 “Africa will NOT allow another 
Genocide to take place on its soil.” This was the communication from the
 African Union’s Peace and Security Council. However, even as members of
 the council met, extrajudicial killings were taking place in Burundi.
“Africa will NOT allow another 
Genocide to take place on its soil.” This was the communication from the
 African Union’s Peace and Security Council. However, even as members of
 the council met, extrajudicial killings were taking place in Burundi. 
Photos, media reports and refugees tell harrowing tales of the 
political violence gripping the country. They speak of men being dragged
 out of their homes at night and killed on the street. Of neighbors and 
parents vanishing without a trace. It is a situation that calls for 
immediate and concerted international action. However, so far, according
 to sources, peacekeepers within the country have not been allowed to do
 their jobs.
Burundi descended into political chaos after President Pierre 
Nkurunziza made a bid for his third term in office, despite the fact 
that the Burundian constitution only allows a president to serve for two
 terms. The nation’s high courts allowed his third term on a 
technicality. Not long after, the streets of Burundi’s capital erupted 
in protests and an attempted coup. However this was all shut down under 
the strong arm of Nkurunziza’s government.
Now the goal of his administration 
seems to be crushing dissent. Burundians both inside and outside the 
country are calling the targeted killings genocide. One Burundian 
activist told the International Business Times,
 “The world needs to understand there absolutely is a genocide underway 
in Burundi, against a part of the population who is opposed to the third
 term.”
Burundian government officials and alleged militias are now going 
house to house to try to root out the opposition. Unlike genocides 
suffered in both Burundi and Rwanda before – which pitted Hutus against 
Tutsis – many are saying this is not an ethnic conflict but a political 
one. Although it has the potential to pit ethnicities against each 
other, at the moment both sides of the political spectrum have both 
Hutus and Tutsis in them, which many believe is mitigating the ethnic 
component for now.
Last Friday around 87 people were 
killed in Bujumbura, the nation’s capital, when gunmen stormed a 
military base. While the government has blamed most of the violence on 
opposition militias and praised the “professionalism” of the police and military, accounts from those on the ground as well as journalists inside the country are telling an entirely different story.
Around 220,000 Burundians have fled the nation to
 neighboring Tanzania, Rwanda and Uganda. Many refugees say that they 
were not personally involved with the opposition but feared for their 
life because a close friend or family member was. It is estimated that 
around 400 people have been killed in the conflict so far, but these 
numbers are also likely to be low considering the nature of the 
killings, which often occur at night and in people’s homes.
However, despite this international 
pressure is working. It should be noted that during the first genocide 
very little media attention was given to Burundi, with few knowing that 
Rwanda wasn’t alone in ethnic cleansing. These days, a mass of stories 
have helped raise awareness. And this awareness has translated into 
actions with the US urging the UN’s Human Rights Council to address the problem. Since then, the UN has agreed to send a convoy of investigators to the country.
The world cannot let up on this pressure, and must continue to call 
for peace and an end to political violence in Burundi. We cannot sit by 
again and again as genocidal warning bells go off in Burundi. We ignored
 it the first time, but this time around we have a chance to put 
pressure on our representatives to do more.
 
 
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