A Discernment and Apostasy watch site for African Saints.
Prove all things..(1 Thesa.5:21)
Test Spirits..(I John 4:1)
Like the Bereans, check whether things are so(Acts 17:11)
Wednesday, 10 June 2020
Born Again Christian Burundi president Pierre Nkurunziza dies of heart failure: Even a Born Again person cannot lead an American Neo-liberal Slave state without contradictions: His regime was tainted with rape , torture and murders
Burundi's President Pierre Nkurunziza
MUST
READ:
When Mercenaries for the American New World Order
system cling to power using Al-Qaeda/ war on terror politics: Born Again
Burundi president Pierre Nkurunziza clings to power despite failed coup and
massive opposition against his third term bid: Pierre Nkurunziza blamed the
confusion in Burundi on Somalia's Al-Qaeda-linked Al-Shebab militants
Burundian President
Pierre Nkurunziza has died of heart failure, the government said
Tuesday, just months before he was to step down after 15 turbulent years
at the head of the troubled nation.
Nkurunziza, 55, first began to
feel unwell after attending a volleyball match on Saturday, and appeared
to be improving until he took a turn for the worse on Monday and his
heart stopped, the presidency said in a statement.
"Despite
intense efforts, the medical team was not able to save the patient,"
said the statement, adding that doctors had spent several hours trying
to revive him.
A post on the government's official Twitter account
early Tuesday evening announced Nkurunziza's death "with great sadness",
and a statement from the presidency said he died in a hospital in the
eastern city of Karuzi.
Many Burundians heard the news via a
statement read out on national television and radio, which disrupted its
programming to broadcast religious songs in Kirundi, the national
language.
Nkurunziza's wife, first lady Denise Bucumi,
is currently recovering from the coronavirus in a Nairobi hospital
after being evacuated late last month.
Nkurunziza's death comes as he
was preparing to leave office following the election last month of his
successor Evariste Ndayishimiye.
In a Twitter post Tuesday night,
Ndayishimiye praised Nkurunziza's "legacy" and vowed to "continue his
high-quality work that he has done for our country, Burundi".
An
evangelical Christian who believed he was chosen by God to rule the East
African nation, Nkurunziza was elected by parliament in 2005 at the
tail end of a brutal civil war. He was re-elected in 2010.
In 2015,
his decision to run for a third term sparked outrage among the
opposition who claimed it was unconstitutional, leading to protests and a
failed coup which plunged the country into violence.
Growing isolation
At
least 1,200 people were killed and some 400,000 fled the country, and
following Nkurunziza's successful election, a climate of fear prevailed
with rights groups regularly denouncing a crackdown on the opposition
and media.
Burundi, which the World Bank ranks among the world's
three poorest countries, has been under sanctions from its major donors
since then.
Nkurunziza exacerbated the country's international
isolation by withdrawing from the International Criminal Court in 2017,
and last year he shut down a local United Nations rights office which
was probing killings, enforced disappearances and other rights abuses in
the country.
More recently Burundi expelled staffers from the World Health Organization despite the ongoing coronavirus pandemic.
Nkurunziza
had come in for heavy criticism over his handling of the pandemic and
his claims God had protected Burundi from its worst ravages.
Officially
Burundi has recorded 83 cases and one death, however doctors in
Bujumbura speaking to AFP on condition of anonymity say many cases and
deaths are going unreported.
"If all over the world we talk about the
coronavirus pandemic, but we were able to gather without any problem,
hold an electoral campaign without any problem, send our children to
school and go to the market without worries... it is the hand of God
which shows he has placed a special sign above our Burundi," Nkurunziza
said last month.
Change of power
Kenyan
President Uhuru Kenyatta and Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed were
among the first world leaders to express their condolences Tuesday
evening, with Kenyatta hailing Nkurunziza's "contribution to the
integration and progress of the region".
The country remains under
the tight control of the ruling CNDD-FDD political party and its
notoriously violent youth league, the Imbonerakure, which the United
Nations has described as a militia.
In May 2018, Burundi approved in
a referendum constitutional reforms that would have enabled Nkurunziza
to rule until 2034, after a campaign Human Rights Watch said was marked
by widespread repression and abuses.
(Nairobi) – Burundian
intelligence services have tortured and ill-treated scores of suspected
government opponents at their headquarters and in secret locations,
Human Rights Watch said today. Police and members of the ruling party’s
youth league, the Imbonerakure, have also committed serious abuses, often in collaboration with the intelligence services.
Agents of Burundi’s national intelligence service (Service national de renseignement,
SNR) have increasingly been responsible for torturing alleged
opposition sympathizers taken into custody. They have beaten detainees
with hammers and steel construction bars, driven sharpened steel rods
into their legs, dripped melting plastic on them, tied cords around
men’s genitals, and used electric shocks. Detainees who were tortured or
injured have been denied medical attention and many have been held in
stinking, windowless cells.
