Elections in Burundi
should be delayed by at least a month and a half and all violence must stop,
East African leaders said Sunday after a regional summit on the crisis.
"The summit,
concerned at the impasse in Burundi, strongly calls for a long postponement of
the elections not less than a month and a half," the East African
Community (EAC) said in a statement read out by its secretary general Richard
Sezibera after the meeting of regional leaders in Tanzania.
The statement called
"on all parties to stop violence," for the "disarmament of all
armed youth groups" -- a clear reference to ruling party supporters
accused of attacking opponents -- and for "the creation of conditions for
the return of refugees" who have fled the turmoil.
The crisis in Burundi
erupted after the ruling party designated Nkurunziza, in power for 10 years, as
its candidate for upcoming elections.
The opposition and
rights groups say this violates the constitution as well as a 2006 peace deal
that ended a 13-year civil war.
The war left hundred of
thousands dead, and there are widespread fears that the current crisis could push
the impoverished, landlocked country back into conflict.
Burundi's government has
insisted that parliamentary elections will take place on June 5 despite weeks
of civil unrest that has left at least 30 people dead. The presidential
election is scheduled for June 26.
The summit has been seen
as an important opportunity to resolve the crisis, with talks between
Nkurunziza's camp and the Burundian opposition deadlocked.
However the leaders
stopped short of telling the president to back down, only calling for a
"return to the constitutional order" in Burundi.
- Nkurunziza
'campaigning' -
The Burundian president,
however, failed to turn up: his spokesman said he instead would be pushing
ahead with his re-election campaign.
It was during a first
crisis meeting on May 13 in Tanzania's economic capital, attended by
Nkurunziza, that a top general launched an unsuccessful bid to oust him -- and
the president was seen as being wary of again leaving the country.
There was no immediate
response from the Burundian government to the call for an election delay.
According to a diplomat
close to the talks, Nkurunziza will also be expected to "give the
opposition and independent media an opportunity to freely express
themselves".
The EAC summit was
attended by leaders from Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda. Rwandan President Paul
Kagame, a key regional player and Burundi's neighbour, sent a minister to
represent him, although South African President Jacob Zuma did join the talks.
Nkuruniza, a former
rebel leader from the Hutu majority and a born-again Christian, insists he has
every right to stand again, arguing that for his first term in office he was
appointed by parliament and not after a general election.
Asked to rule on
Nkurunziza's candidacy, Burundi's constitutional court found in favour of the
president, but not before one of the judges also fled the country, claiming
that its members were subject to death threats.
- Demonstrators
disappointed -
Key international donors
have withdrawn their support for the polls, as has the influential Catholic
Church in Burundi, and on Saturday it emerged that a senior member of the
election commission had fled the country -- further plunging preparations for
the polls into disarray.
The country's main
opposition leader, Agathon Rwasa, also said elections would be a
"masquerade" if they go ahead.
UN special envoy Said
Djinnit said on Friday that talks between the Burundian government and
opposition had made progress on several issues -- including the reopening of
independent media and the release of detainees -- but not on the key issue of a
halt to protests in return for Nkurunziza's agreement not to stand again.
He said both sides
"have agreed to resume their talks after the summit in Dar es
Salaam".
But demonstrators on the
streets of Bujumbura said they were disappointed by the outcome of the summit.
"It doesn't change
anything. One month is not enough. there are lots of problems -- independent
media has not reopened, the rights of protestors are violated. All of this
needs to be resolved before elections can be held," said Antoine, an
anti-Nkurunziza activist who asked that his full name not be published.
"It shows that the
heads of state don't have the will to deal with Nkurunziza," said another
demonstrator. "The crisis will continue, even get worse."
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