As elections in Burundi
approach, thousands of people are fleeing into neighbouring Rwanda, fearing violence
from the ruling party's youth wing, the Imbonerakure.
"The Imbonerakure
threatened to kill us because we are not members of the ruling party, and we
refused to vote for the president," said Minani, a supporter of the
opposition Uprona party, Burundi's main Tutsi political group.
AFP reports:
"At night, they (the
Imbonerakure) patrol the area and threatened to burn our house," he added,
surrounded by a group of terrified Burundians who also fled across the border.
Burundian farmer Emmanuel
Minani knew it was time to leave when the gang who had terrified him for months
told him directly they would torch his house and kill him.
Minani, 44, crossed into
southern Rwanda last week with his wife and four children, because of what he
said were threats from the Imbonerakure ahead of elections in May and June.
Now the group of exhausted
refugees shelter in dilapidated buildings, a former army training camp being
turned into a refugee reception centre at Gashora, in Rwanda's southern region.
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UN rights chief Zeid Ra'ad
Al Hussein on Wednesday warned the "militia of the Imbonerakure" was
"operating increasingly aggressively and with total impunity."
- Intimidation, beating, violence -
Minani, like scores of
others with him in Gashora, came from just across the border from the province
of Kirundo, half a day's walk away.
There are now more than
6,000 Burundians registered in Rwanda, with the number growing by hundreds
every day, many of them Tutsi, as well as Twa people.
Burundi, a small landlocked
nation in central Africa's Great Lakes region, emerged in 2006 from a brutal
13-year civil war, and the majority Hutu and minority Tutsi communities are
still struggling to reconcile after decades of conflict.
It holds general elections
in May to elect lawmakers before a June presidential poll.
Tensions have risen over
incumbent President Pierre Nkurunziza's bid to seek a third term, despite the
constitution stating a president can only be elected twice.
With the opposition and
civil society groups mobilizing, there are worries the country is on the brink
of trouble once again.
Those who have fled say it
is increasingly difficult to leave. When Minani first attempted to cross into
Rwanda, the Imbonerakure blocked their way.
"They stole our goats
and forced us to go home," he said. Now, according to refugees, members of
the youth league are positioned along the border to block it.
"The Imbonerakure have
built camps in the bush at the border so that you can be monitored all the
time," he added.
Refugees around him nodded
in agreement as he described how those who were caught were often badly beaten.
The Imbonerakure have a
fearsome reputation: in February, Human Rights Watch detailed how security
forces and the Imbonerakure executed at least 47 rebels who had surrendered.
Members of the youth wing
were said to have beaten to death those prisoners who were not shot, throwing
others off a cliff and helping to hide bodies in mass graves.
The government rejected the
allegations but set up a judicial commission of inquiry to investigate.
Opposition politicians and
critics say the government is doing all it can to sideline political
challengers ahead of the elections, including arrests, harassment and a
clampdown on free speech.
- 'Never go back to Burundi' -
Those who come from Burundi
now arrive carrying little if anything so as not to attract attention when they
make the break to cross the border.
"I left my goats and my
chickens, I did not even take spare clothes," said Gerard Macumi, 25, now
living in a rundown house, where rain pours through the gaping holes in its tin
roof.
"When it rains at night
we have to stand up or we are soaked," he said.
Yet Macumi says he does not
regret leaving, describing an atmosphere of fear and intimidation to those who
oppose the CNDD-FDD, the ruling party of the Imbonerakure.
"The Imbonerakure puts
cassava leaves on the windows or doors of the houses of members of the
CNDD-FDD," he said, with those who do not show the symbol singled out and
threatened.
"When you have problems
with Imbonerakure, you can't complain to anyone because it is the government
that sends them," he charged. "They are stronger than the army."
Macumi fled after hearing
broadcasts on opposition radio claim weapons were being distributed to the
Imbonerakure to prepare for "war" should the president be blocked
from a third term in power.
"The Imbonerakure never
stop repeating it has distributed weapons," said Pelagie Nduwimana, 65,
another tired refugee.
"One day, in a bar, one
of them told me that if the president gave him the signal, he will clean his
rifle with the blood of Tutsi."
Nduwimana left after that.
"There is a lack of
food and shelter here, but I will never go back to Burundi," she said.
"Even if we are forced to go, I prefer to struggle and to die here."
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