Tag: GreatLakesNews

  • Uganda:Policemen brutalise Besigye supporters

    {Alternative to tear gas? The law enforcers used truncheons and other weapons to clobber Dr Besigye’s followers.}

    Police officers, for the second day in a row, brutally beat up supporters of Opposition leader, Dr Kizza Besigye, who gathered to welcome him on his way to Forum for Democratic Change (FDC) party headquarters in Kampala.

    The officers commanded by Kampala Metropolitan Police South Regional commander Andrew Kaggwa, used truncheons to clobber Dr Besigye’s followers, who were dancing and singing at the sight of the former presidential candidate, who has been in prison for the last two months.

    Mr Kagwa personally had his club and participated in the operation.
    Dr Besigye was on Tuesday released on bail by the High Court pending trial of his treason case.

    The worst incident was at a junction from Busabala Road to Najjanakumbi off Entebbe Road. Here, police surrounded Dr Besigye’s supporters and the beating ensued.
    Among those encircled were boda boda cyclists, who fell in a pack, hastily abandoned their motorcycles and ran for dear life as the policemen unleashed their crude weapons. The boda boda cyclists screamed as the beatings rained from all directions.

    Police officers led by Geoffrey Kaheebwa, the deputy RPC Kampala South, also beat up and dispersed people who had gathered on the island that divides Entebbe Road to wave at Dr Besigye as he made his way to the party headquarters.
    Similar incidents of police and plain-clothed operatives beating unarmed supporters of Dr Besigye played out on Tuesday on his way home shortly after being released from prison.

    The weapons
    In the Tuesday incident, police officers and other operatives travelling on police patrol cars used long sticks and electricity cables to beat Dr Besigye’s supporters, who lined up right from Ternan Avenue near State House Nakasero, along Gayaza Road up to Kasangati in Wakiso District.
    On April 12, masked goons sprayed pepper and beat up boda boda cyclists and onlookers on Kampala Road. Dr Besigye was in Crane Bank at the time and the people had gathered to see him.

    On May 11, a day to President Museveni’s swearing-in, police and the military beat up people, including journalists using fists and batons in downtown Kampala shortly after arresting Dr Besigye.

    Addressing a media briefing at FDC party headquarters shortly after, Dr Besigye said being brutalised was one of the prices Ugandans have to pay to get their “freedoms” and “rights” back.

    “You cannot just go and talk out of a dictatorship; you have to struggle against the dictatorship until a point when it is so weak,” he said. He said the majority of servicemen within the Uganda People’s Defence Forces (UPDF) and police do not support what is going on in the country, stating that this is propagated by a cartel of “criminal” individuals, “who unfortunately issue policy.”

    On Tuesday, Dr Besigye accused Inspector Genral of Police Kale Kayihura of heading the kifeesi, a notorious criminal group within the Force.

    “The institution of the police must be a different institution. Of course, those criminal elements in the police unfortunately are the ones who make policy for the police today and execute it but the greatest majority of our policemen are very unhappy with what is going on,” Dr Besigye said yesterday.

    In November 2015, President Museveni said he would summon the police command over the increasing police brutality.

    “Why should a police officer beat up a civilian? Even barking at a civilian is not good. If a civilian becomes violent, handcuff him. Beating civilians is unacceptable to NRM. That behaviour belongs to a different era,” President Museveni was quoted by the government owned newspaper, New Vision, as saying.

    In an interview with Daily Monitor, Dr Livingstone Sewanyana, the executive director of the Foundation for Human Rights Initiative (FHRI), said police’s actions were characteristic of a country at crossroads where hardly anyone cares about the dignity of the citizens.
    “They are symptomatic of a growing culture of impunity. What we are witnessing is an emerging police state where police has become an instrument of oppression and repression. The primary role of the police has become one – to preserve the regime,” Mr Sewanyana said.

    Meanwhile, Uganda Law Society (ULS) is also investigating the incidents. ULS president Francis Gimara said the society is “documenting some incidents and we will issue a statement tomorrow (today)”.

