Colonel
Gaspard Baratuza
|
Burundi's army killed 31 suspected rebels and captured 170
others in fighting in the country's north, a military spokesman said on Monday.
The fighting, which comes
amid political unrest over the president's controversial bid for a third term,
has raised fears of a return to civil war in this central African country.
AP report continues:
Military spokesman Col. Gaspard Baratuza told a news conference in northwestern Cibitoke province that six soldiers were wounded in recent fighting with suspected rebels, and that nearly 80 assorted weapons were seized.
Military spokesman Col. Gaspard Baratuza told a news conference in northwestern Cibitoke province that six soldiers were wounded in recent fighting with suspected rebels, and that nearly 80 assorted weapons were seized.
Canesius Ndayimanisha,
governor of northern Kayanza province, said that suspected rebels carried out
two attacks inside Burundian territory on Friday after entering the country
through the dense Nyungwe forest on the Rwanda border.
Burundi has been tense
since April when the ruling party nominated President Pierre Nkurunziza to be
its candidate in presidential elections later this month.
Unrest boiled over into a
military coup in May that was quickly put down by pro-Nkurunziza forces, but at
least 77 people have died in sporadic protests in the capital, Bujumbura, by
civilians who say Nkurunziza must go after serving the two
constitutionally-allowed terms. The nation's constitutional court has ruled in
the president's favor, saying he is eligible for a third term because he was
chosen by lawmakers — and not popularly elected — for his first term.
The U.N. human rights chief
Zeid Raad al-Hussein told the U.N. Security Council last week that "the
risk to human life, and to regional stability and development, is high" as
a result of escalating politically motivated violence and Burundi's history of
recurring bloodshed and atrocities.
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