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I
INTRODUCTION II
LAND AND RESOURCES A
Rivers and Lakes B
Plants and Animals C Natural Resources Arable land and land used for permanent crops account for 43 percent of Burundi’s land area. Another 12 percent is covered by forest. The principal mineral resources are peat, uranium, nickel, petroleum, tin, bastnasite, and gold. D
Climate E Environmental Issues Burundi is affected by severe soil erosion due to overfarming, overgrazing, and deforestation. This situation is caused and intensified by population pressures. Antierosion measures taken during colonial times have largely broken down. Wildlife protection and forest conservation have been fostered by the Kibira and Ruvubu national parks and the Ruzizi and Bururi nature reserves. III
POPULATION A Ethnic Groups and Languages The chief ethnic groups are the Hutu and the Tutsi, who traditionally comprised 85 percent and 14 percent of the population, respectively. However, due to Hutu emigration and Tutsi immigration, the politically dominant Tutsi now make up around 20 percent of the population. The Twa, a pygmy group, account for 1 percent. The official languages are Kirundi and French. Swahili is also widely spoken along Lake Tanganyika. B
Religion C Education Primary education is free and officially compulsory for children aged 7 through 12, although in 1996 only 49 percent of primary school-age children were in school. Secondary school enrollment was even lower, with 8 percent of secondary school-age children attending school. The literacy rate for Burundi is 35 percent of the population. Attendance and literacy rates are very low due to national instability and shortages of teachers and school supplies. The University of Burundi (founded in 1960) in Bujumbura is the leading institution of higher education. D
Way of Life E Social Issues Hutu-Tutsi ethnic rivalry has been the dominant feature of Burundian society since independence. This severe and often violent problem is compounded by poverty, overcrowding, environmental stress, and the high incidence of AIDS. Crime is high in and around Bujumbura. IV
CULTURE A
Literature, Music, and Dance
B Art and Architecture Traditional Burundian art includes basketry, ironworking, and the making of gourd containers. The Twa are famed for their pottery. The traditional Tutsi hut or rugo is considered the most important local architectural style, while modern European-style construction predominates in the capital and in government buildings. V
ECONOMY A
Agriculture and Fishing B Mining Mining includes the small-scale exploitation of gold and peat. Important reserves of uranium and nickel (estimated at 5 percent of the world’s reserves) remain to be exploited. Tin and bastnasite ores have been mined sporadically in the past. Test drilling has indicated the presence of oil under Lake Tanganyika, but petroleum exploitation has not yet proved significant. C Manufacturing and Services Manufacturing is limited to processing agricultural products, particularly coffee, and producing consumer goods intended to decrease reliance on imports. These consumer goods include cigarettes, soap, glass, blankets, cement, shoes, beer, and insecticides. Almost all banking, insurance, transportation, communication, technical, and trading services are located in Bujumbura. Despite official efforts, tourism has not proved to be significant. D Energy Burundi has two small coal-fired generating plants and two small hydroelectric dams, which in 1997 produced 122 million kilowatt-hours of electricity, or 80 percent of the country’s needs. A portion of the country’s electricity is now supplied by hydroelectric facilities in Bukavu, the DRC. However, for most Burundians, wood and other traditional fuels remain the primary source of energy for heating and cooking, providing 89 percent of all the energy used. E Transportation and Communications Burundi has no railroads but possesses a road network of about 14,500 km (about 9,000 mi), of which 640 km (400 mi) are paved, and about 1,950 km (about 1,210 mi) are classified as national roads. Most trade is shipped by way of Tanzania through the port of Bujumbura at the head of Lake Tanganyika. Bujumbura has the only international airport. Air Burundi, the national airline, has a limited schedule. The government controls radio and television broadcasting. The country has 1 daily newspaper in French and two weeklies, one in French and one in Kirundi. F Foreign Trade In 1996 annual exports were $40 million and imports $127 million. In the early 1990s coffee accounted for 81 percent of the value of exports. Cotton, hides, and tea are the only other important exports, with tea increasing to nearly 10 percent of export value in the early 1990s. Principal trading partners for exports were the United Kingdom, Germany, Belgium and Luxembourg, and Switzerland. Textiles, motor vehicles, flour, and petroleum products are imported, principally from Belgium and Luxembourg, France, Germany, and Japan. G Currency and Banking The unit of currency is the Burundi franc (352.35 francs equal U.S.$1; 1997 average). The Banque de la République de Burundi (1967) is the national bank of issue. Other banks include a half dozen commercial banks and a post office savings bank system. VI
GOVERNMENT A Judiciary The legal system is headed by a supreme court and is based on German and Belgian codified law and traditional customary law. Corruption in the judicial system is common. B Local Government Local government reorganization in 1982 divided Burundi into 15 provinces, each subdivided into arrondissements and communes. Local authorities tend to be dominated by the national government. C Political Parties The most important political parties are the predominantly Hutu Burundi Democracy Front (Front pour la Démocratie au Burundi, or FRODEBU) and the pro-Tutsi UPRONA. D Social Services Burundi’s health and social security systems are rudimentary and underfinanced. AIDS, typhus, tuberculosis, pneumonia, dysentery, and kwashiorkor (severe protein deficiency) are the most serious health problems. E Defense Burundi’s armed forces are composed of a paramilitary gendarmerie (police force) and an army, which includes naval and air units. In 1997 the total force numbered 30,000, all volunteers. Since independence the military has been very politically active and in turn has fallen victim to corruption and often violent purges. F International Organizations Burundi is a member of the United Nations (UN), the Organization of African Unity, and is a signatory of the Lomé Convention (agreements of cooperation between the European Union and many developing countries). VII
