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Burundi's Hutu extremists murdered 300 in last two months

rw | 01.08.2005 10:17 | Anti-racism | Repression | World

300 Burundian civilians have been murdered by Hutu-extremists in the last two months - that's six times the number killed in the London bombings.

Victims of the August 13th Gatumba massacre
Victims of the August 13th Gatumba massacre


 http://agathonrwasa.blogspot.com/2005/08/rwasas-fnl-killed-300-civilians-in.html

The Burundian Hutu-extremist group Palipehutu-FNL (commonly known as FNL), has killed 300 civilians in the last two months, according to local sources.

Burundi's Radio Publique Africain has reported the discovery of three mass graves in the provinces of Bubanza, and Bujumbura-Rurale - an FNL stronghold.

"Some of them are killed because the FNL accuses them of collaborating with national defence forces, and others are assassinated simply because they have deserted the movement", army spokesman Adolphe Manirakiza is quoted by Reuters as saying.

The FNL, a hardlined splinter group of the "Partie pour la libération du peuple Hutu", has been fighting the Burundian government since the mid-1990s. Civilians have borne the brunt of the violence, according to human rights groups. The organisation has consistently been linked with remnants of the Rwandan Hutu militia who carried out the 1994 genocide, and is believed to share a similar ideology.

In August last year, the FNL admitted responsibility for the massacre of 152 Congolese Tutsis at the Gatumba refugee camp in western Burundi. Rwandan and Congolese groups are also believed to have taken part in the attack. The FNL later claimed that the refugee camp was a military base. UN investigators found no evidence for the allegation, and human rights groups pointed out that most of the dead were women and children.

Although the FNL is known for its hostility to the Tutsi ethnic group, many of its victims have been Hutus accused of disloyalty.

Burundi's ruling FRODEBU party was recently accused by their electoral rivals of employing FNL fighters to disrupt the country's first polls since 1993. FRODEBU denied the charges, but admitted "political collaboration" with the group.

Speaking to Reuters, FNL spokesman Pasteur Habimana admitted that his group had killed civilians in recent months, but said that those killed had been "people who are sent by the army with a mission of eliminating our fighters by giving them poison". Habimana also accused the Burundian army of attacking civilians.

rw
- Homepage: http://agathonrwasa.blogspot.com

Comments

Hide the following 4 comments

Thanks for trivialising this with a cheap dig at Indymedia

01.08.2005 13:56

D'you think you could keep your beef with Indymedia to yourself? Why is it that whenever Africans die people like you want to make a joke out of it?

rw


Re: Thanks for trivialising this with a cheap dig at Indymedia

01.08.2005 15:18

The pity is I wouldn't be surprised to see a comment trying to link this to Israel. The newswire is currently obsessed with trying to blame the Israelis for everything. Only last week some nutter was banging on about the London bombings all being a put up job by Mossad and others were agreeing !

A shame


re: re

01.08.2005 16:06

I guessed that was the point you were trying to make. While I don't agree that every criticism of Israeli policy is anti-semitic, I'm also unsettled by these allegedly-left-wing conspiracy theories which try to characterise the Israelis as the hidden force behind everything that's wrong with the world (they remind me of the Nazi conspiracy theories which blamed everything on the Jews).

But I think that's a separate debate from the Burundi issue. While I wouldn't ever want to trivialise the suffering on all sides in the Middle East, many more Central Africans have been killed than have died on either side in the Israel-Palestine conflict. Frankly it amazes me that so little attention is given to the scale of the situation in Central Africa, and it annoys me when people want to look at what's going on there through the same old simplistic prism.

The great strength of Indymedia is that very little gets censored. That does mean that even the craziest of conspiracy nuts get a hearing - but it also means that you should be able to put your own point across in your own thread. Why don't you do that rather than picking on Burundi?!

rw