The Twa were the original inhabitants of Burundi and were followed (c.A.D.
1000), and then outnumbered, by the Hutus. Probably in the 15th cent.,
the Tutsis migrated into the area, gained dominance over the Hutus, and
established several states. By the 19th cent., the country was ruled by
the mwami (king)—a Tutsi who controlled the other Tutsis of the
region in a vassal relationship. In 1890, Burundi (along with Rwanda)
became part of German East Africa,
but the Germans began to govern the area only in 1897. During World War
I, Belgian forces occupied (1916) Burundi, and in 1919 it became part
of the Belgian League of Nations mandate of Ruanda-Urundi
(which in 1946 became a UN trust territory). Under the German and
Belgian administrations Christianity was spread, but the traditional
social structure of Burundi was not altered, and there was little
economic development.
On July 1, 1962, the country became an independent kingdom ruled by the mwami
of Burundi. The mid-1960s were marked by fighting between the Tutsis
and Hutus and by struggles for power among the Tutsis. In 1965 a coup
attempted by Hutus failed, and the Tutsis retaliated by executing most
Hutu political leaders and many other Hutus. In July, 1966, Mwambutsa IV
was deposed by his son, who became Ntare V. The new ruler was himself
deposed by a military coup in Nov., 1966, when a republic was
established.
Michel Micombero, a Tutsi who had been
appointed prime minister in 1966, became president; a new constitution
was adopted in 1970. Renewed fighting between Tutsis and Hutus in the
early 1970s resulted in the death of many thousands of Hutus. In 1972 a
rebellion attempting to return Ntare V to power was crushed by the
government; Ntare was executed and the Hutus were further repressed. In
1976, Micombero was overthrown by Col. Jean-Baptiste Bagaza (also a
Tutsi), who became president and consolidated the Tutsi stranglehold on
political power. His authoritarian rule led to conflict with the Roman
Catholic Church, and many priests and missionaries suspected of
sympathizing with the Hutu population were expelled in 1985.
Pierre
Buyoya, a Tutsi who became Burundi's head of state after a coup in
1987. Outcry after a Hutu uprising the following year was again brutally
suppressed led to reforms designed to lessen ethnic divisions. Buyoya
appointed a majority of Hutus to the cabinet, including the prime
minister, and encouraged enlistment of Hutus in the military. Many Hutus
had fled Burundi in 1988 and settled in Tanzania, but by mid-1989 most
of them had returned.
A new constitution adopted in
1992 provided for a multiparty political system; in the 1993 elections,
Melchior Ndadaye, a Hutu, defeated Buyoya to win the nation's first free
presidential election. Soon afterward he was overthrown and killed in a
coup attempt by Tutsi soldiers. Burundi was convulsed by ethnic
violence in which thousands of Hutus and Tutsis died, and many fled the
country. The coup collapsed, but civilian authority was restored slowly,
and sporadic violence continued. In Apr., 1994, Cyprien Ntaryamira, a
Hutu who had been chosen as president by parliament, was killed with the
president of Rwanda when their plane crashed, possibly having been shot
down. He was succeeded by Sylvestre Ntibantunganya, an ethnic Hutu,
while a new power-sharing arrangement provided for a Tutsi prime
minister.
Ntibantunganya, however, was unable to
exercise control over the army. Fighting between Hutu militants, who had
taken up arms after the 1993 coup and won control of much of NW
Burundi, and Tutsi soldiers persisted, along with a high rate of
civilian casualties and the continued flight of Hutus from the country.
In July, 1996, the army overthrew the government, and Pierre Buyoya was
once again installed as president. Uganda, Kenya, and Tanzania applied
economic sanctions against the country in the wake of the coup but
lifted them in 1999 as talks between the warring factions progressed. In
Dec., 1999, Nelson Mandela
was appointed by a group of African nations to act as a mediator in the
conflict. An accord was reached in 2000, but some aspects of the
agreement were left incomplete. In addition, two Hutu rebel groups
refused to sign the accord, and young army officers unsuccessfully
attempted to overthrow Buyoya twice in 2001.
In July,
2001, the Arusha accords, a Tutsi-Hutu power-sharing agreement, were
finalized. Under them, Buyoya remained president, with a Hutu vice
president (Domitien Ndayizeye), for 18 months; the new government was
installed in Nov., 2001. Fighting with the Hutu rebel groups remained
unaffected by both the accord and a Dec., 2002, cease-fire agreement
with one of the rebel groups.
Ndayizeye succeeded
Buyoya as transitional president in Apr., 2003, also for an 18-month
term. Alphonse Kadege, a Tutsi, became vice president. At the same time,
African Union observers began arriving in Burundi to monitor the peace.
A peace accord with the Forces for the Defense of Democracy (FDD), the
main rebel group, was finalized in Nov., 2003, and FDD representatives
joined the government the next month. The smaller Forces for National
Liberation (FNL) meanwhile continued attacks on the army. In Jan., 2004,
the FNL participated in talks with the government for the first time,
but no progress was made. In May, 2004, there were tensions between the
FDD and the main Tutsi and Hutu parties in the government, and the FDD
withdrew from the government for several months. The United Nations took
over peacekeeping duties from the African Union the following month.
A
constitution proposed in July was not signed by Tutsi parties, who
wanted a guarantee that the presidency would alternate between Hutus and
Tutsis and objected to the way seats were assigned in the legislature.
Although a disproportionately large number of seats and government posts
were guaranteed to Tutsi candidates, none of those seats were
guaranteed to the candidates of Tutsi parties. The disagreement led to a
cabinet boycott by the parties and stalled movement toward national
elections, which were postponed until 2005. In Feb., 2005, however, the
proposed constitution was overwhelmingly approved by Burundi's voters.
In
Apr., 2005, the transitional period for the government was extended
into Aug., 2005. The FNL agreed to a truce with government forces in
May, but clashes continued to occur, and both sides were accused of
violating the cease-fire. The FDD won a majority of the seats in May's
local council elections, a victory that prefigured its win in the June
national assembly elections. Pierre Nkurunziza, leader of the FDD, was
elected president of Burundi in August.
The following
month the FNL rejected holding peace talks with the new government. UN
peacekeepers began withdrawing in 2006. In May, 2006, the FNL and the
government began talks, agreeing in principle in June to a cease-fire. A
cease-fire was signed in September, and by June, 2007, some progess had
been made in the negotiations. In July, however, the FNL broke off the
talks; FNL dissidents split from the group, leading to FNL attacks on
the dissidents in subsequent months. Clashes between the FNL and the
government resumed as well.
Meanwhile, former
president Ndayizeye and several others were arrested in Aug., 2006, on
charges of plotting to assassinate Nkurunziza and overthrow the
government (Ndayizeye and most of those arrested were acquitted in Jan.,
2007), and in early September the vice president resigned, accusing the
FDD of corruption. The main opposition parties boycotted the parliament
beginning in July, 2007, objecting to the composition of the cabinet; a
new, more inclusive cabinet was formed in November. In May, 2008, the
FNL and the government again signed a cease-fire agreement, and in June
the FNL leader announced an end to the Hutu rebel group's war against
the government.
Source: www.factmonster.com
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