HISTORY A European Colonization In 1858 the British explorers Sir Richard Burton and John Hanning Speke were the first Europeans to visit Burundi. Austrian explorer Oskar Baumann and German Count Gustav Adolf von Götzen arrived in the 1890s, and soon Roman Catholic clergy established missions in the area. Later Burundi (then called Urundi) and Rwanda (then called Ruanda) were incorporated into German East Africa. The indigenous Tutsi rulers maintained good relations with the Germans and later with the Belgians, who occupied the country during World War I (1914-1918). After the war, the area was mandated to Belgium by the League of Nations and became known as the Territory of Ruanda-Urundi. Following World War II (1939-1945), it became a United Nations (UN) trust territory. The Belgians continued previous policies of supporting mission education and ruling through Tutsi chiefs. The colonial authorities strengthened precolonial inequalities and were late in seeking reforms. Nevertheless, the Belgians encouraged the mwami to phase out the ubugabire system in 1955. B Independence and Violence As African political consciousness increased, the Hutu grew more vocal in protesting inequalities. In 1959 ethnic antagonisms in Rwanda erupted into violence. The Rwandan Tutsi king fled the country, and an exodus of some 200,000 Tutsi followed, many of whom went to Burundi. At the insistence of the UN Trusteeship Council, Burundi became an independent constitutional monarchy under Mwami Mwambutsa IV on July 1, 1962, and was admitted to the UN in September. However, political rivalry between Hutu and Tutsi threatened regional stability. Fearing a Hutu revolution similar to Rwanda’s, the Burundian Tutsi reacted brutally. In 1963 thousands of Hutu victimized in Burundi took refuge in Rwanda. The Burundian power structure remained in Tutsi hands, despite a Hutu majority in the legislature after 1965. Accusing Mwambutsa of intriguing to strengthen his position, a group of Hutu police attempted a coup in October 1965. Loyalist police led by Captain Michel Micombero, a Tutsi, thwarted the rebels, but the mwami fled the country. In July 1966 he was declared deposed by his son, Mwami Ntare V. Four months later Micombero led a successful coup, declared Burundi a republic, appointed himself president, and established a National Revolutionary Committee to help stabilize his regime and develop the economy. In April 1972 a Hutu uprising led to widespread massacres claiming at least 100,000 lives, mainly Hutu. Ntare, who was under house arrest, was also killed. The uprising was quelled, but unrest continued, and thousands of Hutu refugees found haven in nearby countries. Micombero was ousted in a bloodless coup in November 1976. The ruling Supreme Revolutionary Council subsequently named Colonel Jean-Baptiste Bagaza as president, but peace between the ruling Tutsi and the Hutu majority remained precarious. A new constitution in 1981 declared Burundi a one-party state. Coming into conflict with the Roman Catholic Church, Bagaza became more authoritarian, persecuting clergy and forbidding masses. This policy led to an erosion of support, and in 1987, while on a foreign visit, he was overthrown by Major Pierre Buyoya, who ruled as head of the Military Committee for National Salvation. Suspending the constitution, freeing political prisoners, lifting restrictions on churches, and touring the country in an effort to unite the people, he quickly consolidated his power and dealt with political tensions. Stability was threatened again in 1988 when the Tutsi-led army engaged in massacres of Hutu that left at least 5,000 dead. Buyoya responded by appointing a Hutu prime minister and including Hutu in the cabinet. He controlled the military and planned a return to democratic, civilian rule. A new constitution providing for a multiparty system was ratified by referendum in March 1992. An unsuccessful coup attempt the same month reportedly was organized by Bagaza, in exile in Libya. C Further Instability In June 1993 Burundi held its first democratic presidential elections since independence. Melchior Ndadaye, a Hutu and a member of the Burundi Democracy Front, won the elections with 60 percent of the vote. Buyoya stepped down peacefully, retired from the army, and remained politically active. In October 1993 army factions loyal to Bagaza assassinated Ndadaye, and instability in neighboring Rwanda spread to Burundi. Ndadaye’s death provoked waves of ethnic violence that sent thousands of refugees fleeing into neighboring Rwanda. Cyprien Ntaryamira, a Hutu who replaced Ndadaye, attempted to restore order by reining in the Tutsi-dominated security forces implicated in the violence. On April 6, 1994, shortly after concluding talks, Ntaryamira and Rwandan president Juvénal Habyarimana were killed in a suspicious plane crash near Kigali, Rwanda. Sylvestre Ntibantunganya, former head of the National Assembly, was named acting president and was formally elected in September 1994. However, Burundi was locked in a stalemate between the elected, Hutu-dominated government and the Tutsi-led army. The situation continued to deteriorate, exacerbated by the influx of thousands of refugees from Rwanda. Many government functions ceased.
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