  • EALA mourns slain Hafsa Mossi

    {The Arusha based East African Legislative Assembly (EALA) through its spokesperson, Mr Bobi Odiko, has expressed shock regarding the news of the untimely death of one of the House Representatives, Ms Hafsa Mossi, a Burundian Legislator who was shot in Bujumbura on Wednesday.}

    “We are preparing an official statement regarding the shocking and untimely death of Ms Mossi,” EALA affirmed. Ms Mossi, who once served as the Minister for East African Affairs representing Burundi and government spokeswoman is a journalist by profession having worked for, among other media outlets, the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC).

    She was killed just as the second rounds of talks on Burundi Peace are taking place at the Arusha International Conference Centre (AICC). Ms Mossi was shot dead in the capital Bujumbura yesterday, according to the country’s police reports.

    “Ms Mossi was assassinated at 10.30 in Gihosha,” in the east of Bujumbura by, “two criminals in a vehicle,” police spokesman Pierre Nkurikiye was quoted as saying. Ms Mossi was Burundi’s information minister and government spokeswoman between 2005 and 2007 and was, at the time of her death, a member of the EALA, a regional parliament pivoted from Arusha.

    Ms Mossi, a former journalist in her 50s, was a member of President Pierre Nkurunziza’s ruling CNDD-FDD party. Riding in her Mercedes Benz car, a vehicle hit her from behind and when she got out in order to find out what was wrong, the culprits showered her with bullets.

    President Nkurunziza’s controversial but ultimately successful bid for a third term last year triggered a deadly crisis that has killed more than 500 people and prompted around 270,000 to leave the country.

    Several senior military officers close to the Burundian president have so far been assassinated since the start of the crisis in April 2015, but Ms Mossi, who was not regarded as a party hardliner, is reportedly the first senior politician to be killed in the troubled country.

    The late Hafsa Mossi
  • Tanzania:473 newspapers, magazines taken off state register

    {The government has annulled the registration of a total of 473 newspapers and magazines for being inactive for three consecutive years.}

    Some of the deregistered newspapers and magazines include Alasiri, Dar Leo, Utamu, Raha, Starehe, Daily Times, Financial Times, Wakati, Mkombozi, Jamii Express, Habari za Tanzania, Pata Ukweli.

    Others are Mamboleo, Weekly Deals, Mwamko, Tanga Yetu, Mwana Africa, Kilimanjaro Yetu, Kigoma Yetu, Mtazamo, Arusha Raha, Pwani Wiki hii, Habari Njema, Sani Sport, Admedia Magazine and Advertising Africa.

    The Minister of Information, Culture, Arts and Sports, Mr Nape Nnauye, said the newspapers had been deregistered through public notice published in a government gazette dated June 10, 2016, number 195 (Supplement No. 23).

    According to him, due to the de-registration, nobody will be allowed to publish or distribute such newspapers and magazines through a hard copy or electronically since it was against the law.

    He noted that the ministry reviewed the certificate of oath of the registration of all magazines and newspapers before deciding deregister the 473 newspapers and magazines. Prior to the decision, the government announced its intention to deregister 550 newspapers and magazines after offering an opportunity for owners to come up and defend themselves.

    “After the announcement, a total 77 newspapers and magazines showed their commitment to continue publishing and the remaining did not show their commitment. So the ministry decided to deregister 473 newspapers and magazines after losing credibility among their readers and losing recognition at the Registrar of Newspapers,” he explained.

    Mr Nnauye explained further that if there was any owner of newspapers who would like to continue with business after the de-registration, the door was open for submitting fresh applications for registration as per existing procedures.

    The minister said that according to the figures from the Registrar of Newspapers, which is within the Tanzania Information Services, MAELEZO, Tanzania has a total of 881 legally registered newspapers and magazines.

    He said further that despite the deregistration of the newspapers and magazines, yet there are other owners of newspapers and magazines who had failed to publish after getting registration and others are erratically published.

    Mr Nnauye pointed out that the registration of all newspapers and magazines in the country were done in accordance with Newspaper Act of 1976.

    He called upon all owners of the deregistered newspapers and magazines to ensure that they were not breaching the laws by starting their business without following the laid down procedures. The government has also congratulated all owners of newspapers who had been observing rules and regulations in conducting their activities.

  • Kenya:Five police officers feared dead in Kapenguria attack

    {A gunman is reported to have invaded Kapenguria Police Station to rescue a “colleague”.}

    Five police officers are feared dead after a gunman attacked Kapenguria Police Station, West Pokot County, on Thursday morning.
    The gunman is reported to have invaded station to rescue “colleague” arrested at Nakujit on suspicion of being a terrorist, according to police sources on the ground.

