Why do so many African leaders assume they can ignore their constitutions, cling to power, and get away with it?Helen Epstein
May 21, 2015
Poor Burundi. Landlocked, tiny, and known mainly for ethnic conflict, it was for years the subject of one of the most intense international peace-building efforts in history. By the time the Arusha Peace Agreement was finally signed in 2003, 300,000 Burundians had died in a civil war rivaling in ferocity that of its neighbor Rwanda. Huge sums had been invested in grassroots workshops, high-level meetings and summits to end the fighting. According to Burundi specialist Peter Uvin, taxi drivers in the capital Bujumbura joke that the per diems received during these protracted negotiations built the poshest neighborhood in the city. Now, a decade after the peace process came to what seemed a successful conclusion, and despite billions of dollars in humanitarian aid, the country appears to be falling apart again.
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Security forces facing off with protesters in Bujumbura, Burundi, May 20, 2015 |
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Burundian President Pierre Nkurunziza and his wife, Denise
Bucumi, attending an Africa Leaders Summit at the
White House, Washington, DC, August 5, 2014
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