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Burundi's President Pierre Nkurunziza has ruled since 2005 (AFP Photo/STR) |
Burundian President Pierre Nkurunziza on Saturday
reaffirmed he will not contest next year's election, despite scepticism from
the opposition, and the ruling party yet to name another candidate less than
six months from polling day.
The long-serving president sought and won a controversial
third term in office in 2015, defying constitutional limits, and plunging the
country into a deadly political crisis and economic recession.
But the 56-year-old leader -- whose tenure has been
marked by allegations of grave rights abuses and a crackdown on political
freedoms -- announced in June 2018 he would not run in elections set for May
2020.
Just a month earlier, constitutional changes in Burundi
had extended presidential terms, and many believed Nkurunziza had backed the
amendments allowing him to stay in office until 2034.
But in an end-of-year address Saturday to the army and
police, Nkurunziza -- who has ruled since 2005 -- again signalled he would
stand down when his term expires next year.
"This ceremony is my last. Next year, at this time,
it will not me who will speak. The ceremony will be for a new head of
state," the president said in Gitega, where the government this year moved
its political capital from Bujumbura.
However the CNDD-FDD, Burundi's ruling party, is yet to
nominate another candidate in his stead. Nkurunziza has described himself as a
"guide" to the party.
The opposition fears Nkurunziza might be the only name
put forward by the party, risking a repeat of the civil unrest in 2015 that
left 1,200 people dead and drove 400,000 from their homes.
Pancrace Cimpaye, a leader from the opposition MSD party,
said Nkurunziza should name his successor to soothe fears his party will again
turn to Nkurunziza.
"On that day, Pierre Nkurunziza will say he has
responded to the will of the people and the party," said Cimpaye, adding
the party had just two months to nominate someone else.
The violent aftermath of the last presidential election
made Burundi a focus of an investigation by the International Criminal Court
for alleged murders, rapes, tortures and disappearances.
SOURCE: AFP
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