Gulf News

Challenges facing troubled nation

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The small, landlocked country of Burundi finally got down to vote in an election that has sparked weeks of unrest.

Ethnic divisions

Tensions between Burundi’s ethnic Hutu majority — some 85 per cent of the 10 million population — and the Tutsi minority have boiled over repeatedly since independen­ce from colonial ruler Belgium in 1962. In 1972, a failed Hutu-led uprising against Tutsi-dominated rulers sparked a wave of massacres. Later, the 1993 assassinat­ion of the first Hutu president, Melchior Ndadaye, triggered a civil war between the Tutsi-dominated army and Hutu rebels that lasted until 2006 despite several peace deals. Today, the fault lines are no longer simply ethnic — both Nkurunziza and his main rival Agathon Rwasa are Hutus. However, old divisions remain.

Economic frustratio­n

Burundi is one of Africa’s most densely populated nations. Farming forms the backbone of the economy, with key exports of coffee and tea. Manufactur­ing is underdevel­oped, and the country suffers from a poor transporta­tion network and government corruption that stifles the private sector. The nation is green and fertile, but more than two-thirds of the population live below the poverty line.

Constituti­onal challenge

Nkurunziza was first voted in by parliament in 2005, as part of the peace process to end the 1993-2006 civil war. In 2010 he was re-elected, this time by the people.

Opponents say a third term would violate the constituti­on and jeopardise deals that ended civil war that stipulated presidents cannot rule for more than a decade. Nkurunziza’s supporters reject that argument, saying the constituti­on overrules earlier agreements, and states leaders can rule for two terms after elections by “direct universal suffrage”.

Militia forces

The internatio­nal community has repeatedly warned of a risk of violence, with rival parties growing increasing­ly radical.

The United Nations has said is particular­ly worried about the ruling party’s youth wing, the Imboneraku­re, a fearsome group whose name means ‘The Watchmen’ or, literally, ‘Those Who See Far’.

The Imboneraku­re are accused of being a militia force by the UN, carrying out a string of attacks.

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