“Politically motivated torture by the Burundian intelligence services
has reached new levels and has become increasingly vicious,” said Daniel Bekele,
Africa director at Human Rights Watch. “Intelligence agents treat
suspected opponents horrifically because they know they can get away
with it. The government should call a halt to torture immediately.”
The United Nations Security Council should deploy international police
to Burundi with a strong protection mandate and set up an international
commission of inquiry to investigate torture and other grave abuses,
Human Rights Watch said.
Since April, 2016, Human Rights Watch has interviewed more than 40
torture victims from nine provinces and the capital, Bujumbura. Some
were interviewed outside the country. Torture and ill-treatment appear
to have become more widespread, and torture techniques more brutal,
following a failed coup in May 2015 and several grenade attacks on bars
by unidentified men in Bujumbura and elsewhere since early 2016. While
it is difficult to ascertain the full scale of the abuses, the number of
people tortured by intelligence agents across the country is most
likely much higher than the number of cases Human Rights Watch
documented. The UN reported 651 cases of torture in Burundi between April 2015 and April 2016.
For security reasons, Human Rights Watch is not making public the names
of interviewees and other information. Intelligence officials told some
detainees they would be killed if they spoke about their treatment and
ordered others to lie or promise not to talk to human rights groups.
Intelligence agents have followed and threatened people suspected of
giving information to human rights groups.
Former detainees, including opposition party members, told Human Rights
Watch that intelligence agents beat them with water pipes weighted with
steel construction bars, often until they bled or had difficulty
standing. One said that a policeman working at the SNR headquarters
poured a liquid over his body that burned him so badly he begged to be
killed. Another said an SNR agent smashed bones in his legs with a
hammer. A former detainee said an SNR agent interrogated him while an Imbonerakure dripped melting plastic on him. They also used pliers to cut his genitals, while an Imbonerakure told him: “You will end up revealing the secrets of [opposition leader Alexis] Sinduhije.”
Detainees and others with knowledge of the SNR headquarters in
Bujumbura’s Rohero neighborhood said that the compound has several
unofficial cells where detainees who had been tortured were hidden from
international monitors.
Police officials have also tortured and ill-treated detainees. A police
officer used pliers to pull out the tooth of one detainee. The victim
told Human Rights Watch: “[The police officer] said he would pull out a
tooth every day until I admitted I worked for human rights. I was in so
much pain, and there was lots of blood.”
Several young men said the police arrested them for no stated reason,
provided no warrants and rarely observed arrest procedures, and then
beat them.
The Burundian authorities should seek the assistance of the UN Office
of the High Commissioner for Human Rights and humanitarian agencies to
identify victims of abuse who need medical assistance, and provide the
necessary assistance, including specialized medical care outside their
detention site, Human Rights Watch said.
Imbonerakure, meaning
“those who see far” in Kirundi, have also been responsible for numerous
abuses across the country, Human Rights Watch said. Imbonerakure operating
at two major border crossings between Burundi and Rwanda have openly
arrested suspected opponents in front of police, military, and border
officials and accused them of collaborating with Burundian opposition
members living in Rwanda. Witnesses said that in some cases the Imbonerakure appeared to have more power than the police.
“Local residents say that no one dares confront the Imbonerakure because of their power and influence,” Bekele said. “The authorities have allowed the Imbonerakure to operate outside the law, so the government needs to take responsibility for their actions.”
In May, Human Rights Watch wrote to Etienne Ntakirutimana, the head of
the SNR, who reports directly to President Pierre Nkurunziza, with
questions about alleged abuses, but received no reply. However, the
public security minister, Alain Guillaume Bunyoni, who oversees the
police, sent a five-page reply in which he wrote that it was
“unthinkable” that police could have mistreated detainees and that it
would be a “serious error to assert gratuitously” that the police
arbitrarily arrested, tortured, or ill-treated suspected government
opponents. He denied categorically that the police collaborated with the
Imbonerakure.
Armed opposition groups have also attacked security forces and ruling party members, including police and Imbonerakure. A high-ranking Imbonerakure told Human Rights Watch that more than 50 Imbonerakure
had been killed across the country since April 2015, including at least
four in grenade attacks in Bujumbura in May 2016. Human Rights Watch
was unable to confirm these figures.
The UN Security Council should urgently set up an independent,
international commission of inquiry and authorize the deployment of an
international police force in Burundi, Human Rights Watch said. While
coordinating with the Burundian police, the international police should
maintain their independence and not provide assistance to the Burundian
security forces.
The commission of inquiry should have expertise in criminal, judicial,
and forensic investigations and conduct in-depth inquiries with a view
to establishing responsibility for the most serious crimes. It should
focus on torture by the intelligence services and the police,
particularly the role of senior intelligence and police officials.
UN and African Union human rights observers in Burundi should intensify
their visits to SNR and police detention facilities to deter and
document torture. They should publish frequent detailed reports on their
findings, including on any attempts by the authorities to obstruct or
restrict their full access to detention centers.
