Burundi President Pierre Nkurunziza, centre, is
escorted on his way to the Julius Nyerere International Airport in Dar es
Salaam, Tanzania, May 13, 2015.
|
Seventeen
security officials, including five generals, accused in the attempted coup of
Burundi President Pierre Nkurunziza appeared Saturday before a prosecutor who
charged them with an attempt at destabilizing public institutions, lawyers of
some of the suspects said.
The suspected coup plotters are three army generals
and two police generals, said Presidential spokesman Gervais Abayeho. Others
are four lower-ranking officers and eight soldiers. The suspected coup leader,
Maj. Gen. Godefroid Niyombare, is still at large.
AP reports:
The coup attempt came amid Burundi’s turmoil over
Nkurunziza’s bid for a third term in office. After weeks of street protests
against Nkurunziza’s efforts to stay in power, Niyombare announced the coup on
Wednesday. Nkurunziza was in Tanzania attending an emergency regional summit to
discuss Burundi’s crisis when the attempted coup started but soldiers loyal to
the president stopped the rebellion.
Lawyers representing the suspects say officials
tortured them during detention.
“They have been beaten, tied with rope and they don’t
have shoes and shirts,” said Miburo Anatole, an official of the Bar Association
of Bujumbura. Anatole said he is representing Maj. Gen. Cyrille Ndayirukiye, a
former defense minister, and two police chiefs.
Another lawyer, Cyriaque Nibitegeka, said his client,
an army official, was forced to confess under gunpoint and had been denied food
since the men were arrested.
He said all 17 men would be tried in a civilian court.
Officials said Friday that Nkurunziza had returned to
the capital though he hasn’t been seen in public.
Despite the failed coup against Nkurunziza, about 30
protesters said Saturday they will continue demonstrating against the leader’s
bid for a third term, which they say goes against the two term limit set by the
constitution.
The protesters defied Nkurunziza’s ban on
demonstrations and vowed to continue to take to the streets to press the
president to drop his plan to run for re-election in June.
“We are going to continue with the protests because
our aim is to stop the president’s third term. We can see that they are
determined to stop us but we are not getting scared and we will not stop the
protests. We will continue to fight for the constitution to be respected,” said
Jean Paul Ndayiragije.
Opposition leaders and members of privately owned
media said they fear being targeted in a government crackdown of those
suspected of involvement in a failed attempt to overthrow Nkurunziza.
Burundi’s
election commission said it will review the situation in the coming week to
determine whether elections should continue.
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