Soldiers try to contain protestors
during a demonstration against the Burundian president's third term in the
Musaga neighborhood of Bujumbura on May 20, 2015 ©Carl de Souza (AFP)
|
Burundi's defence minister has called for army unity after a failed coup
against President Pierre Nkurunziza and demanded soldiers hiding "rejoin
their units."
Defence Minister Emmanuel
Ntahonvukiye, a civilian named on Monday after his predecessor was sacked, made
the appeal alongside the Army Chief of Staff Prime Niyongabo late Wednesday,
according to a statement.
"The survival of Burundi as a
nation depends on the cohesion of the army," the statement read, warning
that should the military splinter, it would result in a situation as seen in
war-torn Somalia.
AFP report continues:
Troops were also told "not to
interfere in the management of political affairs, avoid any form of violence,
and respect human rights and the principles of international humanitarian
law."
One week after a coup led by a top
general was crushed -- with soldiers fighting each other on the streets --
security forces this week have battled to end the anti-government protests
against Nkurunziza's bid for a third term in power that have been raging in
parts of the capital since late April.
More than 20 people have died in
weeks of clashes with security forces that halted during the coup attempt, but
the protests resumed this week.
The leader of coup attempt, General
Godefroid Niyombare, has gone on the run after escaping capture, but 20
soldiers involved were arrested.
Some soldiers were
"manipulated" into taking part, the statement added, calling for
those in hiding to return to their units.
Burundi's 13-year civil war between
the former Tutsi-dominated army and Hutu rebels -- made of up several sometimes
competing factions -- ended in 2006, leaving some 300,000 dead.
As part of the Arusha Agreement in
2000, which paved the way for a final peace, the army and police were to be
reformed with equal numbers of Tutsi and Hutu, in a country where Hutus make up
some 85 percent of the population.
But the army statement said that the
coup bid was "carried out by a group of mutineers and had no ethnic
connotations."
In the days immediately after the
coup bid, it was soldiers rather than police who were mainly deployed to end
demonstrations and who are seen by many protesters as being more neutral.
However, police were seen Wednesday returning to stem the protests.
Some accuse the police of backing the ruling
party's Imbonerakure youth group, a powerful force described by the UN as a
militia and accused of a string of abuses and killings.
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