In April, the International Criminal Court announced a preliminary
examination of the situation in Burundi. Other countries should consider
investigating and prosecuting through their national courts, under the
principle of universal jurisdiction, Burundians found on their territory
who are believed responsible for ordering and carrying out torture and
other serious rights violations.
The facilitator of talks between Burundian political actors, former
Tanzanian president Benjamin Mkapa, should give priority to human rights
concerns. Mkapa should press all sides to stop committing rights abuses
and call upon the government to stop torture by the intelligence
services and the police.
“The Burundian government claims the national justice system is
independent and that individuals who commit abuses are held to account.
Authorities should prove this by investigating and prosecuting those
responsible for the systematic torture taking place in Burundi today,”
Bekele said. “But President Nkurunziza is ultimately responsible for the
torture by the national intelligence services and police, so he should
take appropriate action.”
For further information on torture and other abuses, please see below.
Torture, Other Abuses by the Intelligence Services
The SNR has a long history of torture, extrajudicial killings,
arbitrary detention, and other human rights abuses against suspected
government opponents. Human Rights Watch has documented a pattern of torture by the SNR to compel detainees to confess to alleged crimes or to incriminate or denounce others.
These practices became more widespread, and torture techniques more
brutal, following a failed coup d’état in May 2015. A source who had
access to SNR facilities said that intelligence officials, in
collaboration with Imbonerakure, began then to routinely torture suspected opponents in their custody.
Police officers and SNR agents arrested a police official in Bujumbura
on June 25, 2015. Police beat him and several bystanders. They alleged
the official had a grenade that he was going to “give to Tutsis to kill
Hutus” and took him to the SNR headquarters, commonly known as La Documentation. The man told Human Rights Watch:
When I arrived at the Documentation, I was told to lie on
the ground. They hit me on the rear end with a steel bar. They hit the
soles of my feet. They danced on me. They were telling me I had weapons
and a grenade that I was going to give to Tutsis.
On July 1, [Etienne Ntakirutimana, head of the SNR] came. He told me
to come out of the cell. I showed him where I’d been beaten. He said:
“You haven’t been beaten. You will be seriously beaten now.” He made fun
of me. He said: “If you are a commando, everything that happens to you,
you have to accept it. Even if you want to go to Rwanda and play around
with [Rwandan President Paul] Kagame, the Hutu people will never be
conquered.”
The most stressful were the nights at the Documentation. They
would take people out of the cells and torture them. I heard this. They
took them in the courtyard and you’d hear the screaming. They would
scream loudly. With time, it got quieter until [presumably] the person
died. [Others] were almost handicapped after the beatings.
The SNR transferred the official to Muramvya prison on July 8, and he
was formally charged with participating in the failed coup. He was
convicted after a flawed trial. In January, the Supreme Court acquitted
him and he fled the country. The Supreme Court appeals court later
convicted him in absentia and sentenced him to life in prison.
On February 18, unidentified men arrested a 22-year-old student in
Bujumbura’s Ngagara neighborhood and bundled him into a truck. The
student believed they were intelligence agents. As they drove off with
him, one of the men said to him: “Turn over the weapons that you have.”
They stomped on his chest as he lay in the back of the truck and asked
him about the identity and whereabouts of others in his neighborhood. He
said:
They brought me to a house in Carama [in Bujumbura]. They had a key
to the house and opened it. In the living room, there was a television
and wooden chair. They took my clothes off. I was naked. They said:
“When we hit you enough times, you will end up talking.” They beat me
with an electrical cable. They beat me on the legs and back with the
cable. They said: “Speak!”
I saw I was going to die. I saw that I was already dead. They went out
back; I don’t know what they were discussing. That’s when I tried to
escape. I was going to jump over the fence, but one of them was waiting
outside. He caught me. They burned me with a [hot] knife [after] I tried
to escape. They brought the knife from outside the house. I could feel
the heat on the knife. They cut me just once [on the chest].
The student said his captors continued to beat him and ask questions
about the location of hidden weapons and the people who allegedly had
guns in the neighborhood:
I told them I knew nobody, and I didn’t even participate [in 2015
demonstrations against President Nkurunziza running for a third term].
When I didn’t admit anything, that’s when they used the sharpened steel
bar. They went out back and got it. They pushed it into my leg with more
and more force. When they pierced me with it, I lost consciousness.
The student woke up in a police detention center. He didn’t know who took him there. He was released the same day.
A taxi driver in his early 30s said that in March someone knocked on
his door. When he opened it, an unidentified man was standing in front
of him, pointing a gun at his head. Three pickup trucks escorted the
taxi driver to a military position in Bujumbura. He said:
They tied my arms behind my back and tied my legs, then they tied my
legs to my hands. There was a nail in the wall, and because of the rope
[around me] I was hung like a sack on a coat hanger. They beat me and
injured my head and arm with a bayonet. They told me to hand over the
guns.
