Difference between revisions of "Burundi" - New World Encyclopedia

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== History ==
 
== History ==
  
The earliest inhabitants of the area were the Twa, nomadic [[hunter-gatherer]]s who were largely replaced and absorbed by Bantu tribes during the Bantu migrations. By 1000 C.E., Hutu farmers had established themselves in the highlands, organized into chiefdoms. During the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, Tutsi pastoralists with their cattle moved into the valleys. They relied on their cattle for milk, hides, and meat. Though numerically a smaller group, the Tutsis may have been able to gain ascendance as Hutus had to come to them for employment when their crops failed. Around 1650, a kingdom was established under the Tutsis, with the Hutus largely in a feudal serflike relationship with the Tutsis. Until the downfall of the monarchy in 1966, kingship remained one of last links that bound Burundi with its pre-colonial past.
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The earliest inhabitants of the area now known as Burundi were the Twa, nomadic [[Hunter-gatherer]]s who were largely replaced and absorbed by [[Bantu]] tribes during the Bantu migrations. By 1000 C.E., [[Hutu]] farmers had established themselves in the highlands, organized into chiefdoms. During the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, [[Tutsi]] pastoralists with their [[cattle]] moved into the valleys. They relied on their cattle for milk, hides, and meat. Though numerically a smaller group, the Tutsis may have been able to gain ascendance as Hutus had to come to them for employment when their crops failed. Around 1650, a kingdom was established under the Tutsis, with the Hutus largely in a feudal serflike relationship with the Tutsis. Until the downfall of the monarchy in 1966, kingship remained one of last links that bound Burundi with its pre-colonial past.
  
 
Burundi was claimed by [[Germany]] in 1894, and in 1903, it became a German colony, along with Rwanda, when the king signed a treaty that would keep him in power. During [[World War I]], control passed to [[Belgium]]. It became part of the Belgian [[League of Nations]] mandate of Ruanda-Urundi in 1923 and later a [[United Nations]] Trust Territory under Belgian administrative authority following [[World War II]].
 
Burundi was claimed by [[Germany]] in 1894, and in 1903, it became a German colony, along with Rwanda, when the king signed a treaty that would keep him in power. During [[World War I]], control passed to [[Belgium]]. It became part of the Belgian [[League of Nations]] mandate of Ruanda-Urundi in 1923 and later a [[United Nations]] Trust Territory under Belgian administrative authority following [[World War II]].

Revision as of 22:33, 18 March 2007


Republika y'u Burundi
République du Burundi

Republic of Burundi
Flag of Burundi Coat of arms of Burundi
Flag Coat of arms
Motto: "Ubumwe, Ibikorwa, Iterambere"  Kirundi)
"Unité, Travail, Progrès"  (French)
"Unity, Work, Progress" 1
Anthem: Burundi bwacu
Location of Burundi
Capital
(and largest city)
Bujumbura
3°30′S 30°00′E
Official languages Kirundi, French
Government Republic
 - President Pierre Nkurunziza
Independence from Belgium 
 - Date July 1, 1962 
Area
 - Total 27,830 km² (146th)
10,745 sq mi 
 - Water (%) 7.8%
Population
 - 2005 estimate 7,548,000
 - 1978 census 3,589,434
 - Density 206.1/km²
533.8/sq mi
GDP (PPP) 2003 estimate
 - Total 4,517 2
 - Per capita US $739
HDI  (2004) Green Arrow Up Darker.svg0.384 (low)
Currency Burundi franc (FBu) (BIF)
Time zone CAT (UTC+2)
 - Summer (DST) not observed (UTC+2)
Internet TLD .bi
Calling code +257
11966 Before from "Ganza Sabwa".
2 Estimate is based on regression; other PPP figures are extrapolated from the latest International Comparison Programme benchmark estimates.

Burundi, officially the Republic of Burundi, is a small country of rolling green hills and mountains in the Great Lakes region of Africa. It is bordered by Rwanda on the north, Tanzania on the south and east, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo on the west. Much of its western border is adjacent to Lake Tanganyika, the deepest lake in Africa and the world's longest lake. Though near the Equator, its climate is temperate because of the altitude, which is perhaps why it and neighboring Rwanda are so heavily populated. The country's modern name is derived from its Bantu language, Kirundi.

Geographically isolated, facing population pressures, and having sparse resources, Burundi is one of the poorest and most conflict-ridden countries in Africa and in the world. Its small size belies the magnitude of the problems it faces in reconciling the needs of the Tutsi minority and Hutu majority after centuries of suspicion and oppression.