    Police have taken cover as shooting continues.

    The police station boss (OCS) Vitalis Ochido is said to have been injured in the attack.

    National Police Service spokesman George Kinoti confirmed the incident but without giving the details.

    A Google map shows Kapenguria Town in West Pokot County. Five police officers are feared dead after a gunman attacked Kapenguria Police Station, West Pokot County, on Thursday morning.
  • Five Political Parties Boycott Burundi Peace Talks

    {Representatives of five parties that participated in Burundi’s general election boycotted a second round of peace talks in the northern Tanzanian city of Arusha on Tuesday.}

    Burundi has been mired in crisis that has killed more than 450 people since President Pierre Nkurunziza pursued and won a third term last year. Opponents said his move violated the constitution and a peace deal that ended a civil war in 2005.

    Dialogue in Bujumbura last year between the government and opponents failed to bridge differences, and talks mediated by Uganda earlier this year also swiftly stalled.

    The five parties were unhappy over the decision of the mediator, former Tanzanian President Benjamin Mkapa, to invite Burundians accused of human rights violations and involvement in an attempted coup against Nkurunzinza in May 2015.

    The five parties, FNL, FROLINA, PIEBU ABANYESHAKA, RADEBU and FRODEBU are concerned by the inclusion of Pacifique Nininahazwe of FOCODE party, Armel Ningoyere from ACT party in Burundi and Minani Jean in the dialogue.

    “We are very surprised by their inclusion in the dialogue after all the humanitarian crisis they caused in Burundi,” Jean Didier Mutabazi, RADEBU’s president, told reporters at the venue of the talks. “We don’t see the point of continuing with the dialogue.”

    The government in Bujumbura also expressed its unhappiness over the inclusion of some participants with Willy Nyamitwe, Nkurunziza’s communications adviser, complaining on Twitter.

    “Jean Minani, Nininahazwe Pacifique, Armel Niyongere are being prosecuted and can’t be invited in Burundi dialogue in Arusha,” Nyamitwe wrote.

    Earlier in the day, three former presidents of Burundi were seen walking out of a closed session chaired by Mkapa. Domitien Ndayizeye, Sylvester Ntibatunganya and Pierre Buyoya demanded the arrest of Ninihazwe, and the other two wanted in Burundi, a source in the Burundian delegation said.

    Arusha was also the location for negotiations that led to the deal to end the ethnically charged 1993 to 2005 civil war in Burundi.

    Renewed violence in Burundi has alarmed a region where memories of the Rwanda’s 1994 genocide remain raw. Like Rwanda, Burundi has an ethnic Hutu majority and a Tutsi minority.

    Till now, the violence in Burundi has largely followed political rather than ethnic loyalties. But diplomats fear ethnic wounds could reopen the longer violence continues.

    A woman holds up a picture of Burundi's President Pierre Nkurunziza during a rally in Bujumbura on May 14, 2016, commemorating the one-year anniversary of the failed attempt of a government coup.
  • Uganda:No turning back, Besigye declares

    {Hours into his temporary freedom Opposition leader, Dr Kizza Besigye remained defiant urging his supporters not to give up the fight for a better Uganda.}

    Hours into his temporary freedom Opposition leader, Dr Kizza Besigye remained defiant and urged his supporters, who turned up at his Kasangati home, not to give up the fight for a better Uganda.

    “We are fighting to put our country in our own hands. Until we achieve that, there is no turning back. If they think that putting us in prison will demoralise us, then they are wrong,” Dr Besigye told a crowd of about 200 people who managed to beat the police siege outside his farm and accessed his home.

    Dr Besigye who had been on remand since May on treason charges assured his supporters that they were not breaking any law in defying a “dictatorship”. He instead blamed a section of “criminals” within the Police Force for slapping trumped up charges against him.

    “It hurts that police has been infiltrated by criminals but these are just a few individuals. Most of those in police are not criminals but there is a group of kifeesi who have tarnished the image of the Force. They are led by Mr Kale Kayihura (IGP) and his colleagues,” he said.

