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Sunday, November 8, 2015

President and Commander in Chief Yoweri Kaguta Museveni taking aim yesterday at the graduation ceremony of Special Forces operators.
Burundians flee capital over fears of government crackdown
Burundians flee capital over fears of government crackdown
A file photo taken on May 20, 2015 shows policemen holding a position in the Musaga neighborhood of Bujumbura during a demonstration against the Burundian Presidents third term. AFP PHOTO / CARL DE SOUZA

  • Families were fleeing their homes in Burundi's capital on Sunday, over fears the government will unleash a fresh wave of bloodletting as part of a crackdown to stamp out resistance to the president.


Burundi has been engulfed in violence triggered by President Pierre Nkurunziza's successful bid to win a third term in office, with bodies found dumped in the streets on a nearly daily basis.

International alarm has grown ahead of a deadline of midnight on Saturday for civilians to hand over weapons or face a new regime crackdown, drawing warnings from the head of the UN, Washington and the world's only permanent war crimes court.

Fearing a fresh escalation of the bloodshed, people started leaving parts of Bujumbura that have seen the worst recent violence.

"I was terrified, I understood that this time they would kill every last one of us," said Marie, a secretary in her forties who took her five children to a relative's house in a calmer part of the capital.

A resident of the flashpoint Mutakura district, who asked not to be named, added: "Mostly men have stayed behind to protect their belongings... all the rest have fled."

At least 200 people have died in the latest turmoil and 200,000 have fled the country, sparking fears violence gripping the the central African country could spin into mass bloodletting and even genocide.

"Inflammatory rhetoric deployed in recent days by some government officials and President Nkurunziza's planned security crackdown this weekend are increasing the risk of an outbreak of mass violence," the US said Saturday.

But the government dismissed the concerns, saying it wanted only to crush "terrorism" and comparing the fight to Somalia's struggle against Islamist Al-Shebab insurgents that Burundi is fighting as part of an internationally backed African Union force.

"There will be no war or genocide," presidential communications chief Willy Nyamitwe told AFP on Saturday.

"It is amazing to see that a government that wants to put an end to terrorism is criticised instead of being encouraged," he added.

- Echoes of Rwanda -

The UN Security Council is to meet on Monday to discuss the crisis.

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said Friday that the discovery of bodies -- "many apparently summarily executed" -- has become a "regular occurrence" in Burundi's capital Bujumbura.

Bloodshed has risen ahead of the deadline to return weapons, and on Friday the son of a leading Burundian rights activist was found dead hours after he was arrested in the capital, his family and witnesses said.

Last week, the country's Senate president Reverien Ndikuriyo threatened to "pulverise" regime opponents who do not lay down arms before the deadline which expires later on Saturday.

"Today, the police shoot in the legs... but when the day comes that we tell them to go to 'work', do not come crying to us," he said.

The loaded term "work" was a euphemism used in Rwanda during the 1994 genocide to describe the mass killings of at least 800,000 mainly Tutsi people by extremist Hutu militias.

"The language is unambiguous to Burundians and chillingly similar to that used in Rwanda in the 1990s before the genocide," the International Crisis Group (ICG) think-tank said.

Minister of public security and regime number two Alain-Guillaume Bunyoni this week reminded inhabitants of the restive neighbourhoods -- particularly Tutsis -- that they were a minority compared to the Hutus who back Nkurunziza.

"If the police fail, there are nine million citizens to whom it would be enough to say: do something," he said.

- 'Dark days lie ahead' -

The rising unrest has sparked fears Burundi could slide back into conflict after its 1993-2006 civil war, when 300,000 people died as rebels from the majority Hutu people clashed with an army dominated by the minority Tutsis.

"Ask anyone in Bujumbura and they will tell you the same thing: dark days lie ahead," Carina Tertsakian from Human Rights Watch warned.

"Burundi seems to be descending into uncontrolled violence. A frightening lawlessness is taking hold, which some authorities appear to be taking advantage of to justify brutal repression."

In The Hague, the prosecutor of the world's only permanent war crimes court warned on Friday she would take action if wide-scale abuses were committed in Burundi.

The political crisis has seen many independent media outlets shut down and many journalists have fled the country or gone into hiding because of threats and attacks.

 

Friday, November 6, 2015

TAKE A LOOK AT THIS!

The outgoing Tanzanian president Kikwete gives a hug to his successor Magufuli as three of Africa's worst dictators look on with twisted faces.This was today when the new leader was being sworn in.

"I would rather die, than betraying all those people who want change in govervance,".Dr, Kizza Besigye @ NBS TV interview

Monday, November 2, 2015

BREAKING NEWS
---------------------------

TDA LEADERSHIP EXPRESSES DISPLEASURE AT THE WAY THE GO-FORWARD GROUP IS WRONGLY USING THEIR TDA LOGO.


The leadership of The Democratic Alliance (TDA) has expressed its displeasure at the Go-FORWARD group for wrongly using the alliance's logo in their communication, something the TDA leadership said must be stopped forthwith.In a statement just issued (see copy) the TDA leadership did not mince words in saying that TDA was not Go-FORWARD or FDC but a collection of many interesrt groups and parties, and none of them has the right to use the TDA logo.This means in essence that the claim that Amama was TDA candidate is defective.Yesterday Amama issued a statement (see copy here) and attached a TDA logo and this is said to have triggered this reaction.
SEE THE PRESS MEMO HERE FROM TDA
MEMO
To: All signatories to the TDA Protocol
From: TDA Secretariat
Date: November 1, 2015
RE: CLARIFICATION ON THE USE OF TDA BRAND, LOGO AND OTHER MATERIALS
This is to inform all signatory parties to The Democratic Alliance (TDA) and the general public that the use of TDA brand, which includes the TDA Logo, is exclusively reserved for The Democratic Alliance and cannot be used for any other purpose or by any other entity.
TDA is a platform of democracy-seeking organizations and individual Ugandan citizens working together to win power, establish government in order to undertake essential political and electoral reforms and implement policies that promote equal opportunity and shared prosperity for all Ugandans.
The use of TDA logo and other materials must be consistent with the goals and objectives of TDA. Any use of these materials, unless otherwise authorized by the TDA Summit, is inconsistent with the spirit of Article XVIII(49) of the Protocol establishing TDA.
At the moment, the TDA Summit has not made any decision regarding the use of The Democratic Alliance or the acronym “TDA” as part of the name of any signatory entity to the TDA Protocol. Unless and until such a decision is made, such usage would be irregular and inconsistent with the goals and objectives of TDA.
Bishop Zac Niringiye
Director of Secretariat

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