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arcobalengo · 1 year
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MORTI PER COVID IN AFRICA
L'Africa è stata colpita dal covid in modo molto particolare, visto che la popolazione non sembra essersene neppure accorta, nonostante praticamente nessuno si sia vaccinato, ma i politici hanno pagato un caro prezzo, schiattando come mosche.
Il presidente del Burundi Pierre Nkurunziza ad esempio, mosto poche settimane dopo aver espulso i rappresentanti dell'OMS nel 2020, a soli 55 anni.
Il primo ministro di Eswatini Ambrose Mandvulo Dlamini, morto a fine 2020 a soli 52 anni.
Il ministro dei Servizi Pubblici di Eswatini Ntshangase Christian, morto a gennaio 2021 a 60 anni.
Il ministro del Lavoro di Eswatini Makhosi Vilakati, morto a gennaio 2021 a 45 anni.
Dopo questi morti, il governo di Eswatini autorizzò la vaccinazione generale, nell'aprile 2021, e non si è più registrato alcun morto fra i politici, mentre iniziarono i morti fra la popolazione di "coincidenze".
Il ministro dei Trasporti del Malawi Sidik Mia morì a gennaio 2021 a 55 anni.
Il ministro del Governo Locale del Malawi Lingson Belekanyama morì nel gennaio 2021.
A marzo 2021 il Malawi autorizzò l'uso dei vaccini covid, nessun politico è più morto.
Il ministro per la Presidenza del Sud Africa Jackson Mphikwa Mthembu morì a gennaio 2021 a 62 anni.
Il ministro della Giustizia della Tanzania morì a maggio 2020.
Il presidente della Tanzania Johm Magufuli morì a marzo 2021 a 61 anni. Fu quello che prese per il culo l'OMS mostrando i test positivi fatti ad una capra ed una papaya.
Il successore di Magufuli cambiò le leggi adattandosi alle richieste di vaccini e lockdown dell'OMS.
Il vice presidente dello Zanzibar Maalim Seif Sharif Hamad morì a febbraio 2021.
Il ministro dell'Agricoltura dello Zimbawe Perrance Shiri morì a luglio 2020.
Il ministro degli Affari Esteri dello Zimbawe Sibuso Moyo morì a gennaio 2021 a 60 anni.
Il Ministro dei Trasporti dello Zimbawe Joel Matiza morì a gennaio 2021 a 60 anni.
Il Primo Ministro della Costa d'Avorio morì a marzo 2021 a 56 anni.
La Regina del Sud Africa ed il Re degli Zulu (fratello e sorella) morirono nel luglio 2020 e marzo 2021.
Messi tutti in fila così fanno una bella coincidenza, nevvero?
➡️ Un nutrizionista italiano in Australia: t.me/italiaaustralia
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lboogie1906 · 3 months
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President Évariste Ndayishimiye (born on June 17, 1968) in Giheta, Burundi. After serving in the Burundi Army, he began studies in law at the Université du Burundi in Bujumbura. His legal education was interrupted by the civil war and ethnic divisions between the Hutu and the Tutsi ethnic groups, which cost at least 300,000 lives during its thirteen years.
He married Angélique Ndayubaha Ndayishimiye (2003) an economist and the President of the Good Action Foundation “Umugiraneza.” They are the parents of six children.
He was the Interior and Public Security Minister for Burundi, he served as the personal military aide to President Pierre Nkurunziza. He received an LLB from Université Sagesse d’Afrique and chaired the Burundi National Olympic Committee. He became the Secretary-General of The National Council for the Defense of Democracy, a new Burundi political party. In 2018, he was endorsed by President Nkurunziza as his replacement after the incumbent decided not to run for a fourth term.
On June 18, 2020, he was sworn in as the 9th president of Burundi in the capital city of Gitega after winning 68 percent of the national vote in an election marred by violence and the death of Nkurunziza ten days earlier. Opposition leaders claimed the election was rigged but he vowed to “preserve and promote the country’s independence, love, and equitably achieved development. He had four journalists and two human rights defenders released from prison and announced the pardon or early release of more than 5,000 prisoners.
He addressed the UN General Assembly’s 76th session declaring that refugees who had fled the nation were welcome to return. He announced a strategic action plan designed to protect human rights in Burundi and discussed the restoration of peace, security, stability, and social cohesion in this civil war-torn nation.
In a country where the COVID-19 pandemic remains a threat to thousands of Burundi citizens, he rejected vaccines from outside the nation and closed its borders to foreigners he claimed for safety. To protect himself against COVID-19, he did receive sizable doses of the Chinese Sinopharm BIBP vaccine. #africanhistory365 #africanexcellence
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fatumasvoice · 5 years
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Burundi's Secret Killing House: Silencing Dissent with a River of Blood
Is the red liquid flowing from inside Burundi’s Secret Killing House, human blood? What has the Government of Burundi said about the alleged killings? Is the Pierre Nkurunziza, the President of Burundi behind the human rights violations?
Is the red liquid flowing from inside Burundi’s Secret Killing House, human blood? What has the Government of Burundi said about the alleged killings? Is the Pierre Nkurunziza, the President of Burundi behind the human rights violations?