    Urges police to be strong
    Dr Besigye urged police officers and members of other state security organs “who want our country to go forward and who overwhelmingly voted for us” to be strong.

    Musician Robert Kyagulanyi aka Bobi Wine equated Dr Besigye to South African anti-apartheid revolutionary and former president Nelson Mandela.
    “We the youth are very lucky. We used to just read about freedom fighters such as Nelson Mandela but we have had an opportunity not to just see you but also learn from you,” Bobi Wine said.

    This singer also unveiled another artiste Ronald Mayinja who he said had joined the “struggle”. Mr Mayinja was one of the artistes in President Museveni’s 2016 election theme song Tubonga Naawe. However, both artistes are known for releasing songs laden with political overtones.

    He said he had been overwhelmed by Dr Besigye’s resoluteness. “In school, I studied about Nelson Mandela but very few times did I read about him having food in a hotel, most of the times I heard about him, he was incarcerated in prison but in the end he won,” Mr Mayinja said.

    The journey
    Immediately after leaving the court premises, Dr Besigye defied the heavy police and military presence and stood through the open-roof compartment of his car waving to his supporters that had been blocked along roads such as Kampala Road, Lumumba Avenue and Nakasero Road.

    He then proceeded to Ternan Avenue past the entrance to State House Nakasero connected to Yusuf Lule and then Gayaza Road.
    Police was compelled to fight off his supporters’ procession which kept growing by the minute.

    Police commanded by Geoffrey Kaheebwa, the deputy RPC Kampala South, would occasionally block the road to stop Dr Besigye’s supporters who were mainly running along or riding on boda-boda motorcycles.

    Stick wielding uniformed police officers and operatives would occasionally beat them in an attempt to disperse them. Journalists, too, were not spared.
    At the dusty road heading to Dr Besigye’s home, Police again blocked people and mounted a road block on the main entrance to his farm.

    This, however, did not deter some of the determined supporters. They used short cuts to access the home where they sang, danced and chanted slogans in praise of Dr Besigye. One group even played football in his compound, saying they feel free “when we are in State House with our president”.

    {{Police say}}

    “We don’t want to make a big elephant out of his opinion.That is his opinion, and he is entitled to it. We don’t find insult in what he says because we are doing our job. We hope he will abide by the regulations of his bail, that will make our work very easy,” Polly Namaye, Police Deputy Spokesperson.’

  • Kenyans dominate list of Africa innovators in US news outlet ranking

    {Kenyans dominate the list of Africa’s top 30 innovative entrepreneurs in this year’s ranking by a US-based digital media outlet Quartz.}

    Kenyans dominate the list of Africa’s top 30 innovative entrepreneurs in this year’s ranking by a US-based digital media outlet Quartz.

    There are seven Kenyans in the Quartz Africa Innovators 2016 list, an increase from the six locals who made it to last year’s rankings.

    The finalists include Agosta Liko, founder of e-payment gateway PesaPal, artist and sculptor Cyrus Kabiru, filmmaker Wanuri Kahiu, and techie Marie Githinji who is co-founder of IT training programme AkiraChix and educational technology start-up eLimu.

    Other Kenyans are Diana Opoti, founder of fashion and communications consultancy Diana Opoti PR, Ciiru Waweru, the proprietor of Funkidz, a children’s furniture maker; and, Evelyn Gitau an immunologist.

    “The innovators have been chosen for their groundbreaking work, thought-leading initiatives, and creative approaches to problems,” said Yinka Adegoke, Quartz Africa editor in a citation about the Fellows.

    The 30 finalists will be feted at a gala in Nairobi on July 20.

    Nigeria, Africa’s biggest economy, has seven innovators in the list followed by South Africa with four finalists, Ghana has three, while Uganda, Zimbabwe and Cameroon have two entrepreneurs each in the Quartz ranking.

    Tanzania, Ethiopia, Namibia, Angola and Burkina Faso have one finalist each.

    Ms Gitau was feted for researching cerebral malaria among children, Quartz said, adding that she was instrumental in developing a rapid malaria test.

    She completed her doctoral degree in cellular immunology awarded by the Open University UK in collaboration with Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine and sponsored by the KEMRI-Wellcome Trust Programme Kenya.

