This Article is From Dec 17, 2015

Ban Ki-Moon Sends Envoy To Burundi After 'Chilling' Violence

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Suspected fighters are paraded before the media by Burundian police near a recovered cache of weapons after clashes in the capital Bujumbura, Burundi December 12, 2015. (Reuters Photo)

Nairobi: U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon called on Wednesday for urgent talks to avert civil war in Burundi as the central African country defended the actions of its security forces and rejected any idea of stationing foreign troops on its soil.

Ban said he would send his special adviser Jamal Benomar to the region for talks with the Burundi government, other countries and the African Union on ways to defuse a crisis that has spurred fears of a return to full-scale ethnic conflict.

"An inclusive political dialogue is needed urgently. We must do all we can to prevent mass violence and act decisively should it erupt," Ban told a news conference in New York.

"What we have seen over the past few days is chilling. The country is on the brink of a civil war that risks engulfing the entire region," he added.

In the worst clashes since a military coup was foiled in May, insurgents attacked military camps in the capital Bujumbura last Friday and nearly 90 people were killed in the ensuing violence. nL1N14202U]

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U.N. human rights chief Zeid Ra'ad Al Hussein said on Tuesday the authorities had responded to the attacks with house searches, arrests and alleged summary executions.

Burundi, whose crisis pits supporters of President Pierre Nkurunziza against those opposed to him serving a third term in office, rejected the criticism of its security forces.

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"The security forces intervened with the greatest possible professionalism," it said in a statement late on Tuesday. "It would therefore be irrelevant to talk of bringing foreign forces into Burundi."

"Those who recommend it hide many other intentions," said the statement, issued by a government spokesman.

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The U.N. Security Council has considered actions that include sending a peacekeeping force to deal with Burundi's crisis, though Ban has ruled out such a step for now.

Meddling

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Burundi has accused neighbouring Rwanda and some Western nations of meddling in its affairs, saying they are stoking the crisis in the poor African nation.

Western powers are concerned that Burundi, which only emerged from a civil war in 2005, could plunge back into ethnic conflict, destabilising a region that witnessed a genocide in Rwanda in 1994.

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Like Rwanda, Burundi has an ethnic Hutu majority and a Tutsi minority.

In another statement late on Tuesday, Burundi's ruling CNDD-FDD party accused former colonial power Belgium of providing "weapons to the terrorists and medically assisting them when injured".

Several officials have fled to Belgium since the crisis erupted.
© Thomson Reuters 2015
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