Timeline of Burundi's Turmoil |
Anti-government gunmen
attacked military sites in Burundi's capital on Friday and up to seven people
were killed in fighting, officials and soldiers said, the latest flare-up in a
nation Western powers fear is sliding back into ethnic conflict. Two soldiers and five
attackers were killed in clashes around a base in Ngagara, a district of
Bujumbura, one soldier told Reuters. He lives outside the base, one of three
sites attacked in the capital, but said he spoke to colleagues inside.
A
military spokesman could not be reached for comment.
Reuters report continues:
Heavy
gunfire and blasts erupted in the early hours of Friday morning and shots were
still heard across the capital after daybreak. Residents said the streets were
empty when people normally headed to work and police were out in force.
The
violence in Burundi is unnerving for a volatile region which only two decades
ago saw a genocide in next-door Rwanda.
Night-time
gunfire and sporadic blasts have been common in Bujumbura during a crisis
sparked in April by President Pierre Nkurunziza's bid for a third term, which
opponents, often called 'Sindumuja', said violated a deal that ended civil war
in 2005. Nkurunziza won a disputed election in July.
The
crisis led to a failed coup in May. One of the generals behind that coup said
in July the group still sought to topple the president, raising worries that
the poor nation was slipping into conflict again. Other plotters were caught
and face trial.
"Sindumuja
tried to attack military camps but they failed," presidential media
adviser Willy Niyamitwe wrote on Twitter, describing the raids as "a
diversion" to try to free prisoners.
Without
mentioning any casualties, he dismissed comments that the city was empty,
saying it was "business as usual" with people at work and children at
school.
A
deputy presidential spokesman said on his Twitter account that a cabinet
meeting was taking place in the morning. He also said the aim of the
"armed gang" was to free prisoners.
Alongside
the raid on Ngagara camp in the north of Bujumbura, two southern sites were
attacked, namely Muha camp and ISCAM, a higher institute for officers, soldiers
and residents said.
Till
now, battle lines in Burundi's crisis have followed the political divide, but
Western powers and regional nations fear old ethnic rifts could reopen if
violence continues unchecked.
Burundi's 12-year civil war
had pitted rebel groups of the Hutu majority, including one led by Nkurunziza,
against what was then an army led by the Tutsi minority. Rwanda has the same
ethnic mix.
Meanwhile
AP reports that witnesses says overnight gunfire and explosions that spilled
into the day have shut down activity in Burundi's capital, Bujumbura, amid
turmoil over President Pierre Nkurunziza's extended term in office. Only
military and police vehicles are patrolling the city center and road blocks
have been set up, residents Karikurubu Pie and Jean de Dieu Rugira said Friday.
Military
sources, who insisted on anonymity because they are not authorized to speak
with the media, said that at least one army camp was attacked in the night.
Nkurunziza won elections in
July for a third term in office that opponents say is illegal. At least 240
people have been killed since April when Nkurunziza's candidacy was announced.
The international community warns that Burundi could slide into chaos if the
killings continue.
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