Burundi: Civilians Targeted in Bujumbura Rural

    
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Human Rights Watch (Washington, DC)

PRESS RELEASE
June 25, 2004 
Posted to the web June 25, 2004 

Washington, DC 

Just outside the capital Bujumbura, civilians in Burundi have been killed, raped and 
injured in ongoing combat between government troops allied with former rebel 
combatants and the forces of a rebel group that remains outside the country's peace 
process, Human Rights Watch said in a briefing paper released today.

The 15-page report, 'Suffering in Silence: Civilians in Continuing Combat in Bujumbura 
Rural,' documents how these war crimes have been committed by all three parties in the 
conflict: government troops, allied combatants from the former rebel Forces for the 
Defense of Democracy (Forces pour la d�fense de la d�mocratie, or FDD), and forces 
from the rebel National Liberation Forces (Forces nationales pour la liberation, or 
FNL). In November the FDD, whose forces are still led by former rebel leader Pierre 
Nkurunziza, reached an accord with the government. But the FNL, led by Agathon Rwasa, 
has not yet joined the peace process.

  
"Everyone is applauding the progress towards peace in Burundi, but they seem to forget 
that just outside the capital the war continues for tens of thousands of people," said 
Alison Des Forges, senior advisor to the Africa Division of Human Rights Watch..

Earlier this month, the United Nations established a peacekeeping force, the U.N. 
Operation for Burundi (ONUB), to oversee the implementation of agreements between the 
parties in the 10 -year-old civil war. The U.N.

force incorporates troops from the African Union peacekeeping mission already in 
Burundi for more than a year, and it has a mandate to protect civilians - by force if 
necessary.

Just 15 kilometers south of Bujumbura, 25,000 civilians have been displaced from their 
homes in the rural commune of Kabezi, some of them for more than three months. Another 
25,000 have fled their homes in adjacent Mutambu commune, southeast of the capital. 
Displaced persons are not allowed to go to their fields and must depend on 
humanitarian aid; their children are not allowed to go to school.

In addition to abuses between December 2003 and April 2004 documented in the report, 
in recent weeks all three parties to the conflict have committed further crimes in the 
Bujumbura Rural communes of Kabezi, Mutambu and Muhuta, where combat continues. On May 
2, rebel FNL forces abducted three civilians from Kabezi commune and killed one of 
them, whom they suspected of helping the government army. On May 29, government forces 
deliberately killed at least eight civilians, including two young children at Kimina. 
On June 3, combatants from the former rebel group FDD detained five civilians from 
Nyambuye at an unknown location, one of them a woman accused of helping FNL rebels.

Relevant Links 
 
Central Africa 
Burundi 
Humanitarian Abuses and Civilians 
Arms and Military Affairs 
Post-Conflict Challenges 
 
 
 
"People celebrating the peace have built a wall of silence around the suffering of 
rural victims just outside Bujumbura," said Des Forges.

"Parties to the conflict and the U.N. peacekeeping mission have a responsibility to 
level that wall and deliver effective protection to civilians."





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