The taxi driver estimated that the soldiers suspended him for three
hours, then took him down and beat him for several more hours. They told
him to reveal the location of hidden weapons. The next day, they took
him to the intelligence agency office in Bujumbura.
When I arrived [at the SNR], they [SNR agents] said: “That dog [name
withheld] has returned.” [An SNR agent] took me to a gutter and made me
lie down on my stomach and beat me with a thick stick on my feet and
rear end. Then another person came and poured liquid on me. I felt like I
was burning. I begged them to kill me. They said: “You, you criminal,
you are going to die slowly.”
He said he was beaten twice more. He was in such pain he asked to be
killed again. A policeman who worked at the SNR told him: “Who would
dirty themselves with your blood?” The taxi driver said he is no longer
able to sit down because of his injuries.
Police arrested a 27-year-old man at his house in Bujumbura in February
and took him to the SNR office in Bujumbura. He described his
treatment:
When we were [at the SNR], they tortured me with a cable, the kind
used to connect to a radio or television. There was no rubber on the
cable. They wrapped it [high up] around my leg. They made me sit next to
a socket where they plugged the cable in. They plugged it in and
disconnected it, shocking me, while asking questions. They said: “Show
us where the weapons are.”
After a while, they changed. They wrapped the cord around my genitals
and pulled on them while asking questions. They used the cord for
longer, for 20 to 25 minutes.
With assistance from a guard, the man escaped.
Police from the unit responsible for guarding state institutions (Appui
pour la protection des institutions, API) arrested a group of people at
a bar on the outskirts of Bujumbura in late April 2016 and drove them
to the intelligence headquarters in Bujumbura. A 40-year-old man who was
arrested said:
We arrived around noon, but the trucks didn’t enter directly. We spent an hour outside the Documentation.
We learned afterward that the white people from ICRC [International
Committee of the Red Cross] were inside and that’s why they didn’t want
to take us there. We had to wait until they had left.
Several detainees who had been held at the SNR headquarters said they
were locked in a small toilet room. An official with access to the SNR
said that senior intelligence officials, demobilized rebel fighters, and
Imbonerakure beat detainees and hid them from international monitors. The official said:
They were beaten in the cells or in the courtyard. There are people who are demobs [demobilized fighters], Imbonerakure.
I don’t know where they came from. Sometimes they were at the entrance,
other times inside the courtyard. They did the torture. What really
struck me was that they put [detainees] in the toilet. They were in the
toilet for three days.
Police arrested a man in February in Bujumbura and immediately beat
him with truncheons and gun butts. They told him to admit that he
collaborated with the opposition leaders Alexis Sinduhije, Hussein
Radjabu, and Godefroid Niyombare. They then took him to the SNR
headquarters in Bujumbura. He said:
[An SNR agent] took me to a kind of hallway and handcuffed me and
started to seriously beat me. There was a chair with iron sticking out
of it and big rocks that held up the chair. They tied me to the chair
with handcuffs. They beat me with a kind of cable. He said: “It’s you
who killed policemen. Whatever you do, we are going to rule.” He took me
to a small room, without a window. It was very dark. I couldn’t tell if
it was day or night. I was still handcuffed. I couldn’t leave. I had to
go to the bathroom inside the room. The first time they took me out,
they gave me at least two hours so I could wash myself well.
On the seventh day, they took off the handcuffs and I went before the
judicial policeman. When I was there, [two former opposition members who
collaborate with the SNR] came in. They said they knew me. [Name
withheld] added that you can’t live in Musaga [a neighborhood of
Bujumbura] without knowing what happens there. I was questioned seven
times by different people who asked me where the weapons were hidden.
Some SNR members said I wouldn’t leave until I revealed where the
weapons were hidden.
The official who had access to the SNR, as well as detainees tortured
at its headquarters, said that SNR officials prevented some detainees
who bore physical signs of torture from being taken to the prosecutor’s
office. A judicial official said that magistrates from the public
prosecutor’s office questioned tortured detainees at the SNR’s premises
in Bujumbura instead. The magistrates sent to do this were known to be
loyal to the ruling party.
Intelligence officials have also assigned judicial police officers
known to be loyal to the ruling party to question detainees suspected of
collaborating with the opposition. Some of these judicial officers
slapped or beat detainees during questioning. A former government
official said a judicial police official at the SNR gave case files
directly to a senior intelligence official to review instead of
submitting them to the public prosecutor’s office.
The Burundian Code of Criminal Procedure, article 34, states that
detainees can be held for a maximum of seven days, renewable only once,
before judges decide whether they should be provisionally released or
remain in detention. Detainees should have access to a lawyer while at
intelligence agency facilities, but lawyers told Human Rights Watch that
the SNR prevented them from entering their headquarters.