History

The earliest inhabitants of the area now known as Burundi were the Twa, nomadic Hunter-gatherers who were largely replaced and absorbed by Bantu tribes during the Bantu migrations. By 1000 C.E., Hutu farmers had established themselves in the highlands, organized into chiefdoms. During the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, Tutsi pastoralists with their cattle moved into the valleys. They relied on their cattle for milk, hides, and meat. Though numerically a smaller group, the Tutsis may have been able to gain ascendance as Hutus had to come to them for employment when their crops failed. Around 1650, a kingdom was established under the Tutsis, with the Hutus largely in a feudal serflike relationship with the Tutsis. Until the downfall of the monarchy in 1966, kingship remained one of last links that bound Burundi with its pre-colonial past.

Burundi was claimed by Germany in 1894, and in 1903, it became a German colony, along with Rwanda, when the king signed a treaty that would keep him in power. During World War I, control passed to Belgium. It became part of the Belgian League of Nations mandate of Ruanda-Urundi in 1923 and later a United Nations Trust Territory under Belgian administrative authority following World War II.

From independence in 1962 until the elections of 1993, Burundi was controlled by a series of military dictators, all from the Tutsi minority, who controlled the military. These years saw extensive ethnic violence, including major incidents in 1964 and the late 1980s, and the Burundian genocide in 1972. In 1993, Burundi held its first democratic elections, which were won by the Hutu-dominated Front for Democracy in Burundi (FRODEBU). FRODEBU leader Melchior Ndadaye became Burundi's first Hutu president, but a few months later he was assassinated by a group of Tutsi army officers. The killing plunged Burundi into a vicious civil war.

In retaliation for Ndadaye's killing, Hutu extremists massacred thousands of Tutsi civilians. The Tutsi-dominated army responded by massacring similar amounts of Hutus. Years of instability followed until 1996, when former president Pierre Buyoya took power in a coup. In August 2000, a peace deal agreed by all but two of Burundi's political groups laid out a timetable for the restoration of democracy. After several more years of violence, a cease-fire was signed in 2003 between Buyoya's government and the largest Hutu rebel group, CNDD-FDD. Later that year, FRODEBU leader Domitien Ndayizeye replaced Buyoya as president. Yet the most extreme Hutu group, Palipehutu-FNL (commonly known as "FNL"), continued to refuse negotiations. In August 2004, the group massacred 152 Congolese Tutsi refugees at the Gatumba refugee camp in western Burundi. In response to the attack, the Burundian government issued arrest warrants for the FNL leaders and declared the group a terrorist organization.

In May 2005 a cease-fire was finally agreed on between the FNL and the Burundian government, but fighting continued. Renewed negotiations are now under way, amid fears that the FNL will demand a blanket amnesty in exchange for laying down their arms. A series of elections held in mid-2005 were won by the former Hutu rebel group CNDD-FDD. On September 7, 2006, a second cease-fire agreement was signed.

Politics

File:Pierre Nkurunziza.jpg
Pierre Nkurunziza, president of Burundi

The politics of Burundi take place in a framework where the president is both head of state and head of government and there is a multi-party system. Executive power is exercised by the government. Legislative power is vested in both the government and the two chambers of parliament, the Senate and the National Assembly.

The president has officially called a cease-fire between the two warring parties in the civil war.

Administrative Divisions

Burundi is divided into 17 provinces, 117 communes, and 2,638 colonies. The capital city, Bujumbura, has by far the largest population. Smaller cities include Gitega, Muyinga, Ngozi, and Ruyigi.

Geography

Map of Burundi
File:Burundi sat.png
Satellite image of Burundi, generated from raster graphics data supplied by The Map Library
File:Satellite image of Burundi in February 2003.jpg
Satellite image of Burundi and the surrounding region

Called "The heart of Africa," Burundi lies on a rolling plateau, with Lake Tanganyika in its southwest corner. The average elevation of the central plateau is 5,600 feet, with lower elevations at the borders. The highest peak, Mount Karonje, at 8,809 feet (2,685 m), lies to the southeast of the capital, Bujumbura. The southeastern and southern borders are at roughly 4,500 feet (1,370 m). A strip of land along the Ruzizi River, north of Lake Tanganyika, is the only area below 3,000 feet (915 m); this area forms part of the Albertine Rift, the western extension of the Great Rift Valley. Because of its elevation, the nation's climate is temperate despite its prozimity to the Equator, with the warmest and most humid area in the lowlands around Lake Tanganyika.

