Burundi

Burundi

Overview

International Alert has been working in Burundi since 1995 when peace negotiations were beginning. We have helped provide space for conflict transformation and built capacity for this among some of the main protagonists.

Alert has provided training in conflict resolution to women throughout the country and supported women in the political arena seeking access to the negotiating table. We have supported the creation and development of a civil society organisation for monitoring government action. We have worked with the media to disseminate this monitoring work, as well as findings from a number of research projects, directed to national and international actors. Subjects addressed include the inclusive reform of the coffee sector as well as community perceptions of corruption and of security sector reform. The Burundi team also contributed to Alert’s Great Lakes regional research on women’s political participation and that on the impact of rumour, prejudice and stereotypes on relations between peoples in the Great Lakes Region.

Alert has worked with the UN Peacebuilding Commission, one of whose first interventions was in Burundi. We have supported women’s organisations contributing to a Strategic Peacebuilding Framework and to the implementation, monitoring and evaluation of projects under the Peacebuilding Fund (PBF). Currently, Alert is working with civil society organisations to promote a peacebuilding focus for Burundi’s second Poverty Reduction Strategy, using a conflict- and gender-sensitive approach. We are also studying the effectiveness of the World Bank and the UN in consolidating peace in Burundi as part of a global study.

Where

The Burundi programme operates at the national level, reaching out through partners to all of the provinces – and most of the 129 communes – in Burundi. We also target the international community, notably in London, Brussels and New York.

Conflict Context

After more than a decade of war, Burundi is experiencing a fragile peace. Although 2010 saw elections which re-elected the CNDD-FDD, the conduct of the elections reflected an exclusionary and unaccountable political culture which continues to be an obstacle to long-term stability. Although former rebel groups have been incorporated into the army, rumours abound that some have opted out of the political process as a result, leading to speculation about the potential for new challenges to the current government. Poor governance (characterised by impunity, lack of accountability and the absence of transparency) generates popular resentment and results in the scarcity and inequitable distribution of economic resources.

Since independence, and until the elections in 2005, there was continuous political and economic domination by the minority Tutsi group over the Hutu majority, which gave rise to uprisings, genocidal massacres and brutal repression over a period of forty years that led to inter-ethnic fear and antagonism. Despite the emphasis on ethnicity in the way people often talk about the conflict, it is not the only cause of conflict in Burundi, which has been mainly driven by competition over access to the state as a means of self-preservation, power and economic advancement.

Significant hurdles to long-term peace remain. The majority of Burundians, and women in particular, are offered little scope to participate in the political process. In addition, despite real - albeit imperfect - improvements in security, the population has not yet felt any significant economic peace dividend.

How

Alert’s approach has been to promote socially and politically inclusive participation in peacemaking and in political and economic reform for peacebuilding. We have provided support to civil society from the beginning of the peace process in 1995 and continue to promote its efforts. We also conduct research and evidence-based advocacy. Our advocacy has two main strands: on the one hand it promotes a conflict-sensitive approach to economic reform, and on the other it supports women’s role in peacebuilding, in line with UN Resolution 1325 which promotes gender mainstreaming in national peacebuilding - in planning, policy and practice.

Contact Person : 
Gloriosa Bazigaga
Título: 
Country Manager, Rwanda and Burundi

Projects

International Institutions Programme

This project seeks to promote conflict-sensitive approaches at every level of institutional engagement with fragile and conflict-affected countries, through in-depth research and engagement with international institutions and the wider community of stakeholders that work alongside them both internationally and in-country.

We have produced and circulated rigorous and in-depth evidence-based research to inform policy and practice. Initial research examined institutional engagement in Burundi, Liberia and Nepal through a conflict-sensitive lens. The research had a particular focus on the translation of institutional mandates and priorities into country level programmes and their implementation on the ground. Central to this analysis has been their ‘fit’ with local priorities and needs.

The Burundi case was one of the first countries in which the UN Peacebuilding Commission intervened. The World Bank and the UN are lead institutions in the formulation of the new Poverty Reduction Strategy in Burundi, which will integrate the Peacebuilding Strategy in its current phase.

Making women’s voices heard in peacebuilding and development

This project supporting women peacebuilders follows on from a programme in which Alert supported a number of women’s groups in implementing UN Security Council Resolution 1325. The resolution mandates greater protection of women in conflict situations, particularly through the greater participation of women in peacemaking, peacekeeping and peacebuilding.

International Alert is supporting women to increase their influence in peacebuilding within the framework of Burundi’s Poverty Reduction Strategy (PRS). Women’s organisations will ensure that women’s roles and concerns are central to the PRS process while securing national reconciliation as a key component of poverty reduction strategies. This will be achieved by supporting women’s organisations to advocate at the national level for the definition of a gender- and conflict-sensitive PRS, and through support for continuous monitoring of the process in collaboration with women in grassroots community organisations.

