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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Africa
Burundi civil war escalates
By John Farmer and Chris Talbot
17 April 2001
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Intense fighting is taking place around the capital Bujumbura,
between the Tutsi-dominated army and the ethnic Hutu rebels of
the National Liberation Forces (FNL). At the end of February,
the FNL launched their largest incursion into Burundi since the
start of the eight-year civil war. The rebels were able to hold
Kinama, a northern suburb of Bujumbura, for over three weeks and
continue to engage the army on the outskirts of the capital. Over
200 Kinama residents were killed in the offensive and thousands
have been forced to flee.
Fighting has also erupted in the central Gitega and Mwaro provinces
between the other major Hutu rebel group, the Forces for the Defence
of Democracy (FDD). An estimated 15,000 refugees have fled fighting
in this region.
An April 13 report from the United Nations IRIN news network
states that informed sources in Bujumbura warn of
preparations for a vast rebel offensive against the
capital. The report suggested that the fighting in Gitega was
designed to open up a route to the west, allowing the influx of
a further 10,000 rebels from the neighbouring Democratic Republic
of Congo (DRC), in addition to the 8,000 already in the country.
As well as the FDD, the rebels included the Interhamwe, the Rwandan
Hutu militia, many of whom carried out the genocide in Rwanda
in 1994 and have since been operating in the DRC.
Other rebels were linking up with the FNL to the north of the
capital. The IRIN report described the rebels as well armed. Another
report of April 12 described a massive FDD infiltration
from Tanzania into Burundi's eastern Ruyigi province. Tanzania
contains thousands of Hutu refugees and the Tanzanian government,
hostile to the regime of President Buyoya in Burundi, turns a
blind eye to rebel recruitment in the camps.
The Burundian civil war began in 1993, after the first Hutu
president since independence, Melchior Ndadaye, was assassinated.
Unlike neighbouring Rwanda, where Hutus seized power after independence,
Burundi has been ruled by a Tutsi regime for all but four months
since gaining independence from Belgium in 1962even though
the Tutsis are a minority. As in neighbouring Rwanda, the ethnic
divisions in this small country were fostered under colonial rule,
with Tutsis given all the privileged positions. Since 1993, over
200,000 civilians have lost their lives, caught up in the fighting
as the rebels launched their assaults from the countryside. The
mainly Hutu population also suffers reprisals from Buyoya's army,
which holds them responsible for harbouring rebels. Hundreds of
thousands have been made refugees, with many herded into government
camps where they face starvation conditions as aid workers are
unable to reach them.
Whilst there has been ethnic conflict in Burundi over the years
in which thousands have died, it has not yet reached the same
as in Rwanda. As the war escalates, however, so does the potential
for an ethnically based bloodbath.
Since 1998, attempts at a peace settlement have continued in
Arusha, Tanzania, under the auspices of the ex-President of South
Africa Nelson Mandela. An accord was reached last August under
considerable pressure from the West. In the presence of the then
US President Clinton, seven Hutu parties and ten Tutsi parties,
as well as the government, agreed to form an interim regime as
a precursor to democratic elections. But the Arusha accord had
no real substance. Both the FDD and the FNL refused to take part,
and as Africa Confidential commented: None of the
key issuessuch as the new constitution, structure of power
sharing or reform of the military and security serviceswere
agreed by all or even a majority of Burundi's quarrelling military
and political factions.
The escalation of the war in Burundi is a direct result of
the recent Western-backed initiative to secure an agreement in
the Congo war. Both the Burundi rebels and the Rwandan Interahamwe,
numbering tens of thousands, form a major part of the DRC's army.
Far better motivated than many of the Congo troops, they have
regrouped and retrained inextricably linking the Congo war
with the conflict in its tiny neighbour Burundi. It is likely
that they have received support from backers in France and Belgium,
who have never accepted the present pro-US regime in Rwanda.
After the assassination of DRC President Laurent Kabila in
January, and the installation of his son Joseph, the major Western
powers have pressed for a renewal of the United Nations 1999 Lusaka
peace agreement to bring the Congo war to an end. Joseph Kabila
has toured Western capitals expressing his willingness to collaborate
with the US-backed initiative, and held discussions with mining
corporations over access to the huge mineral wealth of the country.
In recent weeks the countries involved in the warAngola
and Zimbabwe backing the DRC regime, and Rwanda and Uganda backing
the rebel forceshave agreed to withdraw from frontline positions.
The UN is sending eight envoys (led by the French ambassador and
including the US and British ambassadors) to the DRC and other
countries involved in the conflict next month to assess how the
ceasefire is holding. Up to 500 military observers and 2,500 troops
are being sent by the UN to observe the withdrawals.
A key part of the agreement being brokered in the Congo is
how to deal with the Hutu militias. Under the Lusaka accord they
are classed as negative forces that are to be disarmed,
taking no part in the peace negotiations and playing no role in
the proposed political dialogue about how the Congo is to be ruled.
Yet in Burundi they have been regarded as an integral part of
the peace negotiations, despite their refusal to attend the Arusha
talks. Last week, South African Deputy President Jacob Zuma, who
has replaced Mandela in the negotiations, met in Kinshasa with
Jean-Bosco Ndayikengurukiye, leader of the FDD. Neither would
reveal the content of their discussions. It is also likely that
the visit of President Mugabe of Zimbabwe to France and Belgium
last month included a discussion on the role of the Interahamwe.
Their headquarters are believed to be near Lubumbashi in the mineral-rich
southern Katanga region of the Congo, where they have received
support and training from the Zimbabwean regime.
President Buyoya clearly fears a large-scale movement of the
Hutu forces into Burundi. Despite criticisms from Tutsi parties,
he has been attempting to forge an agreement with the FDD, separate
from the Arusha process. In a recent speech he pointed out that
whatever the Lusaka accord stated about holding negative
forces responsible for war crimes, We are conscious
of the fact that neither the Zimbabweans nor the Congolese are
going to disarm their allies of yesterday in the former Zairian
civil war, and we should thus defeat our own rebellion militarily
or ensure that we reach a negotiated peaceful settlement through
national dialogue.
See Also:
New evidence
on the role of the US and France
Who is responsible for the genocide in Rwanda?
[29 April 1998]
Imperialism
and the Rwandan catastrophe
[29 July 1994]
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