Burundi's President Pierre Nkurunziza
Mr Nkurunziza was in Tanzania when military leaders moved against his bid for a third term on Wednesday.
According to the international news channel that quoted the
presidential spokesman, three of the coup leaders have been arrested,
though the main leader was still on the run.
More than 105,000 people have fled the country since unrest began in Burundi last month, the UN says.
However, Reuters reported yesterday, saying Burundian forces
claimed to have arrested the leader of a failed coup yesterday as
President Nkurunziza returned to the capital.
Major General Godefroid Niyombare was captured two days after
announcing Nkurunziza had been toppled in the African nation, which is
still recovering from an ethnically fueled civil war that ended just a
decade ago.
"He has been arrested. He didn't surrender," presidential spokesman
Gervais Abayeho told Reuters, after earlier announcing that three other
generals had also been detained.
Asked what would happen to the plotters who announced the coup when
Nkurunziza was abroad, Abayeho said it was up to the justice system:
"They will be held answerable."
Burundi was plunged into deep crisis after Nkurunziza announced he was running for another five-year term.
Opponents say this violates the constitution and a deal to end the
civil war that pitted rebel groups of the majority Hutu population,
including one led by Nkurunziza, against the army which was then
commanded by minority Tutsis.
The army is now mixed and has absorbed rival factions, but the coup
attempt exposed alarming divisions. Diplomats say the longer unrest
continues the more chance that a conflict, till now been largely a
struggle for power, reopens ethnic wounds.
The unrest worries a region with a history of ethnic killing, but there was little sign that tensions were easing.
Troops loyal to Nkurunziza had largely calmed the streets after frequent gunfire on Thursday.
But activists called for more rallies against the president, while
some Bujumbura residents said police told them they would be fired upon
at if they did demonstrate.
"Protests to reject the third term bid for Nkurunziza will
continue," said Gordien Niyungeko, deputy head of Focode, one of the 300
civil society groups that backed protests. "Our movement had nothing to
do with the attempted coup."
Until the coup attempt, protests had been almost daily. Protesters
hurled rocks while police fired tear gas, water cannon and were even
seen firing guns at the protesters.
LINING THE STREETS
More than 105,000 people have already fled to neighboring states,
including next door Rwanda, with the same ethnic mix as Burundi and
which was torn apart by a genocide in 1994 that killed 800,000 mostly
Tutsis and moderate Hutus.
Hundreds of people lined the streets carrying flags for the
president's return to the capital from his rural home. His spokesman
said he was back in the presidential palace on Friday after returning to
Burundi on Thursday from Tanzania where he had been when the coup was
declared.
A man with a gaping head wound lay dead in a street in Butarere, a
Bujumbura district that has been a hotbed for protests. Residents said
police had shot him and wounded two others. There was no immediate
police comment.
A group of men in Bujumbura's Cibitoke suburb said they had been
told by police that they would be treated as rebels and shot at if they
demonstrated. "Now we are no longer looking for protesters, we are
looking for rebels," police told them.
Even before the coup attempt, officials had called protests an "insurrection".
Fighting on Thursday had at times been fierce, particularly around
the state radio station, a strategic asset for loyalist and supporters
of the coup. An army chief said 12 rebels were killed in those clashes.
The constitution and a peace deal that ended the civil war both
specify a two-term presidential limit. But Nkurunziza is seeking a third
term anyway, relying on a court ruling that his first term does not
count because he was appointed by parliament, not elected. His opponents
and some donors have questioned the court's impartiality.
The heavy-handed response of the police to demonstrations in recent
weeks has drawn stern rebukes from Western donors, who have urged the
president not to run again. The United States, which provides training
and equipment to the army, demanded a halt to "violent force" by police.
The U.S. embassy was closed on Friday, non-essential staff were
leaving and a decision on when to reopen had yet to be made, an embassy
spokeswoman said.
Several African leaders had criticized Nkurunziza's bid for
re-election in the June 26 presidential vote. The African Union also
condemned any attempt to seize "power through violence".
The European Union, Belgium and the Netherlands have all suspended
some aid due to the unrest, particularly donations linked to the
elections, which alongside the presidential polls also include a
parliamentary race scheduled for May 26.
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