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AFRICA NEWS
Mali's Tuareg-led rebels to sign peace deal June 20: chief
by Staff Writers
Algiers (AFP) June 5, 2015


Army 'purge' follows failed coup in Burundi
Bujumbura, Burundi (AFP) June 6, 2015 - Once a symbol of ethnic unity in post-civil war Burundi, the army is now deeply divided and faces a growing climate of fear after a failed coup by generals in the central African nation.

Burundi was plunged into crisis when President Pierre Nkurunziza announced a controversial bid for a third term in April, leading to deadly street protests and an attempted coup in mid-May, which laid bare political splits within the military.

Coup leader General Godefroid Niyombare is now on the run, Defence Minister Cyrille Ndayirukiye has been arrested and hundreds of other alleged coup plotters are absconding or in jail.

Officers now fear the army is being purged along ethnic lines.

"I cannot sleep, I cannot eat, I almost fled the country several times," said one senior officer, speaking on condition of anonymity, adding that he has twice evaded arrest.

The officer is a former member of the pre-civil war army, the FAB, which was dominated by ethnic Tutsis and pitted against a host of Hutu rebel groups in the 1993-2006 civil war.

Officers are worried that Tutsi ex-FAB members are now being specifically purged, targeted on the pretext that they were complicit in the attempted putsch.

"No soldier of the former FAB, from private to general, feels safe," said the officer, despite the fact that both Hutus and Tutsis are among the alleged coup plotters on the run or in jail.

Coup leader Niyombare -- who relatives and intelligence sources say has sought refuge elsewhere in the region -- is a Hutu, who fought alongside President Nkurunziza in the CNDD-FDD Hutu rebel group that is now the ruling party.

About 150 members of the 11th Battalion, accused of spearheading May's coup attempt, are in jail but sources say that perhaps 300 others from the same unit have absconded with their weapons.

For two weeks, arrests have been increasing, with most of those detained former FAB soldiers, among them two colonels, a major and a captain, according to the Association for the Protection of Prisoners and Detainees, which said other officers had gone missing.

"We, the former FAB, are the only ones targeted, while those from the CNDD-FDD are not worried," said another officer, referring to the president's party.

- 'Destroying integration' -

The ethnic parity of the army -- made up of equal numbers of Hutu and Tutsi in a country where the population is 85 percent Hutu -- is considered a fundamental achievement of peace and a guarantee of stability.

The wounds inflicted on the army by the political crisis will be slow to heal and the consequences for Burundi could be explosive.

Army spokesman Gaspard Baratuza insisted that "only those who are suspected of involvement in the attempted coup are arrested".

But an outside analyst dismissed the claim with a stark warning over the growing divisions.

"The regime is destroying one of Nkurunziza's greatest achievements since taking office: the integration of former Hutu rebels and Tutsi ex-soldiers," the unnamed analyst said.

Former defence minister Pontien Gaciyubwenge, an ex-FAB Tutsi general, proclaimed his neutrality during the coup and was sacked soon afterwards, and then fled abroad.

His chief of staff Prime Niyongabo, a former Hutu rebel of the CNDD-FDD, had urged him to join the side of the police in opposing the coup and the anti-third term protests.

Nearly 40 people have been killed in demonstrations in the capital Bujumbura since Nkurunziza announced his bid for a third term -- but another officer warned things could get far worse if tensions in the army were not resolved.

"The day they really divide the army, it will not be like these protests we have experienced," the officer said.

"That will be the end of Burundi as a nation."

The head of Mali's main Tuareg-led rebel groups said Friday his movement will sign a final peace deal on June 20 to end the conflict in the west African nation.

The Coordination of Azawad Movements (CMA) headed by Bilal Ag Acherif initialled a peace agreement with the Malian government on May 14 but held out on a final deal until amendments were made.

"We will sign the peace accord on June 20," Acherif said following talks in Algiers on security issues. The ceremony is expected to take place in Bamako.

The CMA also signed two key documents aimed at removing hurdles that have delayed a final agreement and at cementing a ceasefire in the north of the country.

"We pledge to respect what we have signed," Acherif said.

Malian Foreign Minister Abdoulaye Diop said the signing of the documents was "an extra step in the exclusive interest of peace".

His French counterpart, Laurent Fabius, welcomed "the spirit of reconciliation and compromise shown by all the parties" in Mali's conflict and thanked Algeria for its mediation.

The UN envoy for Mali, Mongi Hamdi, welcomed the CMA's announcement that it will sign the final peace deal, but cautioned that the hardest part was still to come.

"The most difficult phase will be to implement" the agreement, he told reporters.

The Malian government and several armed groups signed an "Algiers Accord" on May 15 in Bamako, in a ceremony spurned by the CMA.

That deal aims to bring stability to northern Mali, cradle of several Tuareg uprisings since the 1960s and a stronghold of jihadists linked to Al-Qaeda.

The CMA has been demanding that an amended final deal recognise "Azawad", the name used by the Tuareg for the northern part of Mali, as a "geographic, political and juridical entity".

The Algiers Accord calls for the creation of elected regional assemblies but not autonomy or federalism, in deference to government concerns of separatism.

The international community has pressed CMA to finalise the deal and Acherif had been holding talks with Malian government representatives in Algiers over the past few days to thrash out security and political concerns raised by the CMA.

- 'Security arrangements' -

The documents signed on Friday appear to reconcile these concerns.

One of them calls for the CMA fighters and other combatants to be included in a security force for the north, and for residents of the north to be represented in government institutions.

The other document stipulates the withdrawal of all armed groups from the northern flashpoint town of Menaka, under UN supervision.

In April, pro-government fighters seized Menaka from the rebels, in an operation which has sparked violations of a ceasefire agreement in the area.

The UN has expressed "deep concern" at the violence and urged both sides to halt violations "that jeopardise the peace process".

Mali was shaken by a coup in 2012 that cleared the way for Tuareg separatists to seize towns and cities of the vast northern desert.

Al-Qaeda-linked militants then overpowered the Tuareg, taking control of northern Mali for nearly 10 months until they were ousted in a French-led military offensive.

But Mali remains deeply divided, with the Tuareg and Arab populations of the north accusing sub-Saharan ethnic groups in the more prosperous south of marginalising them.

Northern Mali has seen an upsurge in attacks by pro-government militias and various factions of the Tuareg-led rebellion, leaving many dead on both sides.


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