Background Note: Burundi
Background Note: Burundi
Burundian traditional dancers practice for ceremony Bujumbura, Burundi, April 29, 2003. [© AP Images]
PROFILE
OFFICIAL NAME:
Republic of Burundi
Geography
Location: Central Africa. Bordering
nations--Tanzania, the Democratic Republic of the Congo,
Rwanda.
Area: 27,830 sq. km. (10,747 sq. mi.); about the
size of Maryland.
Cities: Capital--Bujumbura
(pop. 300,000). Other cities--Cibitoke, Muyinga,
Ngozi, Bubanza, Gitega, Bururi.
Climate: Equatorial;
high plateau with considerable altitude variation (772 m to
2,670 m above sea level); average annual temperature varies
with altitude from 23 to 17 degrees centigrade (73 to 63
degrees Fahrenheit) but is generally moderate as the average
altitude is about 1,700 m (5,600 ft.); average annual
rainfall is about 150 cm (59 in.); two wet seasons (February
to May and September to November), and two dry seasons (June
to August and December to January).
Terrain: Hilly,
rising from 780 meters (2,600 ft.) at the Shore of Lake
Tanganyika to mountains more than 2,700 meters (9,000 ft.)
above sea level.
People
Nationality: Noun
and adjective--Burundian(s).
Population (2008):
8,691,005.
Annual growth rate (2008): 3.443%.
Ethnic
groups: Hutu (Bantu) 85%; Tutsi (Hamitic) 14%; Twa (Pygmy)
1.0%.
Religions: Christian 67% (Roman Catholic 62%,
Protestant 5%), indigenous beliefs 23%, Muslim 10%.
Languages: Kirundi (official), French (official),
Swahili (along Lake Tanganyika and in the Bujumbura area),
English.
Education: Years compulsory--6.
Attendance--84.05% male, 62.8% female.
Literacy: 59.3% of total population over the age of
15 can read and write.
Health (2007): Life
expectancy--total population 51.71 years; male 50.86
years; female 52.6 years. Infant mortality
rate--60.77/1,000.
Government
Type:
Republic. Democratically elected, post-transition government
established August 26, 2005.
Independence: July 1, 1962
(from Belgium).
Constitution: A transitional
constitution was adopted October 18, 2001. The parliament
adopted a post-transition constitution on September 17,
2004, which was approved in a nationwide referendum held
February 28, 2005.
Branches:
Executive--President, First Vice President in charge
of political and administrative affairs, Second Vice
President in charge of social and economic affairs,
26-member Council of Ministers. Legislative--A
100-member directly elected National Assembly plus
additional deputies appointed as necessary (currently 18
appointed) to ensure an ethnic and gender composition of 60%
Hutu, 40% Tutsi, 30% female, and 3 Batwa members. A
54-member Senate (3 seats reserved for former presidents; 3
seats reserved for the ethnic Twa minority; 2 Senators, one
Hutu and one Tutsi, from each of the 16 provinces plus the
city of Bujumbura appointed by an electoral college
comprised of members of locally elected communal and
provincial councils; 14 Senators appointed by the president
according to the president's own criteria. Women must
comprise 30% of the Senate.) Judicial--constitutional
and subsidiary courts.
Administrative subdivisions: 17
provinces including Bujumbura, 117 communes.
Political
parties: Multi-party system consisting of 21 registered
political parties, of which CNDD (the National Council for
the Defense of Democracy, Hutu), FRODEBU (the Front for
Democracy in Burundi, predominantly Hutu with some Tutsi
membership), and UPRONA (the National Unity and Progress
Party, predominantly Tutsi with some Hutu membership) are
national, mainstream parties. Other Tutsi and Hutu
opposition parties and groups include, among others, PARENA
(the Party for National Redress, Tutsi), ABASA (the Burundi
African Alliance for the Salvation, Tutsi), PRP (the
People's Reconciliation Party, Tutsi), PALIPEHUTU (the Party
for the Liberation of the Hutu People, Hutu) and FROLINA/FAP
(the Front for the National Liberation of Burundi/Popular
Armed Forces, Hutu).