The project works to strengthen communication and dialogue among women at all levels of society. One aspect of this process will link women community members with members of civil society organisations. A second is to strengthen dialogue between women at the community level and their elected representatives at the national level. These dedicated fora for communication legitimise women’s perspectives and ensure they are acted on by leaders.

Alert and its partner women’s organisations will continue to contribute towards consolidating peace and preventing future conflicts in communities where reintegration has not yet taken place and mistrust still reigns, leading an approach to reconciliation based on a programme of dialogue, training and practical activities at the community level.

Publications

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Integrating women's priorities into Burundi's poverty reducation strategy

This declaration was prepared for the Conference of Burundi Development Partners in Geneva. 2012. It puts forth concrete policy recommendations on development, gender equality, economic empowerment and peacebuilding priorities for Burundi.

Octubre, 2012
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Lessons from the Great Lakes region in Africa

Recommendations for civil society, governments and the international community to strengthen women’s political participation and economic empowerment in Africa's Great Lakes region.

Julio, 2012
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La participation des femmes dans la transition démocratique au Burundi

Ce rapport examine la participation des femmes dans le processus de paix d’Arusha pour le Burundi, en particulier la manière dont les femmes Burundaises sont parvenues, malgré leur faible représentation à la table des négociations, à faire inclure un certain nombre de dispositions favorables aux droits des femmes et au  principe de l’égalité des sexes dans le texte de l’Accord de paix signé en 2000.

Julio, 2012
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Leçons de la région des Grands Lacs en Afrique

L’un des résultats positifs des processus de paix et des transitions politiques dans la région des Grands Lacs en Afrique ces dix à quinze dernières années, a été la représentation et la participation accrues des femmes dans l’arène politique et dans la sphère publique.

Julio, 2012
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Debates and Practice in Burundi, Liberia and Nepal: Summary

Why is development progress difficult in fragile and conflict-affected countries? This report presents institutional challenges and opportunities experienced by two multilaterals, the World Bank and the United Nations, drawing on case studies of their peace and development work in Burundi, Liberia and Nepal.

Agosto, 2011
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This series of three country “Insights” identifies peacebuilding priorities in Burundi, Liberia and Nepal, and discusses the response of the international institutions operating there.

Junio, 2011
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Understanding And Addressing Key Challenges

This paper discusses why the lessons of past reintegration programmes in Burundi, Liberia and Nepal are not being learned and what implications this has for future EU disarmament, demobilisation and reintegration (DDR) programming.

Diciembre, 2009
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Rumours, Prejudice, Stereotypes and Myths Amongst the People of the Great lakes Region of Africa

Based on three studies from different locations in the Great Lakes region, this report demonstrates the power of rumours, myths, stereotypes and prejudices to fuel conflict. It makes concrete and practical recommendations for decision-makers both inside and outside the region.

Febrero, 2009
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Experiences of monitoring and advocacy in Burundi and Sierra Leone

This report outlines the findings and recommendations of a workshop with representatives from Burundian and Sierra Leonean civil society organisations working in the field of gender equality and women’s empowerment in February 2008.

Noviembre, 2008
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Report of the Consultation Workshop, Hotel Africana, Kampala, Uganda, 28-30 August 2007

The report of a consultation workshop that is part of a regional research project aimed at assessing the impact of women’s political participation in countries emerging from conflict in the Great Lakes Region of Africa.

Mayo, 2008
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Prospects for Participation, Prosperity and Peace

This report looks at coffee sector reform in Burundi and the prevention of conflicts that could arise in connection with the reforms.

Mayo, 2007
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Perspectives d’Avenir pour la Participation, la Prosperite et la Paix

Le but de cet exercise est de proposer des voies de solutions pour que les réformes de la filière café puissent se faire pour l’intérêt commun des principaux intervenants dans le secteur café et d’oeuvrer pour prévenir des conflits qui pourraient en résulter.

Febrero, 2007
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The Case of Burundi

Recommendations on how the UN Peacebuilding Commission (PBC) could most effectively orientate its short and long-term support for men and women in Burundi.

Octubre, 2006
Contenido sindicado

News

Will you help the women of Burundi to recover from conflict?
Geneva conference offers unique opportunity to participate
Alert launches documentary film on Burundi
Improving conditions for women traders in the Great Lakes
International Alert and women get together for peace
International Alert attends the 54th session of the United Nations Commission on the Status of Women
A reply to Oliver Richmond's 'Liberal Peace Transitions'
A study on women's perceptions of security
Cross-regional learning with Burundi, Sierra Leone and Liberia