Military vehicles lead the way as South African President Jacob
Zuma arrives as the head of an Africa Union-lead delegation in an
attempt to broker dialogue to end months of violence in Burundi's
capital Bujumbura February 25, 2016.
Image by: REUTERS
The three investigators are due to visit Burundi for a week from
March 1, the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR)
said in a statement.
The three experts -- from Algeria, Colombia
and South Africa -- are members of the UN's Independent Investigation on
Burundi (UNIIB) office, set up in December and tasked with carrying
out, "an investigation into violations and abuses of human rights with a
view to preventing further deterioration of the human rights
situation."
"Our aim is to help the state fulfil its human rights
obligations, ensure accountability for human rights violations and
abuses, including by identifying alleged perpetrators," said Christof
Heyns, the UN's Special Rapporteur on Extrajudicial, Summary of
Arbitrary Executions who is one of the investigators.
"We have a
clear mandate from the Human Rights Council to help prevent Burundi from
falling into the abyss," said Maya Sahli-Fadel, the Algerian team
member.
The investigators are due to present their preliminary findings in late March with a final report due in September.
Following
a visit to Burundi last week by five African leaders, led by South
Africa's President Jacob Zuma, the African Union (AU) said it would
increase the number of human rights and military observers deployed.
"The
AU will deploy 100 human rights observers and 100 military monitors to
Burundi to monitor the situation," a statement on the South African
presidency's website said Saturday.
Burundi's political crisis was
triggered by President Pierre Nkurunziza's controversial decision last
April to run for a third term, which he won in an election in July.
Since then violence has become routine, with more than 400 people killed
and nearly quarter of a million leaving the country.
No comments:
Post a Comment