Burundi president named ruling party candidate for 2027 election

BUJUMBURA - Burundian President Evariste Ndayishimiye has been named as the candidate of his ruling party for the presidential election due to be held next year, the party said on Sunday.

Ndayishimiye, 57, has been head of state of the poor east African country since 2020, taking over following the death of longtime leader Pierre Nkurunziza. 

His ruling party, the CNFDD-FDD, said in a post on X that Ndayishimiye was its choice to run for a seven-year mandate in the poll. No firm date for the election has been given.

Ndayishimiye reacted on X by thanking the party's members "for putting their trust in me".

"As you have already seen, with what we have done up to now, I pledge to continue the work we are doing, with all of you, so that all Burundi profits in peace," he said. 

Ndayishimiye, a general and former ruling party head who held various roles under Nkurunziza, is the favourite going into the election.

He was first elected president in May 2020, in polls marked by accusations of fraud and the disqualification of his main opponent.

A spokesman for one of the opposition parties said the upcoming election "will not be an election by international standards."

"Ndayishimiye has already spent more than five years without providing fuel, foreign currency or the basic necessities the population needs," said Epitace Nshimirimana, a spokesman for Movement for Solidarity and Development (MSD), whose leader is in exile.

"This means he is being given another seven years to go on impoverishing and destroying the country,” he added.

- One of world's poorest countries -

Since taking power, Ndayishimiye has vacillated between opening up the government to lessen the influence of powerful generals and maintaining a firm grip on the country.

The United Nations and NGOs have condemned rights violations in the landlocked country of 15 million people, which ranks among the world's poorest.

Burundi's media and communications minister was killed this month in what the government was a car accident. Sources said the cause of death was unclear and would be investigated.

Last month, Burundi's ex-prime minister General Alain-Guillaume Bunyoni, who had been serving a life sentence for an attempted coup, was released on medical grounds. 

Once one of the most powerful government figures, Bunyoni was prime minister from mid-2020 until September 2022, when he was fired, days after Ndayishimiye had warned of an alleged coup plot against him.

Burundi was shaken by political crisis in 2015, after the announcement of Nkurunziza's candidacy for a third mandate.

Protests were brutally repressed with summary executions, disappearances, arbitrary detentions, torture and sexual violence. The crisis left at 1,200 people killed and pushed 40,000 Burundians into exile, according to the International Criminal Court.

Ndayishimiye currently holds the presidency of the African Union, which runs for a year from February.

By Dylan Gamba

  • Article by AFP

You May Also Like