The EAC Secretary General Richard Sezibera has said Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni would now lead regional efforts to strike a deal, and that delaying Burundi Presidential poll would allow him time “to lead the dialogue.”
Leaders of the five-nation East African Community had been due to meet Monday in Dar es Salaam, but Nkurunziza instead sent his foreign minister. Kenya and Rwanda were also represented at the ministerial level, leaving host Jakaya Kikwete of Tanzania and Museveni the only presidents in attendance.
Nkurunziza, who stayed in Burundi to lead his presidential campaign, has previously dismissed all previous calls for poll delays.
The EAC, which said it would deploy election observers for the polls, also called on Burundi to disarm the youth wing of Nkurunziza’s ruling CNDD-FDD party — the Imbonerakure — as well as “other armed groups.”
It also called for unity among Burundi’s rival factions, calling for a government of national unity “irrespective of whoever wins the presidential election.”
Parliamentary and local elections held last week were boycotted by the opposition.
The UN electoral observer mission — the only international monitors at the June 29 elections — said the polls took place “in a climate of widespread fear and intimidation”. The results have yet to be released.
Over 70 people have been killed in more than two months of protests in Burundi, with almost 144,000 refugees fleeing to neighbouring countries.

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