    Ms Githinji was honoured for co-founding AkiraChix, a social enterprise which trains about 30 female techies every year. She is also the brains behind eLimu, which has developed tablets and software for school children.

    TED Fellow

    Self-taught artist and TED Fellow Kabiru was ranked due to his works on creating goggles dubbed “C-Stunners” made from electronic refuse and scrap metal.

    Ms Kahiu is best known for the short movie From a Whisper, a Kenyan drama based on the August 1998 twin bombings of the US embassy in Nairobi and Dar es Salaam. The film bagged five awards at the African Movie Academy Awards in 2009.

    The six Kenyans in last year’s Quartz ranking were three female techies namely techie Jamila Abass of M-Farm, Ory Okolloh Mwangi and co-founder of Wananchi Online Njeri Rionge.

    Others were Oscar award-winning actress Lupita Nyong’o, photojournalist cum activist Boniface Mwangi, and novelist Binyavanga Wainaina, winner of the 2002 Caine Prize for African Writing.

    PesaPal founder Agosta Liko is one of the entrepreneurs honoured by Quartz.
  • Tanzania:Five in Dar court over 199 economic sabotage counts

    {Five businessmen appeared before the Kisutu Resident Magistrate’s Court in Dar es Salaam yesterday charged with 199 counts of forgery, uttering false documents, money laundering, occasioning loss to a specified authority and evading tax to the tune of over 15bn/-.}

    They are Mohamed Mustafa Yusufali, alias Mohamedali, alias Choma, alias Jamalii, Alloyscious Gonzaga Mandago, Isaack Wilfred Kasanga, Taherali Sujjauddin Taherali and Mohamed Seif Kabula. They are represented by four Dar es Salaam advocates — Mr Richard Rweyongeza, Michael Ngalo, Hudson Ndusyepo and Martin Rwehumbiza.

    The accused persons were not allowed to enter plea to the charges before Principal Resident Magistrate Huruma Shaidi because they have been charged under the Economic and Organised Crime Control Act.

    They were remanded until July 26, when the case will be mentioned, as investigations, according to the prosecution led by Principal State Attorney Pius Shilla, Senior State Attorney Shadrack Kimaro and an officer from Prevention and Combating of Corruption Bureau (PCCB), Leonard Swai, were incomplete.

    In the case, Mohamed Mustafa Yusufali is facing a total of 196 counts alone, while the remaining accused persons are facing three counts each. They are alleged to have committed the offences at different times between 1995 and 2016 in the city.

    The prosecution told the court that the accused persons forged several certificates of incorporation for about 17 different companies, with 15 among them for Yusufali alone, showing that such companies are limited companies legally incorporated in Tanzania, while it was untrue.

    The prosecution alleged that between January 2008 and January 2016 in Dar es Salaam, being the director responsible for the management of affairs of his company, Farm Plant Limited, with a view to fraudulently evade tax, Yusufali submitted false return to the Commissioner of Tanzania Revenue Authority (TRA).

    As a result, according to the prosecution, Yusufali evaded Value Added Tax (VAT) amounting to 15,645,944,361/-.

    It is alleged further that within the same period in the city, by reason of his wilful acts of making and submitting false returns to the TRA Commissioner General, Yusufali caused the government to suffer a pecuniary loss of 15,645,944,361/-, which ought to have been paid as VAT.

    The prosecution told the court that knowingly and fraudulently, Yusufali uttered to the TRA, Kinondoni Tax Region Office, the certificates for 15 companies to show that they were limited companies registered as taxpayers.

    The court heard further that on diverse period in the city, with intent to defraud, Yusufali made several tax invoices bearing different numbers and value added tax returns to show that Farm Plant Limited purchased from Blue Arrow Tanzania Limited, commodities worth billions of shillings. All the accused persons were charged with an offence of money laundering allegedly committed between March 2011 and January 2016 in Dar es Salaam.

    Being persons responsible with management and operations of Superior Financing Solution Limited, the accused persons allegedly concealed establishment of the true nature, source and movement of money amounting to 1,895,885,000/-.

    The prosecution alleged that the accused persons advanced the said amount as loans to various persons and receiving repayments. It added that they did so while at the time of advancing and receiving such repayments they knew or ought to have known that money was proceeds of predicate offences of forgery and tax evasion.

