January 17, 2025
While announcing the referendum on December 12, 2017, Nkurunziza warned that those who dared to 'sabotage' the project to revise the constitution 'by word or action' would be crossing a 'red line'. His speech legitimised a government policy of seeking out and punishing anyone perceived to oppose the referendum. Local authorities reinforced these threats.

By Human Rights Watch Press
Published May 19, 2018

Human Rights Watch says Burundi’s security services and ruling party youth league members killed, raped, abducted, beat, and intimidated suspected opponents in the months leading up to a constitutional referendum on May 17, 2018.Burundi’s security services and ruling party youth league members killed, raped, abducted, beat, and intimidated suspected opponents in the months leading up to a constitutional referendum on May 17, 2018.

In a 32-page report titled We Will Beat You to Correct You: Abuse Ahead of Burundi’s Constitutional Referendum, Human Rights Watch documents violation and abuse by state security forces, intelligence services, members of the ruling party’s youth league – the Imbonerakure – and others close to the ruling party, in the year and a half leading up to the referendum.

Many victims, the report says, were targeted for refusing to register to vote or contribute funds to finance upcoming polls. In some cases, simply not belonging to the ruling party, the National Council for the Defense of Democracy-Forces for the Defense of Democracy (Conseil national pour la défense de la démocratie-Forces de défense de la démocratie, CNDD-FDD), was enough to create suspicion and provoke a response.

RELATED:Police and Armed Gangs Kill Dozens in Kenya

The French-speaking central African country has faced a political, human rights, and humanitarian crisis since April 2015 when Pierre Nkurunziza decided to run for a disputed third Presidential term.

While announcing the referendum on December 12, 2017, Nkurunziza warned that those who dared to 'sabotage' the project to revise the constitution 'by word or action' would be crossing a 'red line'. His speech legitimised a government policy of seeking out and punishing anyone perceived to oppose the referendum. Local authorities reinforced these threats.“Burundi’s referendum took place amid widespread abuse, fear, and pressure – a climate that is clearly not conducive to free choice,” says Ida Sawyer, Central Africa director at Human Rights Watch. “Government officials and the Imbonerakure clearly knew there would be no penalty for their violence against real and perceived opponents to allow Nkurunziza and the CNDD-FDD to maintain their grip on power.”

If the “yes” vote wins, the constitutional referendum will allow Nkurunziza to run for two seven-year terms, and possibly stay in power until 2034. Results of the referendum are expected to be announced in the coming days.

When announcing the referendum on December 12, 2017, Nkurunziza warned that those who dared to ‘sabotage’ the project to revise the constitution ‘by word or action’ would be crossing a ‘red line’. His speech legitimised a government policy of seeking out and punishing anyone perceived to oppose the referendum. Local authorities reinforced these threats.

RELATED:UN Human Rights Body Suspends Rwanda Visit Citing Obstruction

In one case documented, the Imbonerakure killed a 30-year-old man in February 2017 in Bujumbura Rural province because he refused to join them.

Ida Sawyer, Central Africa director at Human Rights Watch, says “Nkurunziza and the CNDD-FDD have shown they will use whatever repression is necessary to keep their hold on power,” Sawyer says. “Burundi’s international partners, particularly African states, should let the government know that enough is enough. The abuses need to stop, and the abusers held accountable.”“The Imbonerakure wanted my son to join them, but he refused,” his mother said. “Then they started to say he was a traitor. One night, they came to the house and asked my son for money. He gave them what he had, but they still shot him in the stomach. He died there.”

Human Rights Watch spoke with five former Imbonerakure members about how the group has been operating since 2015. A former combatant from the National Liberation Forces (Forces nationales de libération, FNL, a former rebel movement that became a political party) said he reluctantly joined the Imbonerakure but fled after he refused an order to kill.

“I received an order to kill other FNL who were in a jail in Cibitoke,” he said. “But I could not do it…. They said I needed to do something to prove that I could be trusted in the group.”

RELATED:Yemen Detains, Tortures and Rapes African Migrants

The fact that security services and Imbonerakure have been able to commit these crimes in recent years, confident that they won’t face punishment, has protected the abusers and encouraged further abuse. In nearly all cases Human Rights Watch documented, the people responsible and their commanders have not been arrested, charged, or tried, even when witnesses identified them. The government has failed to take reasonable steps to ensure security and protect its citizens, or to fulfill its duty to take all reasonable measures to prevent and prosecute these crimes.

In October 2017, judges from the International Criminal Court authorized an investigation into crimes committed in Burundi since April 2015. Two days later, Burundi became the first country to withdraw from the court.

“Nkurunziza and the CNDD-FDD have shown they will use whatever repression is necessary to keep their hold on power,” Sawyer says. “Burundi’s international partners, particularly African states, should let the government know that enough is enough. The abuses need to stop, and the abusers held accountable.”

RELATED:African Poetry Prize Winner Talks About Her Work

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Share via
Copy link
Powered by Social Snap