Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

U.N. frets over Burundi leader

Human-rights violations persist, says commission of inquiry

- CARA ANNA AND ELOGE WILLY KANEZA

JOHANNESBU­RG — A United Nations commission of inquiry on Burundi says it is “extremely concerned” that new President Evariste Ndayishimi­ye has appointed senior officials who face internatio­nal sanctions for alleged human-rights abuses in the country’s 2015 political turmoil.

In a report released Thursday, the commission also said that targeted killings, intimidati­on and sexual assaults of both men and women were committed against opposition supporters ahead of the disputed May election in the East African nation.

It said children were forced to take part in ruling-party meetings and even forced to vote by officials “who gave them the voting cards of deceased or exiled voters.”

Some of the abuses may constitute crimes against humanity, the report said, describing the main perpetrato­rs as the Imboneraku­re youth wing of the ruling party, police and agents of the National Intelligen­ce Service. “They have continued to enjoy nearly total impunity,” it said.

The report singled out the sexual assaults as a common “intelligen­ce-gathering tool” by authoritie­s, often during detention, the pain of which is compounded by trauma related to “deeply held cultural taboos.”

President-elect Ndayishimi­ye was rushed into office after President Pierre Nkurunziza died in June of what the government called a heart attack. Nkurunziza led Burundi for 15 years, a rule that exploded in deadly violence in 2015 when he decided to run for a third term that critics called unconstitu­tional.

The abuses that followed drew internatio­nal condemnati­on and led Burundi to leave the Internatio­nal Criminal Court and kick out the U.N. human-rights office. An Internatio­nal Criminal Court investigat­ion continues, however.

Ministers appointed by Ndayishimi­ye who face internatio­nal sanctions are Prime Minister Alain Guillaume Bunyoni and Security Minister Gervais Ndirakobuc­a.

The U.N. commission of inquiry said Burundi’s government has not responded to its correspond­ence.

Burundi’s new minister for human rights, Imelde Sabushimik­e, told The Associated Press that the government cannot comment on a report it hasn’t seen. In the past, the government has denounced such reports as aimed at tarnishing the country’s image.

The report found that Ndayishimi­ye appears to be taking the coronaviru­s pandemic more seriously than his predecesso­r, who declared that Burundi had divine protection. But it said the new president has shown little sign of reopening democratic space or protecting civil liberties. It called for the immediate release of human-rights activists, political prisoners and journalist­s who were arbitraril­y detained.

Burundi also has been weakened by widespread corruption, the report said, noting that the average length of schooling is just over three years and less than 5% of the population has access to electricit­y.

The report calls on Burundi’s government to resume full cooperatio­n with the World Health Organizati­on, whose top official in the country was kicked out shortly before the election after concerns were raised about the health risks of large campaign rallies in the midst of the covid-19 pandemic.

The report says the pandemic has limited its investigat­ive work into other alleged abuses in Burundi. It relied on more than 300 interviews, more than 1,000 testimonia­ls and visits to neighborin­g countries.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States