Suffrage: Universal adult.
Economy
GDP (2007): $1.001 billion.
Real
growth rate (2007): 3.6%.
Per capita GDP (2007): $128.
Population below poverty line (2000): 68%.
Inflation
rate (2007): 8.4%.
Central government budget (2006
est.): Revenues--$239.9 million;
expenditures--$297 million, including capital
expenditures.
Natural resources: Nickel, uranium, rare
earth oxides, peat, cobalt, copper, platinum, vanadium,
arable land, hydropower, niobium, tantalum, gold, tin,
tungsten, kaolin, limestone.
Agriculture (2006 est.,
44.9% of GDP): Coffee, cotton, tea, corn, sorghum, sweet
potatoes, bananas, manioc (tapioca), beef, milk, hides.
Arable land--35.57% (2005 est.).
Industry (2006
est., 20.9% of GDP): Types--beverage production,
coffee and tea processing, cigarette production, sugar
refining, pharmaceuticals, light food processing, textiles,
chemicals (insecticides), public works construction,
consumer goods, assembly of imported components, light
consumer goods such as blankets, shoes, soap.
Services
(2006 est.): 34.1% of GDP.
Mining: Commercial quantities
of alluvial gold, nickel, phosphates, rare earth, vanadium
and other; peat mining.
Trade (2006 est.):
Exports--$55.68 million f.o.b.: coffee (50% of export
earnings), tea, sugar, cotton fabrics, hides. Major
markets--U.K., Germany, Benelux, Switzerland.
Imports--$207.3 million f.o.b.: food, beverages,
tobacco, chemicals, road vehicles, petroleum products.
Major suppliers--Benelux, France, Germany, Saudi
Arabia, Japan.
Total external debt (2003 est.): $1.2
billion.
PEOPLE
At 206.1 persons per sq. km.,
Burundi has the second-largest population density in
Sub-Saharan Africa. Most people live on farms near areas of
fertile volcanic soil. The population is made up of three
major ethnic groups--Hutu, Tutsi, and Twa. Kirundi is the
most widely spoken language; French and Kiswahili also are
widely spoken. Intermarriage takes place frequently between
the Hutus and Tutsis. Although Hutus encompass the majority
of the population, historically Tutsis have been politically
and economically dominant.
HISTORY
In the 16th
century, Burundi was a kingdom characterized by a
hierarchical political authority and tributary economic
exchange. A king (mwani) headed a princely
aristocracy (ganwa) that owned most of the land and
required a tribute, or tax, from local farmers and herders.
In the mid-18th century, this Tutsi royalty consolidated
authority over land, production, and distribution with the
development of the ubugabire--a patron-client
relationship in which the populace received royal protection
in exchange for tribute and land tenure.
Although European explorers and missionaries made brief visits to the area as early as 1856, it was not until 1899 that Burundi came under German East African administration. In 1916 Belgian troops occupied the area. In 1923, the League of Nations mandated to Belgium the territory of Ruanda-Urundi, encompassing modern-day Rwanda and Burundi The Belgians administered the territory through indirect rule, building on the Tutsi-dominated aristocratic hierarchy. Following World War II, Ruanda-Urundi became a United Nations Trust Territory under Belgian administrative authority. After 1948, Belgium permitted the emergence of competing political parties. Two political parties emerged: the Union for National Progress (UPRONA), a multi-ethnic party led by Tutsi Prince Louis Rwagasore and the Christian Democratic Party (PDC) supported by Belgium. In 1961, Prince Rwagasore was assassinated following an UPRONA victory in legislative elections.
