Burundi's President Pierre Nkurunziza, whose controversial bid to seek a third consecutive term has sparked weeks of civil unrest and a failed coup attempt, on Monday warned against any fresh move to try to unseat him.
He "warned any person who tries to take power by overthrowing elected institutions", saying "any such attempt will go nowhere", a statement from the ruling CNDD-FDD party said.Addressing
supporters in his hometown in the north of the country, Nkurunziza thanked those who backed him after a top general launched a failed coup while the president was out of the country in May for a summit.
Nkurunziza also "called on party members to be vigilant so that the achievements of democracy are safeguarded," the statement added.
The crisis in Burundi erupted in late April after the ruling party designated Nkurunziza, in power for 10 years, as its candidate in upcoming elections. Weeks of street protests, which were brutally suppressed, left at least 30 dead.
The opposition and rights groups say the president's third-term bid violates a constitutional two-term limit as well as a 2006 peace deal that ended a 13-year civil war.
Nkurunziza, a former rebel leader from the Hutu majority and a born-again Christian, insists he has every right to stand again because he was elected to his first term by parliament, not directly by the people.
Burundi's parliamentary elections are currently scheduled to take place on June 5 while the presidential election is slated for June 26.
On Sunday, regional leaders called for the polls to be delayed by at least a month and a half but stopped short of telling the president to abandon his re-election campaign.
Government spokesman Philippe Nzobonariba told AFP that the government welcomed the proposal to delay the polls, adding that his third-term bid was a sovereign issue and that the government now considered the matter "closed".
Plans by the government to push ahead with the polls have been hit by a string of setbacks, with the influential Catholic Church withdrawing its support and key international donors also suspending crucial aid.
Last week, the election commission's vice president fled the country.
A protestor opposed to Burundian President Pierre Nkurunziza's third term brandishes a rock as he stands beside a burning vehicle during a demonstration in Bujumbura on May 26, 2015 |
On Monday, a second member of the five-person electoral board was said by relatives to have gone into hiding, following threats from the Burundian intelligence service.
The election panel has now been left with just three sitting members, effectively stripping it of its ability to take decisions, which normally require the agreement of four members.
The head of the election commission, Pierre-Claver Ndayicariye, said the questions surrounding a possible election delay, as demanded by the regional summit, was "being discussed with the presidency" but that no decision had yet been taken.
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