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African Union says no room for genocide on the continent

By Editor
18 December 2015   |   4:55 am
AFRIACAN UNION rights investigators have concluded their facts-finding mission to Burundi and expressed “great concern” over an “escalation of violence” after witnessing some of the heaviest fighting in the troubled country for months. The African Union said violence in Burundi must end, warning it would not allow a genocide to take place, the 54-member bloc…

Benin-President-Boni-Yayi

AFRIACAN UNION rights investigators have concluded their facts-finding mission to Burundi and expressed “great concern” over an “escalation of violence” after witnessing some of the heaviest fighting in the troubled country for months.
The African Union said violence in Burundi must end, warning it would not allow a genocide to take place, the 54-member bloc said on Thursday.

“Africa will not allow another genocide to take place on its soil,” the AU’s Peace and Security Council (PSC) there is “an urgent need for action to stop the killings.”

Burundi descended into bloodshed in April when President Pierre Nkurunziza announced his intention to run for a controversial third term, which he went on to win in July.

AU security council chief Smail Chergui said there was “a very clear message coming out of the ongoing PSC meeting: the killings in Burundi must stop immediately.”

Ministers were briefed on the AU’s military capabilities of its regional East African Standby Force for its “possible” deployment to Burundi, without giving further details.

On Wednesday, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon warned that Burundi “is on the brink of a civil war that risks engulfing the entire region.”

The AU team said they had reports of “arbitrary killings and targeted assassinations” as well as arrests, detentions and torture.

AFP reported that the investigators were in the capital Bujumbura last Friday, where they witnessed the “eruption of major exchanges of gunfire, explosions and shootings” during a coordinated attack on three military bases, two of them inside the city.

Since April, hundreds of people had died and more than 200,000 have left for neighbouring countries. Months of street protests in Burundi have spiraled into regular armed attacks with gunfire disrupting the nights and dead bodies appearing on city streets almost every day.

Attacks targeting the security forces had escalated, with rebels armed with assault rifles, rocket-propelled grenades and mortars attacking police convoys and targeting government installations.

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