Tag: Burundi

  • Possible Implications On Burundi Pulling Out Of ICC And Lessons From Kenya

    Possible Implications On Burundi Pulling Out Of ICC And Lessons From Kenya

    By Nicholas Olambo
    The government of Burundi has said the country is pulling out of the International Criminal Court (ICC) and ‘they’ are ready to face the impacts of withdrawing. The cabinet announcement came six months after the court’s Chief Prosecutor, Fatou Bensouda, indicated she would investigate the unending violence.

    Political turmoil erupted in Burundi in April 2015 when President Pierre Nkurunzinza indicated his bid for a third term. The violence has seen hundreds killed with thousands fleeing to seek refuge in neighboring countries like Rwanda. President Paul Kagame (Rwanda) is on record requesting Pierre to stop producing more refugees.

    The mantra that only Africa has the solution to its problems is a loose narrative that does not work for the civilians. The African Union whose body language supports the withdrawal of many African states from the Rome Statute has let Burundi down. AU chose to send peace delegation over peace troops to Burundi for mere threats from Pierre Nkurunzinza. How would his small force defeat over 50 nations?

    AU, under its charter, has the power to intervene in a member state because of grave circumstances as war crimes, genocide and crimes against humanity without that member’s consent. AU chose to sit back and watch the unrest tear the small country into pieces stalling the idea of African solutions to African problems.

    AU failed miserably to assert itself and cut a clear difference from what is was before, the lethargic Organization of African Union. Sending troops to Burundi was the opportunity to do that, but it chose to row back. The choice favored Pierre who was against the deployment of peace troops.

    It’s the fault of Africa and AU to produce many ‘materials’ for the court, Pierre’s greed to force himself for a third term after intimidating the judges of the constitutional court to rule in his favor resulted into what can only be tried at the ICC. Ordinary Burundians have suffered and still continue to suffer under the watch of AU, a replica of the same is taking root in Congo but does AU care?

    It will watch in silence but put every pressure to support a withdrawal of member countries and suspects at the court. The court was under intense pressure from AU over cases against President Kenyatta and his deputy, William Ruto for their alleged in 2007/8 post poll chaos.

    AU has shown and will still demonstrate that it stands for the ruling African elites only and has nothing in favor of the ordinary African. Hundreds of ordinary Burundians are suffering under its watch; the same is the case in Congo and the Oromos in Ethiopia.
    Burundi’s withdrawal from ICC is not in the best interest of the country but one individual, Nkurunzina who knows that he will be declared a wanted man by The Hague-based court sooner or later to answer to charges of war crimes, genocide, forcible transfer of population and crimes against humanity. He has chosen to take a path already supported by AU to insulate himself.

  • Kenya Airways, Ethiopian Airplane Implicated In Sex Trade And Human Trafficking In Burundi

    Kenya Airways, Ethiopian Airplane Implicated In Sex Trade And Human Trafficking In Burundi

    Burundi has been flanked with controversies and conflicts in the past months since and before the disputed re-elections of President Nkurunzinza. As democratic levels hit red signals with the opposition landed wrath, living standards continue to dwindle given the instability with few or no job opportunities to accommodate the swelling job seeking population.

    Gulf nations as Saudi Arabia, world’s biggest oil exporters are preying on poor countries seeking cheap human labor that’s why countries as Kenya, Burundi, and Ethiopia amongst other African countries also Latin America are their softest targets.

    Despite deplorable working conditions and torturing reported in the Gulf states, workers continue to stream in thanks to the recruiting agencies who have mastered the art. Ethiopia becomes the latest to send mass population to Saudi Arabia with an initial batch of 160,000 released to work in Saudi Arabia.

    Nkurunzinza of Burundi said to be sending 120,000 to unspecified Gulf nation highly suspected to be Oman and Saudi Arabia. Kenya, on the other hand, continues to send its citizens to these toxic environments. Uganda has stopped issuing travel permits for its nationals traveling to Saudi Arabia for domestic jobs.

    A lobby group in Burundi, led by Pacifique Nininahazwe, Forum for Conscious Awareness, known by its French acronym, Focode, has been monitoring human trafficking trend in Burundi and is raising an alarm on the growing trend. FOCODE say a locally registered company Salah Al-Dhafeeri is brokering the operation of sending hundreds of young women to Saudi Arabia.

    Human trafficking

    The collaboration is done together with government officials who have their cut off every head smuggled out and also with Airlines.

    According to FOCODE, the situation is so bad that’s an estimated number of 300 plus women are trafficked weekly to Saudi Arabia alone.

    In a report estimated 300 children were smuggled to Saudi Arabia and Oman since April 2016. Most of these women ended up as sex slaves and subjected to pathetic working environments where they serve as domestic workers.

    FOCODE is pointing arrows at Kenya Airways and Ethiopian Airlines as the airlines of choice by the traffickers, “12 girls were flown this morning on flight KQ 448 of Kenya Airlines, and they went to Oman.” Noted FOCODE leader, Pacifique. “Nine girls come from boarding the flight 806 of Ethiopian Airlines, they will in Saudi Arabia” he added.

    #Burundi #HumanTrafficking Dans moins d'une demie heure, le vol ET 806 d'Ethiopian Airlines à destination d'Addis-Abeba…

    Posted by Pacifique Nininahazwe on Tuesday, June 7, 2016

    The lobby group goes further to petition the airlines mentioned to take note of passengers booked for traveling to either of Gulf Nations in a bid to help curb the increasing menace of human trafficking. The syndicate they allege extends to government officials, recruiting agencies and airlines officials. Most of the women travel with falsified documents, FOCODE notes.

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