After its defeat in World War I, Germany
handed control of a section of the former German East Africa to Belgium. On
October 20, 1924, this land, which consisted of modern-day Rwanda and Burundi,
became a Belgian League of Nations mandate territory, in practical terms part of
the Belgian colonial empire, known as Ruanda-Urundi. However, the Belgians
allowed Ruanda-Urundi to continue its kingship dynasty.
Following World War II, Ruanda-Urundi was a United Nations Trust Territory under
Belgian administrative authority. During the 1940s, a series of policies caused
divisions throughout the country. On October 4, 1943, powers were split in the
legislative division of Burundi's government between chiefdoms and lower
chiefdoms. Chiefdoms were in charge of land, and lower sub-chiefdoms were
established. Native authorities also had powers. In 1948, Belgium allowed the
region to form political parties. These factions would be one of the main
influences for Burundi's independence from Belgium.
Independence and Civil War
On January 20, 1959, Burundi's ruler Mwami Mwambutsa IV requested from the
Belgian Minister of Colonies a separation of Burundi and Rwanda and a
dissolution of Ruanda-Urundi. Six months later, political parties were formed to
bring attention to Burundi's independence from Europe and to separate Rwanda
from Burundi. The first of these political parties was the Unity for National
Progress (UPRONA).
Burundi's push for independence was influenced to some extent by the instability
and ethnic persecution that occurred in Rwanda. In November 1959, Rwandese Hutu
attacked the Tutsi and massacred them by the thousands. Many Tutsi escaped to
Uganda and Burundi to find freedom from persecution. While in Burundi, many
Tutsi started fighting the local Hutu, and Tutsi soldiers killed Hutu peasants
in retaliation for Hutu violence in Rwanda.[8] The Hutu took power in Rwanda by
winning Belgian-run elections in 1960.
The UPRONA, a multi-ethnic unity party led by Prince Louis Rwagasore and the
Christian Democratic Party (PDC) became the most prominent organizations
throughout Burundi-Urundi. After UPRONA's victory in legislative elections,
Prince Rwagasore was assassinated in 1961, allegedly with the help of the
Belgian colonial administration.Instability followed.
The country claimed independence on July 1, 1962, and legally changed its name
from Ruanda-Urundi to Burundi. Mwami Mwambutsa IV was named king. On September
18, 1962, just over a month after declaring independence from Belgium, Burundi
joined the United Nations.
Upon Burundi’s independence, a constitutional monarchy was established and both
Hutus and Tutsis were represented in parliament. King Mwambutsa appointed a
Tutsi prime minister, the Hutus, who were the majority in parliament, felt
cheated. An ensuing attempted coup by the Hutu-dominated police was ruthlessly
suppressed by the Army, then led by a Tutsi officer, Captain Michel
Micombero.[14] When the next Hutu Prime Minister, Pierre Ngendandumwe, was
assassinated in 1965, Hutus engaged in a series of attacks on Tutsi, which the
government repressed ruthlessly, fearing the killings of Tutsis by Hutus, who
wanted to follow the "Model Rwanda". The Burundi police and military were now
brought under the control of the Tutsi.
Mwambutsa was deposed in 1966 by his son, Prince Ntare V, who claimed the
throne. That same year, Tutsi Prime Minister Captain Michel Micombero deposed
Ntare, abolished the monarchy, and declared the nation a republic, though it was
in effect a military regime.
In 1972, an all Hutu organization known as Umugambwe w'Abakozi b'Uburundi or
Burundi Workers' Party (UBU) organized and carried out systematic attacks on
ethnic Tutsi with the declared intent of annihilating the whole group. The
military regime responded with large-scale reprisals targeting Hutus. The total
number of casualties was never established, but estimates for the Tutsi genocide
and the reprisals on the Hutus together are said to exceed the 100,000 at the
very least, with a similar number of asylum-seekers in Tanzania and Rwanda. In
1976, another Tutsi, Colonel Jean-Baptiste Bagaza, led a bloodless coup and
promoted various reforms. A new constitution was promulgated in 1981, keeping
Burundi a one-party state. In August 1984, Bagaza was elected head of state.
During his tenure, Bagaza suppressed political opponents and religious freedoms.
Major Pierre Buyoya, a Tutsi, overthrew Bagaza in 1987 and suspended the
constitution, dissolved the political parties, and reinstated military rule
under the Military Committee for National Salvation (CSMN).[14] Anti-Tutsi
ethnic propaganda disseminated by the remnants of the 1972 UBU, which had
re-organized as PALIPEHUTU in 1981, led to killings of Tutsi peasants in the
northern communes of Ntega and Marangara in August 1988. The death toll was put
at 5,000 by the government, though some international NGOs believe this
understates the losses.
The new regime did not unleash harsh reprisals (as in 1972), but the trust it
gained was soon eroded when it decreed an amnesty for those who had called for,
carried out, and taken credit for the killings on ethnic grounds, which amounts
to genocide in international law. Many analysts consider this period as the
beginning of the "culture of impunity." But other analysts consider the "culture
of impunity" to have had started from 1965 and 1972, when the revolt of a small
and identifiable number of Hutus unleashed massive killings of Hutus on the
whole territory.