Full independence was achieved on July 1, 1962. In the context of weak democratic institutions at independence, Tutsi King Mwambutsa IV established a constitutional monarchy comprising equal numbers of Hutus and Tutsis. The 1965 assassination of the Hutu prime minister set in motion a series of destabilizing Hutu revolts and subsequent governmental repression. In 1966, King Mwambutsa was deposed by his son, Prince Ntare IV, who himself was deposed the same year by a military coup led by Capt. Michel Micombero. Micombero abolished the monarchy and declared a republic, although a de facto military regime emerged. In 1972, an aborted Hutu rebellion triggered the flight of hundreds of thousands of Burundians. Civil unrest continued throughout the late 1960s and early 1970s.
In 1976, Col. Jean-Baptiste Bagaza took power in a bloodless coup. Although Bagaza led a Tutsi-dominated military regime, he encouraged land reform, electoral reform, and national reconciliation. In 1981, a new constitution was promulgated. In 1984, Bagaza was elected head of state, as the sole candidate. After his election, Bagaza's human rights record deteriorated as he suppressed religious activities and detained political opposition members.
In 1987, Maj. Pierre Buyoya overthrew Colonel Bagaza. He dissolved opposition parties, suspended the 1981 constitution, and instituted his ruling Military Committee for National Salvation (CSMN). During 1988, increasing tensions between the ruling Tutsis and the majority Hutus resulted in violent confrontations between the army, the Hutu opposition, and Tutsi hardliners. During this period, an estimated 150,000 people were killed, with tens of thousands of refugees flowing to neighboring countries. Buyoya formed a commission to investigate the causes of the 1988 unrest and to develop a charter for democratic reform.
In 1991, Buyoya approved a constitution that provided for a president, multi-ethnic government, and a parliament. Burundi's first Hutu president, Melchior Ndadaye, of the Hutu-dominated FRODEBU Party, was elected in 1993. He was assassinated by factions of the Tutsi-dominated armed forces in October 1993. The country was then plunged into civil war, in which tens of thousands of people were killed and hundreds of thousands were displaced by the time the FRODEBU government regained control and elected Cyprien Ntaryamira president in January 1994. Nonetheless, the security situation continued to deteriorate. In April 1994, President Ntayamira and Rwandan President Juvenal Habyarimana died in a plane crash. This act marked the beginning of the Rwandan genocide, while in Burundi, the death of Ntaryamira exacerbated the violence and unrest. Sylvestre Ntibantunganya was installed as president for a 4-year term on April 8, but the security situation further deteriorated. The influx of hundreds of thousands of Rwandan refugees and the activities of armed Hutu and Tutsi groups further destabilized the regime.
Burundi's civil war officially ended in 2006 under a South Africa-brokered cease-fire agreement with the last of Burundi's rebel groups. Today the government is focused on rebuilding its infrastructure and reestablishing external relations with its regional neighbors.
GOVERNMENT AND
POLITICAL CONDITIONS
In November 1995, the
presidents of Burundi, Rwanda, Uganda, and Zaire (now
Democratic Republic of the Congo) announced a regional
initiative for a negotiated peace in Burundi facilitated by
former Tanzanian President Julius Nyerere. In July 1996,
former Burundian President Buyoya returned to power in a
bloodless coup. He declared himself president of a
transitional republic, even as he suspended the National
Assembly, banned opposition groups, and imposed a nationwide
curfew. Widespread condemnation of the coup ensued, and
regional countries imposed economic sanctions pending a
return to a constitutional government. Buyoya agreed in 1996
to liberalize political parties. Nonetheless, fighting
between the army and Hutu militias continued. In June 1998,
Buyoya promulgated a transitional constitution and announced
a partnership between the government and the opposition-led
National Assembly. After Facilitator Julius Nyerere's death
in October 1999, the regional leaders appointed Nelson
Mandela as Facilitator of the Arusha peace process. Under
Mandela the faltering peace process was revived, leading to
the signing of the Arusha Accords in August 2000 by
representatives of the principal Hutu (G-7) and Tutsi (G-10)
political parties, the government, and the National
Assembly. However, the FDD and FNL armed factions of the
CNDD and Palipehutu G-7 parties refused to accept the Arusha
Accords, and the armed rebellion continued.
