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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Africa
New government established in Burundi
By John Farmer and Chris Talbot
28 November 2001
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After two years of talks, a transitional administration was
established in Burundi at the beginning of this month. Despite
the deal being described by its main facilitator Nelson Mandela
as a breakthrough which will bring permanent peace and stability,
however, it appears only to have exacerbated the countrys
civil war.
Drawn from 17 political parties of both the Tutsi and Hutu
tribal groupings, the power-sharing administration is backed by
a 700 strong protection force of South African troops.
Within the government, all political parties are designated as
either Tutsi or Hutu according to their ethnicity. Fourteen of
the cabinet posts are to be held by Hutus and 12 by Tutsis including
defence and finance.
The country is still effectively run by President Pierre Buyoya,
and the Tutsi-dominated army. In establishing a new government,
the aim is to hold out the possibility to Hutu leaders that they
will eventually be able to play a more equal role in the running
of the regime. Buyoya is supposed to stand down after 18 months
and be replaced by vice-president Domitien Ndayizeye, a leader
of the main Hutu party Front for Democracy in Burundi (FRODEBU).
Elections would then be held within three years.
After the formation of the new administration, Hutu rebels
from the Forces for the Defence of Democracy (FDD) and the smaller
National Liberation Forces (FNL) have stepped up their war against
the government. The civil war, which has resulted in over 300,000
deaths, has continued since Tutsi soldiers murdered the Hutu President
Melchior Ndadaye eight years ago. Although Hutus make up about
85 percent of the population, Ndadaye was the first elected president
after 30 years of one-party rule by the Tutsi elite. Buyoya seized
power in a military coup in 1996.
Both the FDD and FNL refused to take part in the peace accords
held in Tanzania in August 2000. They demand the dismantling of
concentration camps (the camps into which the government
has herded thousands of mainly Hutu civilians supposedly for their
own protection), the release of political prisoners and the reform
of the army.
The larger FDD has responded to the deal by carrying out attacks
on civilians. They have also clashed with the army in a number
of areas throughout the eastern part of Burundi, outside their
usual region of operation in the southeast. According to AFP reports,
about 130 civilians, 200 rebels and 50 government soldiers have
been killed. More than 2,000 people fleeing attacks were forced
to seek refuge in the northeastern province of Muyinga.
The FDD hit international headlines by taking schoolboys hostage,
firstly a dozen primary school children and then 250 to 300 teenagers
from a boarding school. Most of the children escaped, although
it is reported that some of the older ones were forcibly recruited
into the rebel militia.
Mandela is hoping to coax the Hutu politicians, and through
them their contacts in the FDD and FNL, by holding out the promise
of Western aid. After Mandelas telephone talks with French
President Chirac, the European Commission were prompted into making
a 65 million euro ($ 58 million) aid deal with Burundi, which
is supposed to be targeted on infrastructure projects and poverty
reduction. Western donors promised aid worth $440 million
last year, though little of it appears to have materialised. Most
aid was withdrawn in the 1990s, and Burundis economy, especially
coffee production, has virtually collapsed as a result of the
civil war.
South Africa also appears to be carrying out discussions with
the FDD and FNL directly, even though the FDD are said to be opposed
to the South African mediators, preferring a French-based initiative
through President Omar Bongo of Gabon. Both rebel groups are said
to make regular visits to South Africa to hold talks with Mandelas
team and with conflict resolution expert Jan Van Eck,
a former African National Congress (ANC) parliamentarian now based
at the University of Cape Town in South Africa.
The involvement of the 700 South African troops signals a change
of direction by the ANC government. Since the ANC came to power
in 1994, the powerful South African army has been little used
outside of the country. In 1998 a force was sent to quell opposition
in Lesotho, but this tiny state is virtually a South African protectorate.
Last year, South African troops carried out rescue missions in
the Mozambique floods.
The Financial Times claims that the heavily armed South
African force were protecting just four Hutu returnees and Independent
Online reported that Jean Minani, a key FRODEBU leader, had
not used the South African troops for his protection. The troops
are supposed to be demonstrating to the Burundian elite how to
build its own 1,000 strong military protection force,
made up evenly of Hutus and Tutsis, using the South African experience
of integrating black and white troops.
Extremist Tutsi politicians opposed to the peace process have
protested against the decision to send occupying forces
to Burundi, saying that they had been sent to protect
people who committed genocide. Some even called for attacks
to be carried out on the South Africans.
Nevertheless, it is significant that South Africa quickly took
up the protection force initiative, with Mandela using his authority
to get parliamentary approval. The United Nations would not endorse
the South African intervention because of the absence of a ceasefire
agreement, although it has welcomed the establishment
of the transitional government. In addition to the South Africans,
there are supposed to be further contingents of troops from Nigeria,
Senegal and Ghana but they have yet to appear as these countries
have expressed concern at the absence of a ceasefire.
Whilst it is classed as a peacekeeping mission, this incursion
into Central Africa can only be viewed as a development of imperialist
interests in the region, particularly as Burundis on-going
civil war is a key factor in the continuation of fighting in the
neighbouring Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).
The peace process in the DRC now appears to be stalling, despite
the willingness of President Joseph Kabilainstalled after
the assassination of his fatherto open up the countrys
extensive mineral resources to Western corporations. South Africas
military intervention will put more pressure on the regimes and
militias involved in the Congo warincluding the rebel Burundi
forcesa calculation that was no doubt discussed at the talks
between Mandela and US President Bush held mid-November.
See Also:
African Union initiative offers
little prospect of end to Burundi civil war
[28 July 2001]
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