leaders step up and take a strong stance.

President Cyril Ramaphosa should put South Africa at the forefront in helping to restore the gains of the Arusha process and to prevent a further deadly escalation of the crisis in Burundi before elections in 2020. He should work with other African leaders and indicate clearly that there will be real consequenc­es unless Burundi’s leaders call a halt to state repression. African leaders should make full use of the African Union, including its powers to address crimes against humanity.

South Africa justified its leadership role during the Arusha negotiatio­ns by citing its moral obligation­s to support peace efforts on the continent after so many African countries contribute­d to the struggle against apartheid. With further large-scale human rights abuses on the horizon, and the need for strong regional engagement greater than ever, Ramaphosa should recommit to holding Burundi to the Arusha agreement. The Gambia’s President Adama Barrow has pledged 10% of his salary to the country’s national developmen­t plan, launched in February this year. Barrow announced this pledge upon his return from Brussels, where $1.7-billion was raised at a donor conference. But Barrow’s donation is not as generous as that of President Cyril Ramaphosa, who this month pledged to give half his salary to a social project. The money will be managed by the Nelson Mandela Foundation. Unlike Ramaphosa, however, Barrow is not one of Africa’s richest men.

Ethiopian flying high

State-owned Ethiopian Airlines has announced that it will receive its 100th aircraft in early June, making it the first national carrier on the continent to achieve this feat. Ethiopian Airlines, the fastest-growing aviation group in Africa, will add a Boeing 787-900 to its collection. Group chief executive Tewolde GebreMaria­m described this milestone as a “continuati­on of our historical aviation leadership role in Africa”.

Nigeria cuts candidacy age

Nigeria’s President Muhammadu Buhari will approve a law to reduce age limits for political office, which could make it easier for younger candidates to run in next year’s election. The Bill reduces the minimum age for presidenti­al candidates from 40 to 35, and senators and state governors from 35 to 30. The move comes after pressure from youth groups, who said younger people were being politicall­y marginalis­ed.

 ??  ?? Backslide: Burundi’s new Constituti­on has only fortified President Pierre Nkurunziza’s strangleho­ld over the country. Photo: AFP
Backslide: Burundi’s new Constituti­on has only fortified President Pierre Nkurunziza’s strangleho­ld over the country. Photo: AFP

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