In French.
4th Session on the Forum on Minority Issues
Ms. Libérate Nicayenzi – Burundi on Item VI
Thank you Madam Chair. I would like to start with a little reminder that Burundi is a
country in central Africa with a population of 8 million. And the population density is 254
people per square kilometres and the area is just over 27 000 square kilometres. There
are three ethnic groups Hutus, Tutsis, and Twas. The Twas or the Batwas are an ethnic
minority which suffered and continues to suffer from marginalisation, discrimination and
exclusion in all areas of society, economic, politics, society and cultural life. But UNIPROBA
has been set up. This is an NGO to protect and promote the rights of the Batwa minority.
And with political will and I underline that expression certain positive changes are taking
place to the benefit of the Batwa minority. Firstly, the national constitution in article 164
and 180 provides for the co-optation of a certain number of Batwa people to the national
assembly parliament: three that are in the lower house and three in the Senate – the
Upper House. And they represent therefore the ethnic minority, this ethnic minority.
During the first transition period in 1998 we saw the appointment of a woman for the
minority in the national assembly and the Parliament and then following the Erusha
Agreement in the 2000 which led to the creation of the second house of Parliament we
saw the appointment of 3 Batwas including a woman to represent the Batwa minority.
And following the election in 2009 the 2005 Constitution reserved 6 seats in Parliament
for the Batwa minority including 2 for Batwa women. And following the 2010 elections
the constitution has in Article 164 and Article 180 kept the 6 seats for the Batwa minority.
The electoral code of 2010 spells out how the Batwa minority should be co-opted that is
to say on the pass of the basis of the assertions which up and running of the
representative on the ground. The community Law dated 2010 indicates that amongst the
15 members of the community council 1 Batwa should be co-opted where the Butwas are
representative and where they are represented in the list of a political party. Hence, taking
the total of 1139 member of community council there are 69 of them who belong to the
Batwa minority of which 12 are women in the community council representing that is to
say if the political party did not withdraw from the respective elections. In addition, the
Batwa minority also has a member in the national land and property commission and
another member in the state inspectorate general appointed by presidential decree. Three
presidential decrees are important to us. Because they provide for free healthcare for
children under the age of 5, for free maternity care and for free primary school education.
Along side this we have seen the Religions for Peace set up and this has helped the
co-existence of the 3 ethnic minority above mentioned. In addition, thanks to awareness
raising and lobbying which has been undertaken by UNIPROBA we now see collaboration
with various different stakeholders when it comes to promoting and developing the rights
of the Batwa minority. I am thinking in particular of [forums] such as ministries, United
Nations agencies, the media, civil society, NGOs, international NGOS. And we are involved
in a number of projects here, providing for access to justice, access to land, to citizenship,
and education on human rights, specifically the rights of ethnically…women from ethnic
minorities and determining why it is that some young girls are not going to school. Girls
that is who come from the Batwa minority and there are also agriculture and [huspentry]