In the aftermath of the killings, a group of Hutu intellectuals wrote an open
letter to Pierre Buyoya, asking for more representation of the Hutus in the
administration. The signatories were sent to prison. Nevertheless, only few
weeks later, Buyoya appointed a new government with an equal number of Hutu and
Tutsi, and a Hutu, Adrien Sibomana, as Prime Minister. Buyoya also created a
commission in charge of addressing the issue of national unity. In 1992, a new
constitution that provided for multi-party system was promulgated, and a civil
war sprang up from Burundi's core.
First Attempt at Democracy
In June 1993, Melchior Ndadaye, leader of the Hutu-dominated Front for Democracy
in Burundi (FRODEBU), won the first democratic election and became the first
Hutu head of the state, leading a pro-Hutu government. However, in October 1993,
Tutsi soldiers assassinated Ndadaye, which started further years of violence
between Hutus and Tutsis. It is estimated that some 300,000 people, mostly
civilians, were killed in the years following the assassination.
In early 1994, the parliament elected Cyprien Ntaryamira, also a Hutu, to the
office of president. He and the president of Rwanda were killed together when
their airplane was shot down. More refugees started fleeing to Rwanda. Another
Hutu, parliament speaker Sylvestre Ntibantunganya was appointed as president in
October 1994. Within months, a wave of ethnic violence began, starting with the
massacre of Hutu refugees in the capital, Bujumbura, and the withdrawal of the
mainly Tutsi Union for National Progress from the government and parliament.
In 1996, Pierre Buyoya, a Tutsi, took power through a coup d’état. He suspended
the constitution and was sworn in as president in 1998. In response to the rebel
attacks, the population was forced by the government to relocate to refugee
camps. Under his rule, long peace talks started, mediated by South Africa. Both
parties signed agreements in Arusha, Tanzania and Pretoria, South Africa, to
share power in Burundi. The agreements took four years to plan, and on August
28, 2000, a transitional government for Burundi was planned as a part of the
Arusha Peace and Reconciliation Agreement. The transitional government was
placed on a trial basis for five years. After several aborted cease-fires, a
2001 peace plan and power sharing agreement has been relatively successful. A
cease-fire was signed in 2003 between the Tutsi-controlled Burundian government
and the largest Hutu rebel group, CNDD-FDD (National Council for the Defense of
Democracy-Forces for the Defense of Democracy).
In 2003, FRODEBU Hutu leader Domitien Ndayizeye was elected president. In early
2005, ethnic quotas were formed for determining positions in Burundi's
government. Throughout the year, elections for parliamentary and president
occurred. To this day, conflicts between the Hutu and the Tutsi continue. As of
2008, the Burundian government is talking with the Hutu-led Palipehutu-National
Liberation Forces (NLF)[23] to bring peace to the country. In 2005, Pierre
Nkurunziza, once a leader of a Hutu rebel group, was elected to president.
Peace Agreements
Following the request of the United Nation Secretary General Boutros
Boutros-Ghali to intervene in the humanitarian crisis, African leaders began a
series of peace talks between the warring factions. Talks were initiated under
the aegis of former Tanzanian President Julius Nyerere in 1995; following his
death, South African President Nelson Mandela took the helm. As the talks
progressed, South African President Thabo Mbeki and United States President Bill
Clinton would also lend their respective weight.
The peace talks took the form of Track I mediations. This method of negotiation
can be defined as a form of diplomacy involving governmental or
intergovernmental representatives, who may use their positive reputations,
mediation or the “carrot and stick” method as a means of obtaining or forcing an
outcome, frequently along the lines of “bargaining” or “win-lose”.
The main objective framing the talks was a structural transformation of the
Burundian government and military as a way to bridge the ethnic gap between the
Tutsis and Hutus. This would be accomplished in two ways. First, a transitional
power sharing government would be established, with the president holding office
for three year terms. The second objective involved a restructuring of the
military, where the two groups would be represented equally.
As the protracted nature of the peace talks demonstrated, there were several
obstacles facing the mediators and negotiating parties. First, the Burundian
officials perceived the goals as “unrealistic” and viewed the treaty as
ambiguous, contradictory and confusing. Second, and perhaps most importantly,
the Burundians believed the treaty would be irrelevant without an accompanying
cease fire. This would require separate and direct talks with the rebel groups.
The main Hutu party was skeptical of the offer of a power-sharing government;
they alleged that they were deceived by the Tutsis in past agreements.
In 2000, the Burundian President signed the treaty, as well as 13 of the 19
warring Hutu and Tutsi factions. However, disagreements persisted over which
group would preside over the nascent government and when the ceasefire would
commence. The spoilers of the peace talks were the hardliner Tutsi and Hutu
groups who refused to sign the accord; as a result, violence intensified. Three
years later at a summit of African leaders in Tanzania, the Burundian president
and the main opposition Hutu group signed an accord to end the conflict; the
signatory members were granted ministerial posts within the government. However,
smaller militant Hutu groups – such as the Forces for National Liberation –
remained active.
