Does Truth Matter in Burundi Crisis?
By Deo Lukyamuzi
Montreal, Canada
May 19, 2015
Now that
the dust has settled, can we have some truths as to the events in Burundi that
culminated in a failed coup d’état this past week of 11th May. I will leave the legal quandaries of whether
by contesting in another presidential election President Nkurunziza is violating
any constitutional provision to experts who can in a calm and professional way
enrich the debate without choosing sides.
During this
melee, I found a few outbursts rather annoying and for that matter, they
deserve some barbs. A one Bernard
Maingain all the way from Belgium, a lawyer and wanna-be expert on Great lakes
affairs, reported that there were FDLR (Interahamwe) operating in Burundi on
the side of President Nkurunziza and his CNDD-FDD party. In Fact, Mr. Maingain went ahead and sent an
urgent message to the UN headquarters calling on the international body to
intervene and prevent a possible genocide.
Before I was done sighing, out of fatigue due to the abundancy of quack
experts on all things African, the same claim surfaced from Rwanda, and then it
was re-echoed all over the place including coup plotters who even after their
project fizzled, insisted that
Interahamwe must leave Burundian soil.
According
to the UN’s Peace, Security and Cooperation (PSC) Framework Report released
last March, there were an estimated 1,900 strong FDLR still holding out in the
DRC jungles half of whom, actually had weapons. That being the case, why in all our wild
imaginations should we believe that President Nkurunziza would seek the
intervention of a rag tag militia to fight his battles when he has a
well-equipped army, police and even CNDD-FDD Youth wing-the Imbonerakure who
can and actually, did the job? President
Nkurunziza is not known to have an erratic personality to the contrary; he is
quite an analytical mind.
The
disservice that those who are quick to make wild accusations and others who buy
into them hook, line and sinker, is to distort an important pre-occupying
question and replace it with salacious accusations
that only appeal to lazy minds and those with hidden agenda at the expense of a
whole country’s future. There were no
FDLR in Burundi and the dispute in Burundi is a political one rather than an
ethnic one. Of course there are those
who get paid to distort but, in this Burundi case I am not terribly
disappointed their narrative came to naught.
Come in
Bensouda. Fatou Bensouda is the hot
prosecutor at the International Criminal Court (ICC) at The Hague. Before we
even knew who was winning between the coup plotters and coup defenders, Fatou
was no one to be left out of the action.
She came swinging like the legendary head teacher with a big stick in
the Taro Affair. Fatou Bensouda issued a
warning to President Nkurunziza of possible prosection for some form of crimes
–Really! The poor guy was not even in the country and his political life was
hanging by the thread never mind his personal security, but Bensouda felt it
urgent to issue warning before she could even crystallise the prosecutable
nature of the possible allegeable crimes.
That is kind of futuristic.
Does this
point to an international conspiracy against President Nkurunziza as some in
his circle have alleged? Why else would
otherwise competent people and organisations make accusations and dire warnings
before they even gather sufficient evidence credible or fictive before their
outbursts?
Of the four
other heads of state who went to Tanzania in the quest to work out a possible
resolution of the crisis, it is only Presidents Kikwete and Kenyata who can
counsel Nkurunziza with a semblance of any moral higher ground. President Museveni of Uganda actually changed
the constitution to allow himself to stay in power as long as he wants. What used to be two five years presidential
term limits were transformed into termless and as we speak, he is slated to
stand again in 2016 for another five years which will take him painfully close
to 80years old; -talk about Mugabe having company.
As for Dr.
Kagame Paul, regardless of prophesies of Andrew Mwenda, professor of Kagamean
Studies at the independent, who god-knows from where, deduced that Kagame
should reign until 2032, Kagame has no lessons to give to Nkurunziza. It is rather to the contrary. Campaigns are underway at full speed in all
villages in Rwanda, local RPF leaders are cajoling peasants to sign petitions
‘pleading with parliamentarians to amend the constitution to allow Kagame to
stand again’ and, ‘begging the president to not go but stay and steer the nation
with his steady hand’ as, ‘no one else in the country can do such arduous
task’. Actually, even with all this on-going chaos, there is still more freedom
of speech, of assembly and expression in Burundi than there is in Rwanda. So Kaguta and Kagame please, if you keep your
advice to yourselves, it will certainly be more useful.
As for the
international Community represented by UN and US, the Barundi and the rest of us in the region
will be better served if you spoke proper English that majority of us will
comprehend rather that the habitual ‘we urge all parties to act with restraint
and resolve their misunderstanding in a responsible manner’. Prince Clemens Von Metternich once referred
to such statements as loud sounding nothings.