NAIROBI (Reuters) – Burundi said on
Tuesday that a first group of its refugees in Tanzania would return home on
Thursday, as a mass repatriation planned by the two governments begins, a
Burundian official told Reuters.
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About 1,000 refugees are in the first
group, Nestor Bimenyimana, the Burundi government’s general manager for
repatriation, said. He said the process was “voluntary”.
Burundi and Tanzania agreed in August that
repatriations of 200,000 Burundi refugees in Tanzania would start on Oct. 1,
sparking fears of forced returns among some of those who crossed the border to
escape violence.
Tanzania’s home affairs ministry spokesman
said on Tuesday that only the minister could speak and he was not immediately
available.
Hundreds of Burundians have been killed in
clashes with security forces since 2015, when President Pierre Nkurunziza ran
for a third, disputed term in office. Over the same period, more than 400,000
have fled abroad, predominantly to Tanzania, Rwanda and Democratic Republic of
Congo.
The United Nations and rights groups have
said they fear the governments may force the refugees to return home to a
dangerous environment where they face political persecution.
After the announcement in August, Reuters
spoke to refugees in camps who said there was no way they would be safe back at
home.
“At this stage, things are not conductive
for mass returns,” said Babar Baloch, a spokesman for the U.N. refugee agency (UNHCR)
in Geneva, said by phone on Tuesday.
He did not comment on the Burundian
official’s remarks, but said refugees must “make a decision for themselves if
the situation is right for them to return or not”. He said that those that felt
safe had already gone home, while people continue to leave Burundi because of
problems they face there.
ELECTIONRISK
New York-based Human Rights Watch says
Burundi’s government does not tolerate criticism, and security services carry
out summary executions, rapes, abductions and intimidation of suspected
political opponents.
Burundi’s ruling party denies systematic
human rights violations.
U.N. investigators wrote in a report last
month that Burundi was at risk of a new wave of atrocities as it approaches a
2020 election with an unresolved political crisis and a president increasingly
portrayed as a “divine” ruler.
A former ethnic Hutu guerrilla leader,
Nkurunziza came to power in 2005 at the end of a civil war in which 300,000
died.
Burundi’s population is divided between the
Tutsi and Hutu ethnic groups, as is neighbouring Rwanda, where 800,000 Tutsis
and moderate Hutus were slaughtered by Hutu extremists in a 1994 genocide.
Burundians who have fled since 2015 include
members of both groups.
Bimenyimana, the Burundian official, said
that 15,000 of his country’s refugees were living “illegally” in Tanzanian
camps, without giving details.
He said “forced” repatriation of that group
was likely: “We don’t know when, it’s up to Tanzania to decide when to drive
them back. We are ready to receive them on our territory.”
(Additional reporting by Fumbuka Ng’wanakilala in Dar es Salaam; Writing by Maggie Fick; Editing by John Stonestreet and Alex Richardson)
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