The land is mostly agricultural or pasture, the creation of which has led to deforestation, soil erosion, and habitat loss. Deforestation of the entire country is almost complete due to overpopulation, with a mere 60,000 hectares remaining and an ongoing loss of about 9 percent per year[1].

There are two national parks, Kibira National Park to the northwest (a small region of montane rainforest, adjacent to Nyungwe Forest National Park in Rwanda) and Rurubu National Park to the northeast (along the Rurubu River, also known as Ruvubu or Ruvuvu).

The farthest headstream of the Nile River is in Burundi. Although Lake Victoria is commonly considered the source of the Nile, the Kagera River flows for 429 miles (690 km) before reaching Lake Victoria. The source of the Ruvyironza River, an upper branch of the Kagera River, is at Mount Kikizi in Burundi.

Economy

Burundi's largest industry is agriculture, which accounted for 58 percent of GDP in 1997. Coffee is the nation's biggest revenue earner, accounting for 90 percent of all exported goods. Other agriculture products include cotton, tea, maize, sorghum, sweet potatoes, bananas (of which Burundi is one of the world's ten largest producers), manioc (tapioca); beef, milk, and hides. Besides agriculture, other industries include light consumer goods such as blankets, shoes, and soap; assembly of imported components; public works construction; and food processing.

Burundi is one of the poorest countries in the world, in terms of GDP per capita: US$739 as of 2003. The economy is supported by foreign aid from Western Europe and other parts of the world. In 2000 this amount reached US$92.7 million. More than two-thirds of the population lived below the poverty line in 2002. The country's estimated gross domestic product (GDP) was US$700 million in 2001. According to the World Food Program, the majority of children aged under five (56.8 percent) suffer from chronic malnutrition. [2] In early 2007, a food crisis loomed for the two million people, 25 percent of the population, affected by severe flooding. Seven of the country's seventeen provinces were declared disaster areas.[3]

Demographics

File:Burundi child.jpg
A child in Burundi.

As of July 2006, Burundi was projected to have an estimated population of 8,090,068, approximately half of whom are aged 14 or less. This estimate explicitly takes into account the effects of AIDS, which has a significant effect on the demographics of the country. Less than half the children attend primary school, and a higher percentage of those who go to school are Tutsi. Few Hutu go on to secondary school. Both sides in the civil war used child soldiers, and UNICEF estimated in 2004 that 6,000 to 7,000 children were still mobilized.

Roughly 85 percent of the population is of Hutu ethnic origin; most of the remaining population are Tutsi, with a minority of Twa (Pygmy), and a few thousand Europeans and South Asians. The population density of around 753/sq. mi (315 persons/sq. km) is the second highest in sub-Saharan Africa, behind only Rwanda.

The largest religion is Roman Catholicism (62 percent), followed by indigenous beliefs (23 percent) and a minority of Protestants (5 percent) and Muslims (10 percent). However, The Anglican Church of Burundi [4] claims over 10 percent of the population as members and recent reports indicate the Christian population may be as high as 90 percent, with most of the remainder being Muslim. [5]. Care should therefore be taken with these statistics.

The official languages are Kirundi and French, although Swahili is spoken along the eastern border.

Culture

All Burundians enjoy music and dance. The Hutu use song for special occasions such as the birth of a child and harvesting crops, as well as for everyday events. The Tutsi also sing, with specific songs for activities in their lives such as feeding cattle. Dance, accompanied by drums, also serves ceremonial purposes. The Master Drummers of Burundi are the most famous performing group from the nation. Basket-weaving and pottery are crafts traditionally done by women for household use.

Football (soccer) is the most popular sport.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • U.S. State Deptartment, Background Notes and Human Rights Report [6]
  • Human Rights Watch, Burundi [7], observed February 14, 2007.
  • UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, IRIN News [8], observed February 14, 2007.
  • John Iliffe, Africans: The History of a Continent, 1995. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK. ISBN 521484227
  • Kristine Brennan, Burundi, 2005. Mason Crest Publishers, Broomall, PA. ISBN 1590848209
  • Charles H. Cutter, Africa: 2006, 41st ed., 2006. Stryker-Post Publications, Harpers Ferry, WV. ISBN 1887985727

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