  • Congo opposition leader says government tried to kill him

    {WASHINGTON :Congo’s leading opposition candidate for president said Monday he was poisoned as part of a government plot to kill him, a dramatic claim almost certain to escalate tensions even further over upcoming elections in one of Africa’s largest countries.}

    In an interview with The Associated Press, Moise Katumbi said he was roughed up by police in May who injected him with an unknown substance outside a courthouse in the city of Lubumbashi.

    “Their plan was to kill me,” Katumbi said, “because they are scared about my popularity.”

    Katumbi said the directions came from the highest levels of Congo’s government, but he did not provide details about whom he specifically believes was responsible.

    Katumbi and other critics of President Joseph Kabila have expressed concern that the election set for November will be delayed so that Kabila will stay in power longer. Kabila is supposed to leave office in December, but he has not publicly declared his intentions.

    Congo’s communications minister, Lambert Mende, was unavailable to comment on Monday, but he had previously dismissed allegations Katumbi had been harmed by the police. He noted that Katumbi was allowed to leave Congo for medical treatment elsewhere.

    “If the objective was to kill him as he claims, why let him go and vilify us in the press?” Mende said in a recent interview with a radio station.

    Since Congo won independence from Belgium in 1960, there has never been a peaceful, democratic transition of power in the country. Kabila has been in office since 2001, taking over less than two weeks after his father, President Laurent Kabila, was shot by a bodyguard in the presidential palace. He was elected president in 2006 and again in 2011. Kabila is barred by Congo’s constitution from a third term.

    Congo, which has vast mineral deposits, is nearly one-fourth the size of the United States and has a population of more than 79 million. More than a decade after Congo’s back-to-back civil wars ended, the country’s east remains in discord. Scores of militias and armed groups are blamed for violence against civilians, and nearly 2.7 million Congolese are internally displaced as a result, according to figures compiled by the United Nations.

    Katumbi, a former governor of Congo’s southern Katanga and longtime president of the TP Mazembe soccer team, had been summoned to court on allegations he hired mercenaries to be his bodyguards. He called the allegations a “big joke.”

    Thousands of his supporters had gathered outside the venue on May 13 and police fired tear gas to disperse them and Katumbi fell ill. He was hospitalized in Lubumbashi with an unspecified ailment when authorities formally charged him.

    He was medically evacuated to South Africa and has since sought treatment in London and Germany.

    Katumbi hadn’t discussed the circumstances of his illness. He told the AP that he needed oxygen for a week to help him breathe. The substance caused a blood infection, Katumbi said, and he pledged to release laboratory results when tests are complete.

    “I’m going to show to everyone, to tell them what is going on in the Congo,” Katumbi said. “This is not anymore politics.”

  • What to expect from the Inter-Burundi Dialogue in Arusha

    {IBTimes UK speaks to opposition and peace activists about possible outcome of talks.}

    After stalling on negotiations for months, peace talks on the Burundi crisis are expected to resume on Tuesday 12 July in Arusha, Tanzania.

    In April, the UK government called on the Burundian government to protect prisoners’ human rights and stop abuses, after raising concerns about the treatment of prisoners in the African nation that has been rocked by deadly political violence for over a year.

    Hopes of any progress were quashed in May when the government of Bujumbura refused to hold talks with key members of the umbrella National Council for the Restoration of Arusha Agreement and Rule of Law (CNARED) and a major civil society movement known as Halte au 3e mandat.

    Both were opposed President Pierre Nkurunziza’s bid for a third-term in office. At the time, the regime agreed to attend peace talks in Arusha in which only government officials, two former heads of state and a selection of like-minded individuals participated in an exchange with mediators.

    As delegations have either arrived in or are on their way to Tanzania ahead of the talks held at the International Conference Centre (AICC), IBTimes UK looks at what can be expected from the negotiations, hosted by former Tanzania President Benjamin Mkapa. Mkapa was appointed as the facilitator for the Inter-Burundi Dialogue by the East African Community (EAC) on 2 March.

    {{Is the government attending?}}

    According to a document seen by IBTimes UK, seven government officials − including Foreign Minister Alain and spokesman Willy Nyamitwe, Interior Minister Pascal Barandagiye and Minister for EAC Affairs, Leontine Nzeyimana − will be attending the talks.