In November 2001, a 3-year transitional government was established under the leadership of Pierre Buyoya (representing the G-10) as transitional president and Domitien Ndayizeye (representing the G-7) as transitional vice president for an initial period of 18 months. In May 2003, Mr. Ndayizeye assumed the presidency for 18 months with Alphonse Marie Kadege as vice president. In October and November 2003 the Burundian Government and the former rebel group the CNDD-FDD signed cease-fire and power-sharing agreements, and in March 2004 members of the CNDD-FDD took offices in the government and parliament. The World Bank and other bilateral donors have provided financing for Burundi's disarmament, demobilization, and reintegration program for former rebel combatants.
National and regional mediation efforts failed to reach a compromise on post-transition power-sharing arrangements between the predominantly Hutu and Tutsi political parties, and in September 2004 over two-thirds of the parliament--despite a boycott by the Tutsi parties--approved a post-transition constitution. The Arusha Peace Agreement called for local and national elections to be held before the conclusion of the transitional period on October 31, 2004. On October 20, 2004, however, a joint session of the National Assembly and Senate adopted a previously approved draft constitution as an interim constitution that provided for an extension of transitional institutions until elections were held. On February 28, 2005, Burundians overwhelmingly approved a post-transitional constitution in a popular referendum, setting the stage for local and national elections. In April 2005, Burundi's transitional government was again extended and an electoral calendar was established at a regional summit held in Uganda.
In accordance with the new electoral calendar, the Burundian people voted in Commune Council direct elections on June 3, 2005 and National Assembly direct elections on July 4, 2005. An electoral college of commune and provincial councils indirectly elected Senate members on July 29, 2005. Legislative elections are scheduled to take place in 2010. A joint session of the parliament elected Pierre Nkurunziza as President of Burundi on August 19, 2005 in a vote of 151 to 9 with one abstention, establishing the post-transition Hutu majority government. Finally, the Burundian people established Colline (hill) councils through direct elections on September 23, 2005. Nkurunziza maintains the presidency and is eligible for reelection for a second term in 2010.
In September 2006, the last remaining rebel group in Burundi, the Palipehutu-FNL, signed a peace agreement. Implementation obstacles and spurts of violence from the group slowed the process. In May 2008, the leaders of the Palipehutu-FNL returned to Burundi to address the impasse and negotiate with the Government of Burundi. The two entities agreed upon a durable solution December 4, 2008. They are currently working toward implementing that agreement.
Principal Government Officials
President--Pierre Nkurunziza
First Vice
President--Yves Sahinguvu
Second Vice President--Gabriel
Ntisezerana
Speaker of the National Assembly--Pie
Ntavyohanyuma
President of the Senate--Gervais Rufyikiri
Minister of Defense--Germain Niyoyankana
Minister of
External Relations and Cooperation--Antoinette Batumubwira
Minister of Interior and Communal Development--Venant
Kamana
Minister of Public Security--Alain Bunyoni
Ambassador to the United States--Celestin Niyongabo
Permanent Representative to the United Nations--Augustin
Nsanze
Burundi maintains an embassy in the United States at Suite 212, 2233 Wisconsin Ave. NW, Washington, DC 20007 (tel. 202-342-2574).
ECONOMY
Burundi's economy
is based predominantly on agriculture, accounting for 44.9%
of GDP in 2006. Agriculture supports more than 90% of the
labor force, the majority of whom are subsistence farmers.
Although Burundi is potentially self-sufficient in food
production, the civil war, overpopulation, and soil erosion
have contributed to the contraction of the subsistence
economy by 30% in recent years. Large numbers of internally
displaced persons have been unable to produce their own food
and are dependent on international humanitarian assistance.
Burundi is a net food importer, with food accounting for 13%
of imports in 2003.
