This morning’s key headlines from GenerationalDynamics.com

Burundi’s Nkurunziza continues down Mugabe – Assad path of genocide


A policeman walks away after throwing a tear gas canister at protesters in Bujumbura (Reuters)

In Burundi’s capital city Bujumbura in the last 24 hours, police and security courses controlled by Hutu president Pierre Nkurunziza killed seven additional people who opposed Nkurunziza’s unconstitutional third term. At least 240 people have been killed since April, when Nkurunziza announced his candidacy, and about 215,000 others, thought to be almost all Tutsis, have fled to neighboring countries. The latest killings included the wife and child of an assistant pastor of an Anglican Church.

I have heard several analysts say that there are no signs of anything like a repeat of the 1994 Rwanda-Burundi Hutu-Tutsi genocide, and that is absolutely correct. It has only been 21 years since event occurred, a genocide so horrific that it is considered one of the worst of the century, comparable to the Nazi Holocaust. Since only 21 years have past, there are many, many people still alive who are in the generations that survived that event, and who will not let it happen again.

However, there may be a different kind of genocide in progress, far smaller, and far less memorable, but a genocide nonetheless. As I have written in the past, it appears increasingly that Nkurunziza is planning to copy the technique of Zimbabwe’s Robert Mugabe. Mugabe is best known for his 1984 genocidal pacification campaign known as “Operation Gukurahundi” (The rain that washes away the chaff before the spring rain). During that campaign, accomplished with the help of Mugabe’s 5th Brigade, trained by North Korea, tens of thousands of people, mostly from the Ndebele tribe, were tortured and slaughtered. So far, Nkurunziza has not gone as far as Mugabe, but he is systematically slaughtering and torturing peaceful protesters from the Tutsi tribe who oppose his grab for power.

We see the same thing happening in Syria, where Shia/Alawite genocidal monster president Bashar al-Assad transformed peaceful protests in 2011 into a genocide against innocent Sunnis. Like Nkurunziza and Mugabe, he is willing to slaughter any number of people, just to stay in power.

Nkurunziza is starting on the same genocidal path as Mugabe and al-Assad, but has not yet gone so far that he can’t turn back. However, there are no signs that he will. AP and Reuters

EU peace talks collapses on Burundi’s failure to commit to human rights

Despite the Burundi government’s release of 100 jailed political prisoners, as a kind of good-will gesture to the EU, negotiations between the European Union and Burundi representatives collapsed on Wednesday, according to a European Commission statement:

The European Union considers that the essential elements have not been met by the Republic of Burundi.

Following the consultations held in Brussels on 8 December, the European Union took note of the replies given by the Burundi Government and its commitment to provide clarifications to questions and to accelerate certain judicial procedures. Nevertheless, the European Union considers the positions expressed do not help to improve the breaches of the essential elements of its partnership with the Republic of Burundi.

The “essential elements” referenced include progress on human rights, democratic principles and the rule of law specified in an EU-Burundi agreement. Presumably “not killing peaceful protesters” is in there somewhere as well.

According to Adama Dieng, the United Nations special adviser on the prevention of genocide, there is a serious risk that if the violence in Burundi is not stopped there could be a civil war:

I would not say that tomorrow there will be a genocide in Burundi. But there is a serious risk that if we do not stop the ongoing violence, this may end with a civil war and following such civil war everything is possible.

Now, everyone who reads my World View columns regularly knows how cynical and jaded I am, so you will not be surprised to read that I’m the Christmas Grinch who points out that although we all know how wonderful the United Nations is, and although Adama Dieng may be a truly wonderful, decent person, and although his mission statement is wonderfully benevolent:

The Special Adviser on the Prevention of Genocide acts as a catalyst to raise awareness of the causes and dynamics of genocide, to alert relevant actors where there is a risk of genocide, and to advocate and mobilize for appropriate action.

The Special Adviser on the Responsibility to Protect leads the conceptual, political, institutional and operational development of the Responsibility to Protect.

…his budget depends on how many genocides and almost-genocides and potential-genocides he can identify, so it is to his benefit to exaggerate the possibility of genocide.

As I wrote above, a 1994-style civil war is not occurring, and from the point of view of Generational Dynamics cannot occur during a generational Awakening era. The 1994 genocide came “from the people”: For example, a Hutu who has lived next door to a Tutsi family in peace, and their children had played together and all that, suddenly picks up a machete, goes next door, kills and disembodies the husband and children, then rapes the wife and kills and dismembers her. Nothing like that is happening in Burundi, or could possibly happen, since the survivors of the 1994 war will not let it happen. Today’s genocide is all political, all from Nkurunziza.

The UN has been pitifully irrelevant in stopping the genocides in Rwanda-Burundi and Syria. Dieng will not stop it, unless Nkurunziza decides he wants to stop it. Episcopal Digital Network and UN Office of the Special Adviser on the Prevention of Genocide

KEYS: Generational Dynamics, Burundi, Pierre Nkurunziza, Hutus, Tutsis, Rwanda, Zimbabwe, Robert Mugabe, Operation Gukurahundi, Syria, Bashar al-Assad, Adama Dieng, Special Adviser on the Prevention of Genocide
Permanent web link to this article
Receive daily World View columns by e-mail