Human rights abuses persist in Burundi despite new gov’t: UN | News

Human rights abuses including rape, murder and targeting of the country’s youth persist in Burundi despite a change of government, a new United Nations report has revealed.

The report, released on Thursday, looks at the period preceding and following the May election of retired general Evariste Ndayishimiye, a member of the governing party who came to power after the 15-year rule of Pierre Nkurunziza. 

Nkurunziza, who became president in 1995 after the country’s 12-year civil war, was elected for a third term in 2015 in a poll largely boycotted by the opposition.

At least 1,200 people were killed and more than 400,000 displaced during the ensuing unrest between April 2015 and May 2017, according to the UN. 

While Ndayishimiye’s inauguration speech hinted that he hoped to make a break from the abuses committed under his predecessor, the UN report said those changes have not come to pass.

“So far we see little positive changes since President Ndayishimiye assumed office,” Doudou Diene, the chief of the UN Commission of Inquiry on Burundi, said in a statement.

“The democratic space remains very narrow, impunity persists, and there is no indication that the level of human rights violations has abated under the new government.”

The report added that Ndayishimiye promoted high-ranking military officers involved in human rights abuses, and appointed some military officers to governorships previously held by civilians.

He has also appointed two men, currently under sanctions for rights violations, to his cabinet

Security forces and the youth wing of the governing party, the Imbonerakure, continue to have almost total impunity for beatings, kidnappings and sexual violence, the report said.

‘Comparable gravity’

In Thursday’s report, which covers the period since May 2019, the UN commission said it “still has reasonable grounds to believe that crimes against humanity … have been committed in Burundi”.

“These crimes include murder, imprisonment or other severe forms of deprivation of physical liberty, torture, rape and other forms of sexual violence of comparable gravity and political persecution,” it said.

The investigators, who have been denied access to Burundi itself, particularly highlighted a wide range of serious abuses by local authorities and the Imbonerakure in the context of the 2020 elections.    

“The perpetrators were seeking to deprive the main opposition party of any chance of winning the election,” the report said, pointing out that only members and supporters of the main opposition CNL party were the main targets.

Authorities had also worked to muzzle independent observers, including journalists, and imposed tight controls on common people, it said, decrying “systematic attacks deliberately targeting civilians”.

SOURCE:
Al Jazeera and news agencies

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