    {{At least eight ruling CNDD-FDD officials will also be present in Arusha.}}

    While former presidents Pierre Buyoya and Sylvestre Ntibantunganya are expected to attend, presidency spokesman Nyamitwe on Monday confirmed former President Domitien Ndayizeye was aboard a flight heading to the talks.

    {{Will the opposition participate?}}

    A number of opposition parties (Uprona, Radebu, Frodebu and Pader) will be represented and leaders were invited by the mediators, including Agathon Rwasa, leader of opposition, National Liberation Forces (FNL) and current deputy head of parliament. However, officials from the MSD party have not been invited.

    Following the fiasco of the previous round of negotiations, however, Jeremie Minani, a spokesman for the alliance-in-exile Cnared exclusively told IBTimes UK that progress has been made. IBTimes UK understands that, while the negotiators refused to invite the Cnared as an entity − as previously required by the alliance − to avoid government officials pulling out of the talks, it had instead agreed to extend the invitation to between 15 and 20 members of the Cnared.

    {{The regime describes Cnared as is a “terrorist organisation”.}}

    “There will be a strong delegation from the Cnared in Arusha, whose goal is to tell the mediator what we already told him in Brussels − that we want to negotiate a return to peace,” Minani confirmed. “The entire world needs to understand that we are not in a spirit of sabotage of the negotiations because, despite the mediators’ refusal to take into account our prime demand to be invited as an entity, we still agreed that a Cnared delegation attended without the Cnared label. That is essential.”
    {{
    Will Burundi’s civil society be represented?}}

    For many Burundians, the participation of a number of members of the Cnared, as well as those of the civil society who were against the third presidential term, including right defender Pierre-Claver Mbonimpa, is a step forward.

    It is still unclear whether the presidents of other civil society organisations including Vital Nshimirimana (FORSC), Pacifique Nininahazwe of FOCODE and ACAT will be represented. IBTimes UK understands that Nininahazwe was invited, however.

    “We must admit that there has been a spectacular evolution but the regime of Bujumbura remains stubborn and not everyone has been invited to participate,” Minani said.

    {{Are Burundians confident?}}

    The presence of both sides seems to indicate they are willing to compromise a little.

    “I think Mkapa and other Burundi partners have done a great job in trying to deal with both the government and the opposition’s picky requirements. Despite the peace talks being postponed (until 11 July), there have been satisfying changes,” Jean Claude Nkundwa, a Burundian peace activist, told IBTimes UK.

    According to the peace worker, the fact the government has not changed its commitment to join the talks is encouraging, as it may allow Mkapa to draw up compromise proposals and keep the focus on Burundi. For instance, French ambassador to Tanzania and the EAC, Malika Berak, last week pledged her country’s willingness to provide support to the peace talks.

    “With this inclusion, we expect the mediators to have a clearer picture and deeper understating of Burundi’s current crisis… These level talks will also help international community be well-informed about the nature of the Burundi crisis and Mkapa’s report will help international actors decide how to prevent mass atrocities in Burundi and protect civilians from the ongoing killings.”

    According to Nkundwa, between 40 and 70 people die every month.

    {{What will be discussed?}}

    According to the invitation sent to members of the Cnared and Bujumbura officials, the facilitators are expected to listen to the different parties involved about a number of topics. On top of the list will be what the negotiations agenda will include, as well as what the negotiations’ priorities should be.

    The opposition is expected to outline “urgent preconditions” that it wants the negotiators to cover − the cessation of violence, the reopening of independent media and liberation of political prisoners.

    “We will reiterate our position, and hand our immediate road-map to the facilitators. The rest of our demands include freeing up the political space and having a democratic transition that will drive the organisation of free and fair elections for the restoration of constitutional order,” Minani said over the telephone.

    The spokesman, meanwhile, insisted the alliance “would not abandoned its principal preoccupation to be considered as an entity” and said it was wary of “being pushed towards a wall or the exit door, or starting the negotiations already weakened by the conditions of the mediators that seem to go in favour of the Bujumbura regime”.

    Burundi's President Pierre Nkurunziza (R) embraces his South African counterpart Jacob Zuma (L) as he leaves the previous round of the Africa Union-sponsored peace dialogue in Burundi's capital Bujumbura