The main cash crop is coffee, which accounted for some 80% of exports in 2004. This dependence on coffee has increased Burundi's vulnerability to fluctuations in seasonal yields and international coffee prices. Coffee processing is the largest state-owned enterprise in terms of income. Although the government has tried to attract private investment to this sector, plans for the privatization of this sector have stalled. Efforts to privatize other publicly held enterprises have likewise stalled. Other principal exports include tea, sugar, and raw cotton. Coffee production, after a severe drop in 2003, returned to normal levels in 2004. Revenues from coffee production and exports are likewise estimated to return to pre-2003 levels.
Little industry exists except the processing of agricultural exports. Although potential wealth in petroleum, nickel, copper, and other natural resources is being explored, the uncertain security situation has prevented meaningful investor interest. Industrial development also is hampered by Burundi's distance from the sea and high transport costs. Lake Tanganyika remains an important trading point.
Burundi is heavily dependent on bilateral and multilateral aid, with external debt totaling $1.4 billion in 2004. International Monetary Fund (IMF) structural adjustment programs in Burundi were suspended following the outbreak of violence in 1993; the IMF re-engaged Burundi in 2002 and 2003 with post-conflict credits, and in 2004 approved a $104 million Poverty Reduction and Growth Facility loan. The World Bank is preparing a Transition Support Strategy, and has identified key areas for potential growth, including the productivity of traditional crops and the introduction of new exports, light manufactures, industrial mining, and services. Both the IMF and the World Bank assisted the Burundians in preparing a Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper, released in February 2007. More than 81% of Burundians live below the poverty line. Serious economic problems include the state's role in the economy, the question of governmental transparency, and debt reduction.
Based on Burundi's successful transition from war to peace and the establishment of a democratically-elected government in Burundi in September 2005, the United States Government lifted all sanctions on assistance to Burundi on October 18, 2005. Burundi also became eligible for trade benefits under the African Growth and Opportunity Act in December 2005.
FOREIGN RELATIONS
Burundi's relations with its
neighbors have often been affected by security concerns. The
Great Lakes is home to a number of illegal armed groups,
including the Burundian Palipehutu-FNL. Thousands of
Burundian refugees have at various times crossed into
Rwanda, Tanzania, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
Thousands of Burundians fled to neighboring countries during
the civil war, more than 48,000 of whom sought refuge in
Tanzania. Burundi maintains close relations with all
neighbors in the Great Lakes region, including Rwanda,
Uganda, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo. In
reaffirming Burundi's commitment to regional peacekeeping
and allegiance to the African Union, the government recently
deployed troops to quell the ongoing crisis in Somalia.
Burundi is a member of various international and regional organizations, including the United Nations, the World Trade Organization, the African Union, the African Development Bank, COMESA, the free-tariff zone of eastern and southern Africa, and the East Africa Community (EAC).
U.S.-BURUNDI RELATIONS
U.S. Government goals
in Burundi are to help the people of Burundi realize a just
and lasting peace based upon democratic principles and
sustainable economic development. The United States
encourages political stability, ongoing democratic reforms,
political openness, respect for human rights, and economic
development. In the long term, the United States seeks to
strengthen the process of internal reconciliation and
democratization within all the states of the region to
promote a stable, democratic community of nations that will
work toward mutual social, economic, and security interests
on the continent.
The United States supported the Arusha peace process, providing financial support through our assessed contributions to a UN peacekeeping force established in 2004. Burundi is also a member of the Tripartite Plus Commission, which convenes member countries of the Great Lakes region in an effort to end the threat of armed groups and foster stability.
Principal U.S.
Officials
Ambassador--Patricia Newton Moller
Deputy Chief
of Mission--JoAnne Wagner
Political Officers--Lewis
Carroll, Matthew Garrett
Economic Officer--Mark Carr
Management Officer--Anthony Kleiber
Consular
Officer--Caren Brown
Regional Security
Officer--Christopher Bakken
General Service
Officer--Chelsea Bakken
The U.S. Embassy is located at Avenue des Etats-Unis (Boite Postale 1720), Bujumbura (tel. [257] 222234-54).
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