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Burundi opposition fights for survival in key polls

Published: 25 Jun 2015 - 04:20 pm | Last Updated: 12 Jan 2022 - 01:36 pm

 

 


Bujumbura, Burundi---Almost five million Burundians will go to the polls on Monday for parliamentary and local elections after weeks of unrest and violence that have forced 100,000 to flee the country.
Burundi has been in crisis since late April over President Pierre Nkurunziza's controversial bid to stand for a third consecutive five-year term, a move opponents have branded unconstitutional and a violation of a peace deal that paved the way to the end of 13 years of civil war in 2006.
Rights groups say over 70 people have been killed in the worst political crisis to hit the troubled central African nation since the war ended a decade ago.
Many fear a repeat of that violence, which split the country along ethnic lines, pitting the majority Hutus against the minority Tutsis and causing rival factions to emerge within those groups.
Parliamentary elections are due on June 29, ahead of the presidential vote on July 15.
Voters will elect 100 lawmakers, with lists to ensure parliament adheres to constitutional rules on ethnic and gender representation.
Parliament must be 60 percent Hutu -- the group that accounts for some 85 percent of the population -- with the remaining 40 percent of elected seats reserved for the minority Tutsi. At least 30 percent of seats must be held by women.
- Protests and grenade attacks -
Observers warn of the potential for fraud, with an electoral commission made up of members close to the government, after two of the five original commissioners fled the country.
"Given the configuration of the electoral commission, what is important is probably not the vote but the count," said Thierry Vircoulon of the International Crisis Group (ICG) think tank.
Several journalists who have been covering Burundi's crisis -- which has seen weeks of street demonstrations, a violent police crackdown and a failed coup attempt by a section of the army -- have complained of being subjected to threats, including death threats, by members of the police or other branches of the security forces.
Despite growing isolation, the government has defied international appeals to delay the series of elections, including from the United Nations, European Union, African Union and even its neighbours, the regional five-member East African Community (EAC) bloc.
While security forces crushed more than a month of protests from late April to mid-June against Nkurunziza's bid for another term in power, violence has resumed in recent days and has included a string of grenade attacks targeting both civilians and police that have left at least four dead and 40 wounded.
Gunshots are heard almost every night in the capital Bujumbura.
On one side is Nkurunziza's powerful ruling ex-rebel CNDD-FDD party, well-organised and with sizeable resources, facing off against a marginalised opposition out of power for five years following its boycott of elections in 2010.
The main opposition parties -- the Tutsi UPRONA party and the ex-Hutu rebel National Liberation Forces (FNL) -- have been co-opted into becoming government allies.

AFP