More than 450 people
have been killed in Burundi in unrest that began a year ago, the police said in
a report on the crisis that has raised fears of a return to the ethnically
charged violence of civil war.
A policeman walks at the crime scene where Burundian General Athanase Kararuza was attacked and killed by unknown gunmen in Ntahangwa commune, north of the capital Bujumbura, April 25, 2016. |
"The report at the disposal of police shows that 451 people
have been killed since the start of the crisis, including 77 police officers
and 374 civilians," the police said.
The crisis began when
President Pierre Nkurunziza announced in April 2015 plans to run for a third
term. Despite criticism that that violated the constitution and a peace deal
that ended the civil war in 2005, he went on to win July's election.
Nkurunziza's camp says a
court ruling had declared the former rebel-turned-president eligible to seek
another term.
The police report said 59 of its officers had been
jailed over the last year for "serious misconduct". It did not detail
their actions but opponents of the government have accused the police of
violently suppressing protests and dissent.
The
government denies that but say the police have pursued opponents who have taken
up arms. At least three rebel groups have emerged, one of them led by army
officers who launched a failed coup last May.
The
violence, which diplomats say includes tit-for-tat killings of pro-government
supporters and political opponents, has so far largely been driven by political
differences.
But
diplomats and residents in Bujumbura, which has seen the worst of the violence,
say there are worrying signs of ethnically motivated killings.
Burundi
has an ethnic Hutu majority and Tutsi minority, the same split as in
neighboring Rwanda, which was torn apart by genocide in 1994.
Reuters
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