Friday, September 11, 2015

Burundi army chief 'escapes assassination attempt'

Burundi's deputy police chief says General Prime Niyongabo was unharmed but seven other officers killed in Bujumbura.

A senior police official said the attack appeared to have been "meticulously prepared" [UN Photo/Abdi Dakan]
The head of Burundi's armed forces has survived an assassination attempt in the capital Bujumbura, police said, adding that at least seven other people were killed in the attack.



"There was an attack against the armed forces chief, General Prime Niyongabo, but happily he was unharmed," Burundi's deputy police chief, General Godefroid Bizimana, told AFP news agency.

He said two attackers were killed in the clash, and a third arrested.

Another senior police source said four bodyguards were also killed, as well as a female police officer.

"Reinforcements have arrived. We are pursuing the remainder of the commandos," Bizimana.

Another senior police source, who asked not to be named, said the attack appeared to have been "meticulously prepared".

"It was sudden and violent. Four bodyguards were killed instantly. He managed to survive only because the driver managed to overtake a bus transporting police officers to work, and the attackers could not keep up," said the source, adding that the attackers were wearing military uniforms and travelling in a military vehicle.

Tensions remain high in the central African nation following President Pierre Nkurunziza's successful bid for a third term in power in July.

Nkurunziza won a highly-controversial third term in July in polls the United Nations said were not free or fair.

His bid sparked an attempted coup and months of civil unrest led by opposition groups, who condemned his re-election bid as unconstitutional.

There has also been a string of killings since his re-election, including the assassination of his top security chief in a rocket attack last month.

Many have raised alarm bells at the risk of renewed conflict in Burundi, which lies in the heart of central Africa's troubled Great Lakes region.

At least 300,000 people were killed in a civil war there which ran from 1993-2006.

Source: Agencies

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