In February, men in police uniforms arrested a 34-year-old man on the
street in Bujumbura. Passersby who witnessed the arrest started yelling:
“They are taking [name withheld]!” The man said a policeman in the
truck pointed his gun at the crowd and the passersby fled. One of the
arresting officers stabbed the man in the foot with a bayonet because,
the officer said, he did not want the man to reveal that he had stolen
his money and phone. The police took him to the intelligence services
headquarters. The man said:
At the SNR, they seriously beat me with a steel rod all over my back
and legs. When they were beating me, they asked me how many times had I
talked to Sinduhije and accused me of being among those who throw
grenades in the city.
About 4:30 p.m., they stopped beating me and took me to a cell with
other people. During the night, they took me out of that cell and
brought me to a very dark place, in a toilet. A person who was in there
with me who was called [out of the cell] on Saturday about 9 a.m. When
he came back about 4 p.m., his backside was like it was on fire. He had
been beaten with a steel rod, and he couldn’t sit down. He told us he
had been hit 150 times.
I stayed [in the toilet room] for 10 days. On the tenth day, [guards]
came and took me out of the dark cell and brought me to a judicial
policeman and ordered me to tell him that I had just arrived.
Guards returned the man to the cell with other detainees.
[I was at the SNR] when the magistrate came. He was with [a former
member of the armed opposition who acts as an SNR informant]. The
magistrate asked him how long we had known one another. [The informant]
told the magistrate that I’m in contact with Alexis Sinduhije. The
magistrate started to question me. He repeated the same accusations [as
the SNR]. I asked him: “Why didn’t I go to court like the others? Why
did you come here?” He said: “You just answer my questions.”
Police Torture, Ill-Treatment, and Arbitrary Arrests
Since May 2016, the government has responded to grenade and other
attacks it attributes to the opposition with mass arrests and detentions
of hundreds of people. Many have been released but many others remain
in custody. On May 2, President Nkurunziza said in a public speech: “We
ask all Burundian citizens to fight those who disrupt security and peace
and be finished with them in two months.”
After a grenade attack in Bujumbura’s Bwiza neighborhood on May 28, the
police detained several hundred people. The police spokesman, Pierre
Nkurikiye, told a local media outlet it was “normal” to arrest people
near the site of a grenade explosion and “among those arrested, there
may be perpetrators of the attack.” Police officials said all those
arrested were later released.
Bujumbura’s mayor, Freddy Mbonimpa, said the arrests were necessary to
control the movements of the population. To do this, police raided
houses and detained people to check “household notebooks,” a register of
all people living in a particular house. It is now compulsory for all
households in Bujumbura to maintain a household notebook certified by a
local government official.
On May 11 and 13, police arrested more than 200 young men and students
in Bujumbura’s Musaga neighborhood. Local residents said the police
ordered them to produce identity cards and “household notebooks,” but
arrested some of them and took them to a nearby administrative office
before they had time to collect the notebooks. Police beat some
detainees with belts and truncheons and insulted them. Detainees said
that the police used Imbonerakure and former opposition members
to identify suspected government opponents. They recognized some former
opposition members who used to live in Musaga circulating among the
detainees.
The police mass arrests appeared politically motivated, rather than a
genuine attempt to verify household notebooks. A 25-year-old man among
those arrested told Human Rights Watch: “A policeman said: ‘You have
been arrested. You are rebels, and you can’t prove that you are not.
Look how many of you are here. Do you think you can attack the country
with this number of people?’”
Under Burundian law, police must obtain an arrest warrant to arrest a suspect, unless the person is caught in the act (en flagrant délit).
The public security minister, in his letter to Human Rights Watch, said
that no suspects were arrested without a warrant except for those who
were caught in the act. However, in the majority of cases that Human
Rights Watch documented, the police failed to show a warrant to those
arrested.
One young man who had been arrested said: “The police have nothing on
us when they arrest us. They come and catch us like a sack of charcoal.
They show us nothing. You know nothing.”
Police have tortured and ill-treated detainees. In February, policemen
carrying firearms emerged from a police truck and stopped a 27-year-old
man on the street. When they ordered him to come with them, he refused. A
policeman hit him in the back with his gun butt, then forced him into
the truck.
The man said: “When the truck was moving, one of the policemen stabbed
me with his bayonet in my left leg and said: ‘That’s for hassling us
when we were capturing you.’ I bled a lot.”
The police took the man to the police detention center in Bujumbura known as the Bureau spécial de recherche (Special Research Office). He said:
In the office of the judicial police officer, they started to stomp
on the [leg] wound and hit me with steel bars on my back. They said to
go bring them the weapons I’m hiding. I told them I didn’t have any
weapons. The judicial policeman repeated the same thing, and each time I
said I didn’t have weapons, they hit me with the steel bar.
The next morning, I was brought back to the same office and a
policeman slammed my head against the ground and started to hit me again
with the steel bar on my buttocks. They wanted to make me confess to
having weapons, but I continued to deny it. The next day, they did the
same thing.
I spent five days [at the detention center] and was beaten during the
first three days, twice a day: in the morning between 8 and 9 a.m. and
in the evening about 4 p.m. It was always the same scene: questions from
the judicial police officer that alternated with blows from the steel
bar from the three policemen. Each time it lasted at least 30 minutes.
