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At least 34 Burundi police killed in months violence: government

By AFP
01 December 2015   |   11:30 am
At least 34 policemen have been killed and almost 300 wounded in Burundi since violent protests erupted in April against the president's bid to remain in power, the government said Tuesday. "The 'insurrectional movement' has caused significant losses on all sides," said a report by Public Security Minister Alain Guillaume Bunyoni, who himself was slapped…
Burundi Police Officials

Burundi Police Officials

At least 34 policemen have been killed and almost 300 wounded in Burundi since violent protests erupted in April against the president’s bid to remain in power, the government said Tuesday.

“The ‘insurrectional movement’ has caused significant losses on all sides,” said a report by Public Security Minister Alain Guillaume Bunyoni, who himself was slapped with sanctions last week by President Barack Obama, over his alleged links to the country’s descent into violence.

Bunyoni, the regime’s number two, said that 34 police officers were killed and 293 were injured in attacks by insurgents.

Burundi’s government blames a string of attacks on “armed criminals”, but the UN has warned that Burundi risks sliding back into civil war after a dramatic rise in violence.

The report gave no details of other casualties, although the UN says that at least 240 people have been killed and more than 200,000 have fled the country.

In the report, Bunyoni says the police had handled the situation with “professionalism, loyalty and self-sacrifice.”

Rights groups offer a different picture. Testimonies recorded by Amnesty International accuse both the police and National Intelligence Service (SNR) of “torture and other ill-treatment” against protestors.

Police beat people with electric cables and batons, while the SNR used iron bars, as well as “forcing detainees’ heads under dirty water,” Amnesty said in an August report.

The US said that the police under Bunyoni have conducted operations to silence and intimidate government opponents, breaking up peaceful protests with a “disproportionate use of force and acts of violent repression.”

The US action imposes visa restrictions on the four and blocks their US assets, a White House statement said, adding that it was considering similar action against other individuals.

“These sanctions are a fraud… I do not give a damn,” Bunyoni said in reply on Monday.

President Pierre Nkurunziza, an ex-rebel turned born-again Christian who believes he has divine backing to rule, won a third term in power in July, despite concerns over the legality of him serving a third consecutive mandate.

UN observers said the polls were neither credible nor free. Since the elections clashes between gunmen and the security forces have become a near daily event.

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