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How a city in Tanzania holds the key to peace in Burundi*

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How a city in Tanzania holds the key to peace in Burundi*

Relatives of a student killed in Burundi's political violence. Photo: Phil Moore/IRIN
Photo: Phil Moore/IRIN
Relatives of a student killed in Burundi''s political violence. Photo: Phil Moore/IRIN

NAIROBI, 13 January 2016 (IRIN) - At some stage, both sides in Burundi鈥檚 increasingly bloody political crisis are likely to be sitting across the table from one another in Arusha, Tanzania, looking to agree a political settlement.

Arusha, a laidback cosmopolitan city in northern Tanzania, has been the traditional venue for negotiating some of East Africa鈥檚 most intractable conflicts. It was where the Burundian government and the opposition CNARED were supposed to be heading last week for talks mediated by the African Union and the East African Community, until the government pulled out its representatives on the grounds that they couldn鈥檛 meet with 鈥渃riminals鈥 and 鈥渢errorists鈥.

<a href="/" style="text-decoration: none color: rgb(10, 98, 161) font-family: Tahoma, Verdana font-size: 14px line-height: 19.6px background-color: rgb(255, 255, 255)" target="_blank">See: Briefing: What next for the Burundi peace process?

Such contretemps are nothing new. After all the purpose of mediation is to put together people who don鈥檛 like each other, sometimes with murderous intensity. The Arusha Accords, aimed at resolving Rwanda鈥檚 civil war, took a year to hash out: the Arusha 探花精选 and Reconciliation Agreement for Burundi (the document CNARED accuses the current government of trashing) took two years.&nbsp

In the case of South Sudan, where a peace agreement was signed in Arusha last year and then promptly torn up by both sides, who knows?

Why Arusha?

It鈥檚 ever so slightly schizophrenic. It draws legions of tourists visiting the Serengeti national park, Ngorongoro conservation area, and Mount Kilimanjaro. But alongside the backpackers in sandals and bush camouflage 鈥 though rarely literally 鈥 are the men and women in power suits representing the other face of Arusha, that of a regional diplomatic hub.&nbsp

It鈥檚 the headquarters of the EAC, hosts the African Court on Human and Peoples'' Rights, the UN鈥檚 Mechanism for International Criminal Tribunals, and until two years ago, was home to the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda, trying those implicated in the 1994 genocide.

Arusha is bucolic enough to avoid distractions, but with the infrastructure necessary for high-level summitry 鈥 an East African Sharm el-Sheikh.

Why Tanzania?

鈥淭anzania is often perceived as a relatively neutral zone, a relatively positive force in the region,鈥 explained Yolande Bouka of the Institute for Security Studies. Wrapped up in that perception is the still towering figure of Julius Nyerere, the country鈥檚 first president.&nbsp

The guiding principle of his rule 鈥 that of independence and African Socialism - was enshrined in the Arusha Declaration, which led to a long dalliance with Scandinavian social democrats.

But it was his role in African liberation 鈥 particularly in southern Africa 鈥 for which he is rightly lionized. That also led to a partnership with Nelson Mandela over Burundi that was key to ending the 12-year civil war, in which Mandela domestically took a unilateral decision to send South African troops to protect returning political leaders.

What was the Burundi agreement?

Its aim was to end the conflict and cycles of massacres, including genocide, dating back to Burundi鈥檚 independence in 1962. Central to the agreement was trust. In broad terms, what was required was for the Tutsi minority to give up the army they dominated as a guarantee of their physical survival, and for the Hutu majority to see the democratic process as a way to win representation without resorting to arms.&nbsp

According to&nbsp<a href="/" style="text-decoration: none color: rgb(10, 98, 161) font-family: Tahoma, Verdana font-size: 14px line-height: 19.6px background-color: rgb(255, 255, 255)">Paul Nantulya&nbspof the Pentagon鈥檚 Africa Center for Strategic Studies, the mediation 鈥渟ought to balance two extremely complex questions. The first was how to guarantee full political participation by the minority Tutsi population even when its prospects for winning competitive elections would remain slim in the foreseeable future? The second was how to alleviate the deep mistrust of the Hutu majority in the armed forces?鈥&nbsp

Resolving that conundrum rested on a power-sharing formula based on minority over-representation and coalition-building protocols providing for the equitable participation of all parties in the three branches of government and all national institutions, including state-owned corporations constitutional checks to discourage the concentration of power by a single party or group of aligned parties and the building of a unified military.

In Burundi鈥檚 current political crisis, the opposition鈥檚 central case is that President Pierre Nkurunziza鈥檚 ruling CNDD-FDD party is expanding its control over all political and military institutions 鈥 in contravention of the Arusha Accords. The CNDD-FDD, slow to put down its guns, were not signatories to Arusha. They argue they are therefore not bound by the deal, which they dismiss as outdated. They claim the Global Ceasefire Agreement, which CNDD-FDD signed in 2003, supersedes Arusha.&nbsp

Bouka, of the ISS, sees that position as something of a canard, as the GCA flowed from the Arusha agreement, and can鈥檛 be viewed as independent from its provisions.

鈥淎rusha remains a potent, yet increasingly controversial symbol of the possibilities of regional diplomacy,鈥 an African diplomat based in Addis Ababa told IRIN. His concern is whether the region now has the leverage to get Nkurunziza to the negotiating table and avoid an acceleration of violence in Burundi. 鈥淭he risk is if we鈥檙e seen as fickle, without the muscle to sustain and follow through.鈥

The case of Rwanda

Before the Rwanda genocide in 1994, there were the Arusha Accords. The UN-sponsored agreement was between the Rwandan government and the Rwandan Patriotic Front rebels. The RPF were the sons of mainly Tutsi exiles in Uganda, who returned in 1990 to wage war against a largely Hutu dominated government 鈥 all oversimplifications acknowledged, the mirror opposite of Burundi.

The accords provisions included a power-sharing formula to also incorporate the civilian opposition to President Juvenal Habyarimana. Complicating the Arusha negotiations were the various splits among the political parties, and Habyarimana鈥檚 disregard for the 鈥減ieces of paper鈥.

The accords, finally agreed in 1993, were never implemented. In April 1994 the plane carrying Habyarimana and Burundian President Cyprien Ntaryamira from Dar es Salaam to Kigali was shot down 鈥 nobody can quite agree by whom 鈥 triggering the beginning of the genocide that targeted Tutsis and liberal Hutus. The RPF鈥檚 subsequent military victory ended the seeming political necessity of the agreement.&nbsp

A better peace?

The nature of peace deals is that they usually end with a power-sharing agreement between the men with the guns, which tends to ignore issues of transitional justice and accountability. The usual steps are a ceasefire, UN-supervised elections, and then international attention shifts elsewhere. There is rarely any explicit attempt to involve the communities that bore the brunt of the conflict, or mechanisms to effectively monitor the peace in a sovereign country.

鈥淲e are very aware that we reward the people that caused the death and violence, but how do you not bring them to the table?,鈥 noted Bouka.

An elite-based peace, derived from an agreement with men used to impunity for their actions, can be fragile. 鈥淚n some cases, we see the early warnings [of trouble ahead], but because we focus so much on current stability, we let things slide,鈥 said Bouka.

She added that there are more than enough examples in Burundi of the closing of political space and growing intolerance by the CNDD-FDD for regional diplomats not to have intervened far earlier.

* This story was amended to correct the date of Burundi independence, and the flight route of President&nbspHabyarimana''s plane

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