Fiche du document numéro 12927

Num
12927
Date
Thursday April 7, 1994
Amj
Fichier
Taille
14835
Urlorg
Titre
Burundi's Ntaryamira strove for ethnic harmony
Cote
lba0000020011120dq4700xo8
Source
Type
Dépêche d'agence
Langue
EN
Citation
BUJUMBURA, April 7 (Reuter) - Cyrien Ntaryamira, the urbane Burundi
president slain in neighbouring Rwanda on Wednesday, was a moderate who
fought in vain to end ethnic hatred tearing apart his country.

Ntaryamira and Rwandan President Juvenal Habyarimana were killed along
with two Burundi ministers and five senior Rwandan officials when their
plane crashed in the Rwandan capital of Kigali. Officials said the
plane was hit by a rocket.

Ntaryamira, a 38-year-old agronomist, made a reluctant entry into
politics last July when Burundi's first democratically elected,
president Melchior Ndadaye, promoted him to agriculture minister from a
career civil service job as agriculture planner.

A political moderate who abhorred tribal animosities between the
majority Hutu tribe and the minority Tutsi in this central African
state, Ntaryamira had promoted Tutsis to top positions as a sign of
reconciliation when he headed the agriculture ministry.

Renegade soldiers from the Tutsi-dominated army murdered Ndadaye on
October 21 in a failed coup, triggering ethnic slaughter across the
country which killed up to 50,000 people.

Ntaryamira was a compromise between the former ruling UPRONA (Party for
Unity and Progress) and the slain Ndadaye's Front for Democracy in
Burundi (FRODEBU).

Even political opponents credited him with having strong grassroots
support across the tribal divide especially in rural areas.

He had a clean record, genuinely committed to peace and
reconciliation, a man greatly pained when slow progress was made in
ending the killings,
a Western diplomat in Bujumbura said.

A calm, soft-spoken man, intelligent and brilliant. He was extremely
popular with many of the ordinary civilians.


As a young man, pains of tribal strife left an indelible mark on
Ntaryamira, a Hutu. He fled his native Rwanda after massacres in 1972
that killed an estimated 100,000 people.

Ntaryamira studied in Rwandan schools and the national university in
Kigali where he graduated with honours in agronomy.

He worked briefly in his adopted home but left in the mid-1980s to
return home after former military ruler Jean Pierre Buyoya appealed for
educated Burundians to rebuild the country.

Ntaryamira was married with three young children.

(c) Reuters Limited 1994
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