The United Nations High Commissioner for Human
Rights said on Wednesday he feared increased violence and incitement in
Burundi's crisis could turn ethnic in nature, but the government rebuffed his
comments.
| United Nations (U.N.) High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Ra'ad Al Hussein addresses the 31st session of the Human Rights Council at the U.N. European headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland, February 29, 2016. |
U.N. human rights chief Zeid Ra'ad Al Hussein also told a
meeting in Geneva while giving a report on Burundi that he was concerned about
suspensions and arrests of students for defacing portraits of President Pierre
Nkurunziza's earlier this month.
Burundi has been mired
in a year-long crisis in which more than 450 people have been killed since
Nkurunziza pursued and won a third term. Opponents said his move violated the
constitution and a deal that ended a civil war in 2005.
The central African
country has an ethnic Hutu majority and Tutsi minority.
Zeid said while the
number of Burundians killed had fallen since April, cases of arbitrary arrests,
detention and torture had continued while ex-officers of the defunct armed
forces, or FAB, had been killed because of their Tutsi ethnicity.
"I am alarmed by the very real prospect of an
escalation in ethnic violence," he said.
"In
the south of the country, I have also been informed of speeches by members of
the Imbonerakure amounting to incitement to violence against political
opponents, with strong ethnic overtones," he added, referring the ruling
party's youth wing.
Neighboring
Rwanda also has a Hutu majority and Tutsi minority. In Rwanda in 1994,
extremist Hutus killed about 800,000 people, mostly Tutsis but also moderate
Hutus,
in
a genocide after years of civil war.
Burundi's
government rejected Zeid's accusations, saying his report to the U.N. Human
Rights Council meeting in Geneva omitted a lot of other items and was
imbalanced.
"We
would like to remind the council that the Imbonerakure are just members of the
youth league of the CNDD-FDD, just like any other party in Burundi that has a
youth component in its organization. Their stigmatization, through the
different reports and statements, has cost a lot of lives," Burundian
Human Rights Minister Martin Nivyabandi said.
"It's
scandalous that the report does not mention young people who have tried to
create chaos, after being recruited, trained and armed. There serious attacks
with heavy weapons... murders by non-identified actors against members of
defense and security forces - we don't really see it in this report."
Early
this month, 530 students were sent home from schools across the central African
country for defacing Nkurunziza's portrait, and in one incident, police shot
and wounded another as they demonstrated against the arrest of fellow students.
"I
am dismayed by continuing reports of the suspension and arrest of school
children and students for having scribbled on pictures of the president in
textbooks," Zeid said.
Reuters
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