They showed me a photo [on a computer] of myself when I was
participating in the demonstrations [against President Nkurunziza’s
third term in 2015]. I was circled in red on the photo. Maybe that was
the basis on which they arrested me.
On his fifth day at the detention center, a judicial police officer
released him without explanation, telling him: “I never want to see you
again.” The man continues to have pain in his spine where the police
beat him.
In April, two policemen stopped a 36-year-old man on the street in a western province and asked for his identity card. He said:
They called someone. I saw a truck coming and someone in it [wearing
a police uniform] said: “That’s him! That’s him!” In the truck there
was the driver, a police commander, and five policemen. They started
beating me. We got in the truck and they took me to Bujumbura. They took
my phone and looked at the messages. They said: “Who are you sending
these messages to? You work for human rights.” I said I don’t work for
human rights.
The policemen took the man to a neighborhood police detention center.
They used indembo [police truncheons] to beat me on the
head. I said: “I did nothing!” They beat me for at least two hours, on
my feet, my head, all over my body. When they were beating me, they
told me to tell them who I sent the message to. I spent the night in a
cell with detainees. One was accused of being a demonstrator. Others
were accused of robbery and other things. There was one with a broken
leg. He couldn’t walk. One of [the police] said: “Take him to the
hospital.” Others said: “Wait for the doctor; he will come here.” But
the doctor never came.
When the man’s family contacted the police to try to find him, the
police demanded an exorbitant ransom. The man said that a police officer
told the family: “If you have [the money], you can see him. If not,
you’ll never see him again.” The man’s family could not afford to pay.
The man said the police beat him on the second day in detention for at
least an hour. He said the police officer told him: “Tell us who you
sent the message to and we’ll let you go.” The man refused so the police
officer tortured him with a metal tool.
On the third day, he was released after another policeman intervened.
The public security minister, in his letter to Human Rights Watch,
stated that the police never resorted to torture and observed all legal
processes. He highlighted the prohibition of torture in Burundi’s
Constitution and international and regional treaties that Burundi has
ratified. He said that the police received human rights training.
The minister wrote that allegations that the police demand money from
detainees or their families in exchange for their release were “a lie,”
and that any police involved in extortion would face “severe
administrative sanctions and penalties.” However, he conceded it would
be “illusory” to claim that police never make mistakes and that more
than 70 police officers had been prosecuted since 2015, some for “abuses
committed during the management of the insurrectional movement” before
and after the 2015 elections and others for common crimes. He did not
provide details of these prosecutions.
Abuses by Imbonerakure
In recent years, Imbonerakure members have been responsible
for numerous killings, beatings, threats and other abuses against
suspected government opponents, Human Rights Watch said. Imbonerakure often operate alongside the police and intelligence services.
The police, in their brutal suppression of protests against President Nkurunziza’s bid for a third term in 2015, used Imbonerakure
from neighborhoods where protests were taking place to identify and
target demonstrators. Bujumbura residents said they often saw known Imbonerakure wearing police or military uniforms, carrying weapons, and operating side by side with the police. One man detained by Imbonerakure said he watched them put on police raincoats.
Since February 2016, Human Rights Watch has documented several cases of Imbonerakure
beating, intimidating, and arresting people in various provinces.
Victims, witnesses, and human rights activists say that people rarely
report Imbonerakure abuses to the authorities because they fear retribution and believe that some security force members collaborate with the Imbonerakure.
The ruling party and intelligence services have often used Imbonerakure to identify suspected government opponents. Despite having no legal powers of arrest, Imbonerakure have frequently arrested people, beaten them, and handed them over to intelligence agents who tortured some of them.
Residents from some provinces told Human Rights Watch that Imbonerakure often give orders to the police and that low-level police appear powerless to stop Imbonerakure abuses. Imbonerakure often collaborate with provincial intelligence authorities after they arrest perceived opponents. In one northern province, Imbonerakure told a policeman who asked them why they were beating a man: “What are you doing here? Get out of here!” The policeman left.
Victims reported that they have seen Imbonerakure conducting
surveillance and sometimes arresting people crossing the border between
Burundi and Rwanda. Government authorities have indicated that many
Burundians who go to Rwanda have links with the opposition or may be
planning to join Burundian opposition members in Rwanda.
In mid-April 2016, four Imbonerakure and a policeman arrested a man on the Burundi side of the border. The Imbonerakure made him take off his shirt and shoes, took his telephone, and bound his arms and legs. They carried him to a makeshift Imbonerakure base in the forest, where he saw another man the Imbonerakure had beaten. The first man said:
They started beating me with cables like those they use to install
fiber optic lines. Others used big sticks. When they were beating me,
they said they were going to decapitate me … that I maintain relations
with Rwandans, and that I’m in touch with “putschists” [those
responsible for the failed coup].
