Burundi's
Major-General Godefroid Niyombare
|
Burundi General Godefroid Niyombare, who announced the
overthrow of the president Wednesday, is a former member of a feared rebel
army, powerful spy chief, diplomat and respected army officer.
An ex-chief of staff of
the army and one-time ambassador to Kenya, Niyombare has a reputation for
professionalism and integrity, commanding respect among rank and file soldiers
in the new Burundi that emerged after the end of a brutal civil war in 2006.
AFP/GRAPHITTI NEWS/Media reports:
During Burundi's 13-year
civil war, Niyombare fought alongside Pierre Nkurunziza, who led the rebel
CNDD-FDD and went on to become president. The rebel force, like all sides in
the conflict, was implicated in widespread atrocities including ethnic
massacres.
With the end of the war
and a return to peace, Niyombare rose through the ranks becoming deputy head of
the army and then chief of staff. He also served as Burundi's ambassador to
Kenya.
In December he was
appointed head of the national intelligence, placing him at the heart of
government affairs and the president's powerful and shadowy security apparatus
-- which had been accused of helping the president by intimidating opponents.
Niyombare's loyal rise to
the top came to an abrupt end less than three months later when he was fired in
February after privately opposing Nkurunziza's intention to run for a third
term.
His deputies at the time,
intelligence chief of staff General Leonard Ngendakumana and the head of the
domestic intelligence division, General Sylvestre Ndayizeye, were also sacked.
Critics say Nkurunziza's
third term bid goes against the constitution and the Arusha peace deal that
ended Burundi's bloody civil war.
At the time of his
sacking, a senior CNDD-FDD official said Niyombare and his deputies were
punished for asking the president not to stand for re-election in June.
Many top generals
privately feared the attempt by Nkurunziza to stay in office could plunge the
country back into chaos, and the army has since been at pains to maintain its
neutrality in the political dispute.
On Wednesday, while
Nkurunziza was in Tanzania to attend a regional summit on Burundi's crisis, the
general took to private radio to announce the president's removal from office
and the dissolution of his government.
It remains unclear,
however, how much support General Niyombare still commands in the armed forces.
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