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Feature: Burundi refugees hesitant to return home after elections

Xinhua, July 27, 2015 Adjust font size:

Burundian refugees camped in Mahama in Kirehe district, Eastern Rwanda are uncertain of returning home, despite the fact that presidential elections in the country are over.

Thousands of Burundians fled to Rwanda three months ago fearing the possibility of eruption of violence in their country during the concluded presidential polls.

President Pierre Nkurunziza won third term in elections denounced by opposition and international observers last week.

He is set to serve a five-year term after garnering 69.41 percent of the vote, 50 percentage points ahead of his leading opponent, Agathon Rwasa.

About 66,879 Burundians have streamed to neighbouring Rwanda, the majority being women and children, since the announcement that Nkurunziza was bidding for a third term in office in April.

Consequently violent protests erupted in the small central African country after the Burundi's ruling National Council for the Defence of Democracy-Forces for Defense and Democracy (CNDD-FDD) party designated Nkurunziza as its candidate for the presidential election and has since left the country in political turmoil.

"Our country is not safe as yet, I see no reason of returning to Burundi yet people are still dying and others are forced into exile by Burundi security personnel. I will go back home once our country is stable and secure," Pierre Celestin Rwagasore told Xinhua on Monday at Mahama Camp.

He noted that he doesn't mind if Nkurunziza won elections in transparent manner or not, what he wants is a peaceful country that focuses on economic development and poverty alleviation.

The 50-year-old Rwagasore, who heads a family of six people, stated that he was safe in Rwanda and he will remain in the camp because the place is peaceful despite the challenges of living as a refugee.

The post conflict country, which borders Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of Congo, has an ethnic mix of Hutu majority and minority Tutsi population.

Burundi has been involved in violent ethnic conflict almost since it first gained independence in 1962. The last conflict from 1993 to 2005 cost hundreds of thousands of lives.

"I prefer staying in a refugee camp to go back to Burundi. Here I am safe from violence. People don't want President Nkurunziza but still he is going to lead us since he won the polls, meaning that opposition will continue violent protests. I am not going anywhere, I really want peace," said 40-year-old Raisa Uwamahoro.

She has a family of three but Uwamahoro doesn't want to raise her children in her homeland and prefers refugee camp life due to peace and tranquilly at the Rwanda based camp.

Mahama camp hosts about 30,639, according the Rwanda ministry of Disaster Management and Refugee Affairs statistics.

Seraphine Mukantabana, Rwanda minister of disaster management and refugee affairs, said that refugees will not be forced to return if their country remains insecure.

"We shall wait for total tranquility in the country so that we look at the issue of Burundi refugees returning to their homeland," she noted.

The Rwanda government in partnership with the humanitarian agencies has been battling malnutrition cases among thousands of children who were immediately put on a special nutrition program called blanket feeding. Endit