A pickup truck belonging to the SNR provincial commissioner arrived
at the forest base and four policemen put the man in the back. The
policemen beat him as he was driven to the SNR office, where a senior
official accused him of collaborating with the armed opposition. After
an acquaintance paid a bribe, Burundian authorities released the man.
A student in a northern province said that on April 18, he was in a bar with friends when a group of Imbonerakure
wielding wooden rods asked for his identity card and money. When he was
unable to give them money, they accused him of helping Burundian rebels
cross from Rwanda into Burundi. A truck from the local government
office arrived and took him to a nearby province. The student said:
We were held in a cellar of a multi-story house. When we arrived, we
were tied up tightly with ropes. [Police] started to beat us with
truncheons. We spent four days there and were always tied up. They beat
us twice a day: once in the morning about 6 a.m. and once at night about
8 p.m. We were especially beaten on the bottom. Then we were sent to
[another province]. The police commissioner drove us there. Wherever we
went, we were accused of collaborating with armed groups.
[A senior police official] wanted us to admit that [weapons the police
had found] were ours. He intimidated us, saying it’s better that we
admit it because, according to him, a mistake admitted to is half-way
forgiven. We told him that we can’t admit something we know nothing
about. He said: “Are you going to tell human rights organizations [about
your arrest] once you’ve been freed?”
A few days later, the senior police official drove him to a rural, uninhabited place and released him.
Imbonerakure arrested a 34-year-old taxi driver in a northern province in early 2016. The taxi driver said:
I saw two Imbonerakure come toward me with a policeman. They jumped on me, and they grabbed me by my belt, one on either side of me. A third Imbonerakure
came and hit me, and they took me by force. I said to a policeman who
was nearby: “Are you going to let them harm me while you are standing
there?” The policeman said: “I can’t do anything for you.”
Imbonerakure tied the man’s arms behind his back and marched him into the forest.
They started to beat me. They all had wooden rods. They lashed me 300 times. An Imbonerakure who said he was the commissioner in charge of operations said: “It’s you who are supplying the rebels. Even Jesus is an Imbonerakure.
Whether you want him or not, Nkurunziza should remain president. You’ll
have to wait at least 200 years until there’s a Tutsi president.”
The man said one of the Imbonerakure who beat him appeared to be Rwandan.
When they were beating me, I screamed loudly and one of them said [in Kinyarwanda, the language of Rwanda]: Reka nze mbereke!
[I will show you]. Then the same person came and stomped on my stomach
and put plastic bags and stones in my mouth so I couldn’t yell.
The man paid a bribe of 100,000 Burundian francs (approximately US$60) to an Imbonerakure who released him. The man said he was bruised and swollen and urinated blood after the attack.
Abuses by Armed Opposition Groups
Local journalists and human rights activists have reported several
grenade attacks and killings believed to have been committed by armed
opposition groups. Former members of armed opposition groups told Human
Rights Watch that in the past they had used hit-and-run tactics and
grenade attacks to kill ruling party members and suspected
collaborators.
Unidentified people have attacked several bars in Bujumbura and other
provinces with grenades since early 2016. Burundian media reported that
on May 24, 10 men attacked a drinks depot and bar in Mwaro province,
killing a judicial policeman and injuring several customers. During the
same attack, a guard at the ruling party offices in Ndava, a commune in
Mwaro, was also killed as the attackers attempted to burn down the
building. Three men were arrested in connection with the attacks.
In Bururi province, unidentified gunmen shot dead several ruling party
members in April and May, including Jean Claude Bikorimana, a ruling
party member fatally shot on April 9. Three ruling party members were
among four people shot and killed at a bar in Bururi province on the
night of April 15; another attack on the same night killed a ruling
party member, Japhet Karibwami, at his home. Several people were
reported arrested after these attacks.
A reported ruling party member, Anitha Nizigama, was shot dead June 12
in Musaga, Bujumbura. The exact circumstances and motive for the
shooting have not been confirmed.
In all of these cases, Human Rights Watch was unable to confirm the
identity of the attackers. Efforts to interview witnesses to attacks or
contact family members of ruling party members or Imbonerakure who were killed were unsuccessful.
Burundi Youth Militia Compares Opposition to Lice in Video
Burundi human rights activists expressed outrage
Tuesday over an online video that shows pro-government youth militia
members teaching young students songs comparing the opposition to lice.
The video of Imbonerakure militia members follows a recent video in
which they encouraged the rape and impregnation of opposition
supporters.
Burundi has been plagued by deadly political violence since President
Pierre Nkurunziza successfully sought a disputed third term in 2015.
Hundreds have been killed and hundreds of thousands have fled the
country.
Lawyer and activist Lambert Nigarura told The Associated Press that the
latest hate messages are meant to depict ethnic Tutsi as bad people, and
he called it “the final step in preparation of genocide.” He urged the
international community to take action against Imbonerakure activities
in schools.
