Kenya's President Uhuru Kenyatta. (AFP)
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On Sunday,
President Uhuru Kenyatta spoke with his Burundian counterpart by telephone,
according to spokesman Manoah Esipisu, who said other East African Community
leaders shared the view that Pierre Nkurunziza should postpone his June 26
re-election bid. Protests started April 26, after the president
announced plans to retain power.
Manoah Esipisu, the spokesperson for Kenyatta, wrote
on his Twitter feed that the two leaders, whose nations belong to the East
African Community (EAC) common market, had spoken by phone. Regional leaders want the election date changed from
June 26 to create a "conducive environment" but the vote should still
be held within the current electoral cycle, which comes to an end in late
August, Esipisu said.
GRAPHITTI NEWS based on Reuters/AFP/AP filings reports:
Presidential aide Willy Nyamitwe said Burundi
"could decide to delay" the vote: "We will put everything in
place for the laws and constitution to be respected and for elections to be
held."
Critics say the president's bid violates a
constitutional limit established in 2005, when he took office at the end of a
war between Hutus and the minority Tutsis that left more than 300,000 people
dead. The president says that because he was appointed rather than elected the
first time around he may run again. The US, EU and African Union have
criticized Nkurunziza's plan.
At least 20 protesters have died in clashes with
police. Last week, top army generals, a former defense minister and two police
commissioners attempted to oust Nkurunziza, a former rebel leader, in a coup
while he was visiting neighboring Tanzania.
The United Nations reports that 100,000 Burundians
have fled. The US, which closed its embassy in Bujurumba Friday, has helped 20
Americans, four Canadians and several other non-Burundians evacuate the country
on commercial flights to neighboring Rwanda. "The security situation
remains fluid and volatile because of militia, military and security forces
activity in Bujumbura," State Department spokesman Jeff Rathke said late
Sunday.
'Dumbfounding'
On Sunday, Nkurunziza appeared publicly for the first
time since the coup, sending a clear message that he intended to remain in
charge of Burundi. Dressed in a blue blazer and polo shirt, the president
smiled and shook hands with reporters at the presidency in Bujumbura's city
center. He gave only a brief statement, without even mentioning the failed plot
to overthrow him.
Instead, he spoke of external threats, bringing up the
Somali group al-Shabab, which has carried out terror attacks in other East
African nations, including Kenya.
Al-Shabab later dismissed the allegations, telling
Reuters news agency in a statement that what Nkurunziza had said was
"dumbfounding" and that the turmoil in Burundi was "clearly
domestic."
Protesters vow to retake the streets, but Interior
Minister Edouard Nduwimana called on the opposition to stay home. He said
security forces might not differentiate between demonstrators and
"extremists."
During the coup, loyalist troops forced independent
radio off the air, and the opposition accuses Nkurunziza of repressing
dissidents and media. The head of RPA radio has fled the country.
In
a televised speech on Friday, Nkurunziza had also attempted to link protesters
to the coup.
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