BUJUMBURA, May 10: Burundi’s government has ordered protesters to immediately end weeks of demonstrations against President Pierre Nkurunziza’s third term bid and ordered all barricades to be removed within 48 hours.
“The protesters and organisers of this insurrection must immediately and unconditionally stop this insurrection that handicaps the life of Burundi and its people,” the National Security Council said in a statement read out in Bujumbura.
The government’s top security body, headed by Nkurunziza, demanded that all roads “previously barricaded by insurgents” be cleared by security forces within 48 hours.
Protest leader Pacifique Nininahazwe slammed the order as a “declaration of war”, vowing that the demonstrations would continue until Nkurunziza scraps his plan to run for a third term, widely deemed unconstitutional.
Protesters observed a one-day truce yesterday that saw calm return to the streets of the capital Bujumbura for the first time in weeks.
At least 18 people have been killed, among them police and protestors, since April 26 when Nkurunziza declared his intention to run for a third term in elections scheduled for next month.
Nkurunziza has so far faced down international condemnation of his third term bid, including from the African Union and the United States. Critics say his candidacy runs contrary to both the constitution and the peace deal that ended a bloody civil war in 2006.
On Friday the president officially registered to run in the June 26 election when he submitted his papers in person at the electoral commission. Yesterday rival candidates followed suit, including main opponent Agathon Rwasa.
Rwasa leads the National Liberation Forces — known by its French acronym FNL — and is the key challenger to Nkurunziza and his CNDD-FDD party.
Rwasa said his registration was not a sign that he accepts either the electoral process or the candidature of his opponent, the president.
“The security situation is not looking good,” Rwasa said. He alleged that the ruling party youth wing, known as the Imbonerakure and employed as election muscle in the past, “are armed and wearing police uniforms”.
“How can we campaign in the current circumstances?” Rwasa asked.
Yesterday saw shoppers out in the streets, making their way past barricades that remained in place in neighbourhoods that have been protest hotspots. (AGENCIES)