The latest video was filmed by a local human rights group in Burundi. It
shows Imbonerakure members singing with schoolchildren in the local
Kirundi language, saying their president in 1993 was assassinated in
cold blood. Melchior Ndadaye was Burundi's first ethnic Hutu president,
and the country's Tutsi-led army was blamed for killing him.
In the video, the Imbonerakure asks whether those who killed the
president have stopped the killings, and the children reply that the
killers have not stopped and they know them well.
Another Burundian human rights activist, Vital Nshimiyimana, called the songs “terrifying.”
Burundi has faced similar tensions between Hutu and Tutsi as neighboring
Rwanda, where the 1994 genocide left more than 800,000 Tutsi and
moderate Hutu dead. What sparked it was hate speech against the Tutsi
minority spread by Hutu extremists.
In Burundi, ruling party members have called the Imbonerakure peaceful.
But Human Rights Watch earlier this year reported that Imbonerakure
members had brutally killed, tortured and severely beaten scores of
people across the country.
GENEVA - The U.N. high commissioner for human rights
says he is alarmed by a growing, widespread campaign of terror in
Burundi being waged by government-backed militia against opponents of
President Pierre Nkurunziza’s party.
The U.N. human rights office says a chilling video circulating on
social media has laid bare the horrifying and alarming nature of the
campaign of terror.
Rupert Colville, spokesman for High Commissioner Zeid Ra-ad
al-Hussein, says the video shows more than 100 members of the
Imbonerakure, the government’s youth wing, inciting violence. He says
the young men are heard calling for opponents to be impregnated so they
can give birth to Imbonerakure or for them to be killed.
“These grotesque rape chants by the young men of the Imbonerakure
across several provinces across Burundi are deeply alarming —
particularly because they confirm what we have been hearing from those
who have fled Burundi about a campaign of fear and terror by this
organized militia,” he said.
When the video surfaced, the ruling CNDD-FDD party initially said it
was fake and had been filmed outside Burundi. After admitting the
footage was real, the party said youths at one rally sang a song that
"does not conform to the morals or ideology" of the party.
However, Colville says the video of this rally, which was released on
April 5, is not an isolated incident, but rather the tip of the
iceberg. He says his office has documented eight large rallies organized
across Burundi where similar slogans inciting rape and violence against
opponents have been chanted.
Colville says senior government officials reportedly have been present at some of these rallies.
While the terror campaigns are ongoing, Colville tells VOA rapes,
torture and other serious human rights violations are continuing.
“Some of the reports of torture are pretty horrendous — people being
burnt with hot knives, acid being poured over parts of their body, teeth
broken with rifle butts, attacks on sexual organs, etc. So, very
grizzly stuff,” he said.
Colville says security forces reportedly have participated in the
systematic use of torture. High Commissioner Zeid is calling on the
authorities in Burundi to prevent the abhorrent practice and to swiftly
condemn the incitement to hatred and violence.
Pierre Nkurunziza: Burundi leader to get $530,000 and luxury villa
Burundi's parliament has voted to
pay $530,000 (£400,000) to President Pierre Nkurunziza and provide him
with a luxury villa when he leaves office.
The draft law, which has been presented to the cabinet for approval, also awards him a lifetime salary.
It also proposes that Mr Nkurunziza be elevated to the title of "supreme leader" when he steps down in May.
Burundi was plunged into a constitutional crisis in 2015 when he successfully ran for a third term.
The move sparked violent protests by opposition supporters which morphed into reprisal attacks.
Last
year a UN commission accused the government of human rights abuses,
including executions, arbitrary arrests, torture and sexual violence.
Burundi called the claims "lies".
Last
year, Burundi banned the BBC from operating in the country, accusing it
of producing a documentary that had damaged the country's reputation.
Media captionWhy has the BBC been banned in Burundi?The new legislation, which was passed on Tuesday by 98
lawmakers and opposed by two, would benefit former presidents but only
those who were democratically elected.
"A president who came to
power via the simple consensus of a group of politicians does not have
the same regard as one who was democratically elected," Justice Minister
Aimee-Laurentine Kanyana told the national assembly, news agency AFP
reports.
The retired president will also get the same benefits as
a serving vice-president for seven years after he steps down, and will
for the rest of his life get an allowance equal to that of a lawmaker,
the report says.
The draft law does not specify the cost and size of the villa to be built.
A
diplomat based in Burundi told AFP anonymously that the proposal was
"exorbitant" but was also "a positive measure", because it signalled
that President Nkurunziza would not run in the 20 May election.
A new constitution passed in 2018, after a referendum, allowed him to stay in power until 2034.
The
lavish proposal is, however, in contrast to the standard of living of
most Burundians, where more than 65% of people live in poverty and half
of its 10 million population is food-insecure, according to the UN's
World Food Programme.
Mr Nkurunziza, a Hutu former rebel leader,
became the second president in Burundi to be chosen in democratic
elections. He was elected in 2005 after the end of a brutal civil war.
In March 2018, the governing CNDD-FDD party named Mr Nkurunziza the country's "eternal supreme guide".