Burundi prez polls held amid violence
Burundians voted today amid gunfire and grenade blasts, with President Pierre Nkurunziza widely expected to win a third term despite international condemnation and thousands of people fleeing feared violence.
At least two people — a policeman and a civilian — were killed in a string of explosions and gunfire overnight, police and witnesses said.
Blasts and shootings were also heard as polls opened shortly after dawn in the capital Bujumbura, the epicentre of three months of anti-government protests.
Willy Nyamitwe, Nkurunziza’s chief communications adviser, condemned the attacks as “terrorist acts” aimed at “intimidating voters”.
Opposition and civil society groups have denounced Nkurunziza’s candidacy as unconstitutional and a violation of a peace deal that ended a dozen years of civil war and ethnic massacres in 2006.
Around 3.8 million Burundians are eligible to vote between 6:00am (0400 GMT) and 4:00pm (1300 GMT). As voting got under way, centres visited by AFP reporters in Bujumbura appeared quiet with few queues.
UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon urged calm, calling on all sides to “refrain from any acts of violence that could compromise the stability of Burundi and the region”.
Critics fear a win by the incumbent will be a hollow victory, leaving him ruling over a deeply divided nation.
With the election denounced by the opposition as a sham, the 51-year-old president — a former rebel, born-again Christian and football fanatic — is facing no serious competition.
Although eight candidates are on the ballot paper, most have already withdrawn from the race and those remaining are not seen as having a chance against the incumbent.
In one polling station, the Saint-Etienne school in the centre of the capital, voters were seen scrubbing off indelible ink from their fingers to avoid reprisals from opposition supporters boycotting the ballot.
“I do not want to return home with ink on the finger,” said one voter.
Nkurunziza himself turned up on a bicycle to vote in his home village of Buye — where turnout was high with long lines of voters.
“Despite a facade of pluralism, this is an election with only one candidate, where Burundians already know the outcome,” said Thierry Vircoulon from the International Crisis Group, a think-tank that has warned the situation has all the ingredients to kickstart renewed civil war.
Analysts say renewed conflict in the country could reignite ethnic Hutu-Tutsi violence and bring another humanitarian disaster on the region. The conflict also risks drawing in neighbouring states — much like in the war-torn east of Democratic Republic of Congo.
The last civil war in Burundi left at least 300,000 dead.
Nkurunziza’s CNDD-FDD party scored a widely-expected landslide win in parliamentary polls on May 29 that were boycotted by the opposition.
UN electoral observers — some of the few international monitors in today’s poll — said the last round of voting took place in a “climate of widespread fear and intimidation”.
The results of parliamentary polls took a week to be announced.
The presidential election is likely to be seen in the same light, diplomats said, meaning Nkurunziza — whose nation is heavily aid-dependent — will probably also face international isolation.