Text Only
Search

 
Burundi Referendum - A Consensus to End Civil War ?


28 February 2005

Voters in Burundi are deciding whether to accept a power-sharing constitution designed to end more than a decade of ethnic conflict.   More than three million Burundians are registered to vote on the proposed document, which gives Hutus 60 percent of the seats in the national assembly, and the remaining 40 percent to Tutsi parties.  

Under the new constitution, both groups will share equal control of the army and the police force.   Burundi's minority Tutsis have dominated politics and the military since independence from Belgium in 1962.  Monday’s vote is Burundi's first since 1993, when Melchior Ndadaye became the first democratically elected Hutu in the nation's history.   His assassination by Tutsi soldiers sparked a civil war that killed more than a quarter of a million people. 

Hussein Soloman, director of the Center for International Political Studies at the University of Pretoria, South Africa, says the draft constitution represents a consensus among Hutu and Tutsi moderates.  This, despite opposition to the document by three Tutsi political parties and one Hutu group, and despite the fact that the Tutsi, who represent 15 percent of Burundi, will receive more than that percentage in the new national assembly, government, and army.  Professor Soloman says the broad support among the ethnic elites mirrors popular support for an end to years of civil war. 

Burundi’s draft constitution differs from the solution to ethnic violence used in neighboring Rwanda. Burundi's northern neighbor has similar demographics, but experienced a genocide against the Tutsi and moderate Hutu in 1994.  A Tutsi-led army ended the killings in Kigali, and the Rwandan government says it does its best to eliminate any official vestiges of ethnicity, such as ethnic identity cards.  But Professor Soloman says Burundi’s approach, which deals openly with the question of ethnicity and political power, may be a better solution.  He says ethnic rivalry remains a political problem in many parts of Africa, and that suppressing ethnic identity may cause the issue to reassert itself as a political problem in the future. 

emailme.gif E-mail This Article
printerfriendly.gif Print Version

  Top Story
Obama Pays Tribute to Fort Hood Shooting Victims   Audio Clip Available  Video clip available

  More Stories
Details Emerge About Alleged Fort Hood Shooter  Audio Clip Available  Video clip available
Bomb Rocks Northwestern Pakistan
China Ready to Welcome President Obama  Video clip available
US Urges North Korea Not to Escalate Tensions in Yellow Sea
British PM Defends Military Mission in Afghanistan  Audio Clip Available
Lebanon's Unity Government Convenes for First Time
Tropical Storm Ida Downgraded; Moves Inland
Report: Africa's Disappearing Wetlands Produce 'Alarming' Levels of Greenhouse Gas
IEA Urges Action on Climate Change
Somali Pirates Deny Arms Seizure  Audio Clip Available
Cross-Examination Begins in War Crimes Trial of Former Liberian President  Audio Clip Available
US Development of H1N1 Vaccine Hits Snag  Video clip available
Asia to Welcome President Obama  Video clip available
Obama Makes First China Tour as Economic Interdependence Grows  Audio Clip Available  Video clip available
APEC Marks 20 Years, Looks to Future of Regional Trade  Audio Clip Available
Clinton Urges 'Compassion' for Americans Detained in Iran  Audio Clip Available
World War II Museum Expansion Aims at Younger Generations  Audio Clip Available  Video clip available
North Carolina World War II Veterans Honored in Washington  Video clip available