Heavy fighting between rival Burundian troops erupted in the
capital on Thursday, the day after a top general launched a coup to oust the east
African nation's President Pierre Nkurunziza.
Military sources and
witnesses said troops loyal to the president, who was outside the country when
the coup was launched and who has been blocked from returning, were fighting
off an attack against the state television and radio complex.
Multiple media sources report:
Media workers also said
supporters of the president carried out attacks against independent media
broadcasters in the capital.
The influential African
Public Radio (RPA) station, which was shut down during weeks of protests
against the president and reopened after the coup attempt, was hit by a rocket
and was ablaze, witnesses said.
Media boss and rights
activist Innocent Muhozi, whose independent TV station was also attacked, said
the raids were carried out by pro-Nkurunziza police and ruling party youth.
"During the night a
truck full of police attacked RPA," Muhozi said, adding they fired a
rocket at the radio building after fighting pro-coup troops guarding the
station.
AFP reporters said the
crackle of automatic weapons fire and the thump of explosions could be heard
throughout the night and intensifying before dawn.
The streets were largely
deserted by civilians as sporadic clashes could be heard in other parts of the
city, while plumes of smoke were seen on the city skyline.
According to a pro-coup
military source, the state media complex was attacked in the early hours of the
morning after Burundi's armed forces chief used national radio to declare that
the coup, launched by former intelligence chief Godefroid Niyombare, had
failed.
"The national
defence force calls on the mutineers to give themselves up," armed forces
chief General Prime Niyongabo, a supporter of the president, said in an address
on state radio.
However a spokesman for
the anti-Nkurunziza camp, Burundi's police commissioner Venon Ndabaneze, told
AFP the claim was false and that General Niyombare's supporters were in control
of many facilities including Bujumbura's international airport.
A journalist inside the
RTNB building said the complex came under attack after the loyalist broadcast,
and that heavy weapons including cannons and rockets were being used.
The attempted coup capped
weeks of deadly civil unrest sparked by the president's controversial bid to
stand for a third term.
The crisis has raised
fears of a return to widespread violence in the impoverished country, which is
still recovering from a 13-year civil war that ended in 2006 and which left
hundreds of thousands dead.
Opposition and rights
groups insist that it is unconstitutional for Nkurunziza, who has been in
office since 2005, to run for more than two terms. The president, however,
argues his first term did not count as he was elected by parliament, not
directly by the people.
Nkurunziza, a former
rebel leader from the Hutu majority and born-again Christian, also believes he
ascended to the presidency with divine backing.
- Where is Nkurunziza? -
More than 22 people have
been killed and scores wounded since late April, when Burundi's ruling CNDD-FDD
party -- which has been accused of intimidating the opposition and arming its
own militia -- nominated Nkurunziza to stand for re-election in June 26 polls.
More than 50,000
Burundians have fled the violence to neighbouring nations in recent weeks, with
the UN preparing for thousands more refugees.
There was uncertainty
over the whereabouts Nkurunziza, whose attempt to return home from Tanzania
after the coup was announced was blocked by his opponents who seized the
airport and ordered the borders to be shut.
An AFP correspondent
confirmed the airport in the Burundian capital had been shut and appeared to be
in the hands of pro-coup forces.
Reports suggested
Nkurunziza had returned to Tanzania after his plane had been forced to turn
back.
The attempted coup has
sparked international alarm, with Washington urging Burundians to "lay
down arms, end the violence and show restraint".
Those calls were echoed
by the European Union which warned it was "essential the situation does
not spin out of control".
UN Secretary General Ban
Ki-moon also made an urgent appeal for calm, while the Security Council said it
would hold an emergency meeting on the situation on Thursday.
In his message announcing
the coup, Niyombare signalled he did not want to take power himself, vowing to
form a "committee for the restoration of national harmony" and work
for "the resumption of the electoral process in a peaceful and fair
environment."
Niyombare is a highly
respected figure who was sacked from his intelligence post in February after he
opposed Nkurunziza's attempt to prolong his 10-year rule.
Asked to rule on the
issue of a third term, Burundi's constitutional court found in the president's
favour but not before one of the judges fled the country, claiming its members
were subject to death threats.
Burundi's President Appeals
For Calm - Presidency Website
Burundi's president
appealed to the nation to stay calm in a brief state statement on the presidential
website and his Twitter feed on Thursday, after one general said he had been
deposed while another said the coup had failed.
"President Pierre
Nkurunziza calls on the Burundian people to remain calm," the statement
said, after the Army Chief of Staff General Prime Niyongabo said loyalist
forces still controlled all strategic points in Burundi.
Nkurunziza's
whereabouts are unclear. A Tanzanian official had said he left for Burundi on
Wednesday from Tanzania, where he had been for a summit. One security source
said he was still in Tanzania after his plane could not fly to Bujumbura as its
airport was closed. But there has been no formal announcement.
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