Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Crisis in Burundi is deteriorat­ing

- By Robyn Dixon

JOHANNESBU­RG — Just over a week after a failed coup, the crisis in Burundi deteriorat­ed sharply with escalating violence and the weekend assassinat­ion of an opposition leader.

Thousands of activists carrying placards Sunday mourned Zedi Feruzi, leader of the small Union for Peace and Developmen­t party. He was buried during the day as opponents of President Pierre Nkurunziza’s bid for a third term in office vowed to continue protests.

Observers fear the small central African nation is sliding dangerousl­y toward another civil war, with Mr. Nkurunziza determined to cling to power despite widespread opposition. The country emerged from more than a decade of war in 2006.

Mr. Nkurunziza says his bid for a third term doesn’t violate the constituti­on, as opponents allege. He says he is entitled to one more term in office because he was elected by parliament, not the public, the first time around.

Mr. Feruzi was shot by men wearing uniforms similar to those of the presidenti­al guard who pulled up in a car, opened fire and sped off, Burundi radio journalist Jean-Baptiste Bireha told news agencies. He was with Mr. Feruzi and witnessed the attack.

The killing sent waves of shock through the nation’s opposition, with fears that other opponents of the third-term bid could be targeted in coming weeks.

Mr. Feruzi’s assassinat­ion came after a grenade attack Friday in the central market in the capital, Bujumbura, that killed two people and injured dozens. Dozens more have been killed in recent weeks when police opened fire on protesters demonstrat­ing against the third term.

Mr. Nkurunziza is pressing ahead with the presidenti­al election next month, ignoring internatio­nal pressure, including some from African leaders, calling on him to delay a vote until the country is peaceful and stable. U.S. and African Union leaders say his bid flies in the face of the constituti­on.

Police blamed Friday’s grenade attack on protesters opposed to Mr. Nkurunziza’s plans, but organizers reject the accusation.

 ?? Goran Tomasevic/Reuters ?? Men throw soil over the body of Zedi Feruzi, the head of opposition party UPD, on Sunday during his funeral in Bujumbura, Burundi.
Goran Tomasevic/Reuters Men throw soil over the body of Zedi Feruzi, the head of opposition party UPD, on Sunday during his funeral in Bujumbura, Burundi.

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