A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Friday, May 15, 2015
Burundi army says 12 dead in radio station battle as coup plotters arrested
Presidential aides say Pierre Nkurunziza has returned to country and is due to make address from the capital Bujumbura
Men in police uniforms walk along a street in Bujumbura, Burundi, on Friday Photograph: Goran Tomasevic/Reuters
Abigail Higgins in Bujumbura and agencies-Friday 15 May 2015
Burundian forces have arrested two senior army officers and a police
general accused of taking part in an attempted coup as the president,
Pierre Nkurunziza, returned to the capital from Tanzania.
Reuters reported that Major General Godefroid Niyombare – the former
intelligence chief who launched the coup – had been captured, but other
reports said he was still at large. “He has been arrested. He didn’t
surrender,” presidential spokesman Gervais Abayeho told the news agency.
Asked what would happen to the plotters who announced the coup when
Nkurunziza was abroad, Abayeho said it was up to the justice system:
“They will be held answerable.”
State radio said Nkurunziza’s motorcade was cheered by large crowds as
it headed for the capital yet protesters pledged to go back to the
streets, setting the stage for more clashes.
Niyombare announced earlier in the week that Nkurunziza had been ousted after
weeks of civil unrest triggered by the president’s attempt to stand for
a third term. The efforts to overthrow Nkurunziza were apparently
popular with the public but met with heavy armed opposition from
military loyal to the president.
Twelve soldiers who backed the attempted coup against Nkurunziza were
killed amid fierce fighting on Thursday when they tried to seize the
state radio station, a top army officer said on Friday.
Giving the first death toll for the fight to control the state
broadcaster, army chief of staff Gen Prime Niyongabo told state radio
that 35 other “mutineers” were wounded and 40 more surrendered. He said
four loyal troops were wounded.
Late on Thursday a deputy leader of the coup, General Cyrille Ndayirukiye, told AFP:
“Personally I recognise that our movement has failed … We were faced
with an overpowering military determination to support the system in
power.”
Earlier on Friday, Niyombare told AFP by phone: “We have decided to surrender … I hope they won’t kill us.”
The recent violence has left the country facing its biggest crisis since
the end of a 12-year ethnically charged civil war in 2006. Hundreds of
thousands of people died in the conflict and the subsequent peace accord
ensured that the future army would be split 50-50 between minority
Tutsis and majority Hutus.
Nkurunziza, a former rebel leader from the Hutu majority and a
born-again Christian, believes he ascended to the presidency in 2005
with divine backing. Opposition and rights groups say it is
unconstitutional for him to run for more than two terms.
The president, however, argues his first term did not count as he was
elected by parliament, not directly by the people. This was supported by
the constitutional court, although one of the judges fled the country,
claiming its members received death threats.
Gordien Niyungeko, deputy head of Focode – one of the 300 civil society
groups that backed protests against Nkurunziza’s bid for a third term –
said his group would continue to demonstrate. “Our movement had nothing
to do with the attempted coup,” Niyungeko told Reuters.
More than 50,000 Burundians have fled the violence to Rwanda and other
neighbouring countries in recent weeks, with the UN preparing for
thousands more refugees.
