The 'Burundi Civil War' (1993-2006) is driven by ethnic rivalries between
Hutu and
Tutsi 'tribal' factions of
Burundi. Rivalry escalated into a bloody power struggle following the
presidential election of June
1993. The swearing in of
Pierre Nkurunziza as president in
August 2005 was seen as a formal endpoint to the conflict, but one major rebel group remained outside the peace process. Over 300,000 people perished in the war.
Background
Burundi's first multiparty national elections were held on
June 27, 1993.
Melchior Ndadaye of the
Front for Democracy in Burundi (FRODEBU) won the presidential election, the first person from the Hutu 'tribe' to become the president since the country secured independence from
Belgium in 1962. Hutus are the majority ethnic group, at about eighty-five percent, in the country, but the government has been dominated by Tutsis, through the
Union for National Progress (UPRONA) political party. Ndadaye was killed in a
coup d'état by Tutsi military officers on
October 21, 1993.
Course of the war
Violence between the ethnic groups followed the coup almost immediately, as Hutus sought revenge against Tutsis for Ndadaye's killing, and the Tutsi military killed thousands of Hutus in an attempt to retain power. For much of the conflict the
National Council for the Defense of Democracy-Forces for the Defense of Democracy (FDD) was the major Hutu rebel group operating in the country. While some factions of the FDD have abided by a peace agreement signed with the government, the largest faction continues to carry out attacks. There are gunfights daily in
Bujumbura, the country's capital, and people walk around armed on the street.
On
September 7,
2006,
FNL, the last remaining rebel group, signed a ceasefire agreement with the
NCDD–FDD government after fighting was renewed on 2004-2006.
[1] Earlier, on
May 2005, the two sides signed a first ceasefire agreement, but it had since failed.
External links
★
Burundi Civil War, globalsecurity.org