UN Involvement
Between 1993 and 2003, many rounds of peace talks, overseen by regional leaders
in Tanzania, South Africa, and Uganda, gradually established power-sharing
agreements to satisfy the majority of the contending groups. African Union (AU)
peacekeepers were deployed to help oversee the installation of a transitional
government. In June 2004, the UN stepped in and took over peacekeeping
responsibilities as a signal of growing international support for the already
markedly advanced peace process in Burundi.
The mission’s mandate, under Chapter VII of the UN Charter, has been to monitor
cease-fire; carry out disarmament, demobilization, and reintegration of former
combatants; support humanitarian assistance and refugee and IDP return; assist
with elections; protect international staff and Burundian civilians; monitor
Burundi’s troublesome borders including halting illicit arms flows; and assist
in carrying out institutional reforms including those of the Constitution,
judiciary, armed forces, and police. The mission has been allotted 5,650
military personnel, 120 civilian police, and about 1,000 international and local
civilian personnel. The mission has been functioning well and has greatly
benefited from the existence of a fairly functional transitional government,
which is in the process of transitioning into a more legitimate, elected entity.
The main difficulty the operation faced at first was the continued resistance to
the peace process by the last Tutsi nationalist rebel group. This organization
continued its violent conflict on the outskirts of the capital despite the UN’s
presence. By June 2005, the group had stopped fighting and was brought back into
the political process. All political parties have accepted a formula for
inter-ethnic power-sharing, which means no political party can gain access to
government offices unless it is ethnically integrated.
The focus of the UN’s mission had been to enshrine the power-sharing
arrangements in a popularly voted constitution, so that elections may be held
and a new government installed. Disarmament, demobilization and reintegration
were done in tandem with elections preparations. In February 2005, the
Constitution was approved with over 90% of the popular vote. In May, June, and
August 2005, three separate elections were also held at the local level for the
Parliament and the presidency.
While there are still some difficulties with refugee returns and securing
adequate food supplies for the war-weary population, the mission has overall
managed to win the trust and confidence of a majority of the formerly warring
leaders as well as the population at large. It has also been involved with
several “quick impact” projects including rehabilitating and building schools,
orphanages, health clinics, and rebuilding infrastructure such as water lines.
2006 to Present
Reconstruction efforts in Burundi started to practically take effect after 2006.
The UN shut down its peacekeeping mission and re-focused on helping with
reconstruction. Toward achieving economic reconstruction, Rwanda, D.R.Congo and
Burundi relaunched the regional economic bloc: The Great Lakes Countries
Economic Community. In addition, Burundi, along with Rwanda, joined the East
African Community in 2007.
However, the terms of the September 2006 Ceasefire between the government and
the last remaining armed opposition group, the FLN (Forces for National
Liberation, also called NLF or FROLINA), were not totally implemented, and
senior FLN members subsequently left the truce monitoring team, claiming that
their security was threatened. In September 2007, rival FLN factions clashed in
the capital, killing 20 fighters and causing residents to begin fleeing. Rebel
raids were reported in other parts of the country. The rebel factions disagreed
with the government over disarmament and the release of political prisoners.[30]
In late 2007 and early 2008, FLN combatants attacked government-protected camps
where former combatants now live, in search of peace. The homes of rural
residents were also pillaged.
The 2007 report of Amnesty International mentions many areas where improvement
is required. Civilians are victims of repeated acts of violence done by the FLN.
The latter also recruits child soldiers. The rate of violence against women is
high. Perpetrators regularly escape prosecution and punishment by the state.
There is an urgent need for reform of the judicial system. Genocide, war crimes
and crimes against humanity remain unpunished. The establishment of a Truth and
Reconciliation Commission and a Special Tribunal for investigation and
prosecution has not yet been implemented. The freedom of expression is limited,
journalists are frequently arrested for carrying out legitimate professional
activities. A total of 38,087 Burundian refugees have been repatriated between
January and November 2007.
In late March 2008, the FLN sought for the parliament to adopt a law
guaranteeing them ‘provisional immunity’ from arrest. This would cover ordinary
crimes, but not grave violations of international humanitarian law like war
crimes or crimes against humanity . Even though the government has granted this
in the past to people, the FLN is unable to obtain the provisional immunity.
On April 17, 2008, the FLN bombarded Bujumbura. The Burundian army fought back
and the FLN suffered heavy losses. A new ceasefire was signed on May 26, 2008.
In August 2008, President Nkurunziza met with the FLN leader Agathon Rwasa, with
the mediation of Charles Nqakula, South Africa’s Minister for Safety and
Security. This was the first direct meeting since June 2007. Both agree to meet
twice a week to establish a commission to resolve any disputes that might arise
during the peace negotiations.
Refugee camps are now closing down, and 450,000 refugees have returned. The
economy of the country is shattered – Burundi has the lowest per capita gross
income in the world. With the return of refugees, amongst others, property
conflicts have started.
Other articles in this category |
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Brundi at a glance |
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Economy (2) |
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