In December 2016, a video is widely shared by Burundian social media accounts. It shows red liquid flowing from the gutter of a private property. Those who…
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touchrwanda · 4 years
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Barashakishwa bashinjwa kugerageza guhirika ubutegetsi bwa Pierre Nkurunziza muri 2015
Barashakishwa bashinjwa kugerageza guhirika ubutegetsi bwa Pierre Nkurunziza muri 2015
Leta y’u Burundi irashakisha abantu 34 ishinja kugerageza guhirika ubutegetsi bwa Pierre Nkurunziza tariki ya 13 Gicurasi 2015, kugira ngo ubutabera bwayo bubakurikirane. Nk’uko bigaragara ku rupapuro rw’Umunyamabanga Mukuru w’Urukiko rw’Ikirenga mu Burundi rwo ku wa 2 Gashyantare 2016, aba barimo abahoze ari abasirikare, barangajwe imbere na Maj. Gen. Godefroid Niyombare wari uyoboye iki gikorwa…
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vilaspatelvlogs · 4 years
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इस देश के राष्‍ट्रपति की मौत की गुत्‍थी उलझी, कोरोना या हार्ट अटैक होने पर उठे सवाल
इस देश के राष्‍ट्रपति की मौत की गुत्‍थी उलझी, कोरोना या हार्ट अटैक होने पर उठे सवाल
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नैरोबी: बुरुंडी के राष्ट्रपति पिएरे नकुरुंजिजा की दिल का दौरा पड़ने की वजह से मौत हो गई. उनकी उम्र 56 साल थी. बुरुंडी की सरकार ने कहा है कि नकुरुंजिजा का निधन दिल का दौरा पड़ने से हुआ. लेकिन कई लोगों को आशंका है कि राष्ट्रपति की मौत कोरोना वायरस (Coronavirus) के कारण हुई है.
सरकार ने सोशल मीडिया पर जारी एक बयान में कहा कि राष्ट्रपति को तबियत बिगड़ने के कारण शनिवार रात को अस्पताल में…
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kafunel · 4 years
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URGENT ! Burundi: décès du président Pierre Nkurunziza à l'âge de 55 ans
URGENT ! Burundi: décès du président Pierre Nkurunziza à l’âge de 55 ans
Le gouvernement du Burundi vient d’annoncer, ce mardi 9 juin dans un communiqué, « le décès inopiné » du président Pierre Nkurunziza, qui était hospitalisé depuis samedi après un malaise. Pierre Nkurunziza, au pouvoir depuis 2005, est décédé ce lundi officiellement des suites d’un « arrêt cardiaque », annoncent les autorités, qui ont décrété un deuil national de sept jours.
L’information est…
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anki14542 · 4 years
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नहीं रहे बुरुंडी के राष्ट्रपति पिएरे नकुरुंजिजा, बड़ा सवाल- क्या है उनकी मौत का कारण?
नहीं रहे बुरुंडी के राष्ट्रपति पिएरे नकुरुंजिजा, बड़ा सवाल- क्या है उनकी मौत का कारण?
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Image Source : AP FILE Burundi says President Pierre Nkurunziza has died of heart attack.
नैरोबी: बुरुंडी के राष्ट्रपति पिएरे नकुरुंजिजा का दिल का दौरा पड़ने के बाद निधन हो गया। वह 56 वर्ष के थे। बुरुंडी की सरकार ने कहा है कि नकुरुंजिजा का निधन दिल का दौरा पड़ने से हुआ, हालांकि कई लोगों को आशंका है कि राष्ट्रपति का निधन कोरोना वायरस के संक्रमण…
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profzubby · 4 years
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Burundi President Applauds Chosen Successor On Election Win (FILES) Burundi’s President Pierre Nkurunziza gives a speech as he inaugurates the new state house constructed by the Chinese aid in Bujumbura, during its inauguration on September 27, 2019.
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nipashe411 · 4 years
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Burundi in full steam towards poll Burundi holds presidential, legislative and municipal elections on May 20 despite Covid-19 challenges. The General Election will be held 15 years after the country’s emergence from a 12-year civil war, and five years after a major crisis.
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gwydionmisha · 5 years
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TW: Rape, Torture.
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midnightfunk · 5 years
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There’s no such thing as shithole countries.
Just shithole people.
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political-affairs · 9 years
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Burundi : The world's unhappiest place
Burundi is a landlocked country in the African Great Lakes region of East Africa, bordered by Rwanda to the north, Tanzania to the east and south, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo to the west. It is considered part of Central Africa. Burundi's capital is Bujumbura. The southwestern border is adjacent to Lake Tanganyika.
The Twa, Hutu and Tutsi peoples have lived in Burundi for at least five hundred years. For more than 200 years, Burundi was an independent kingdom. At the beginning of the twentieth century, Germany colonized the region. After the First World War and Germany's defeat, it ceded the territory to Belgium. The Belgians ruled Burundi and Rwanda as a European colony known as Ruanda-Urundi. Their intervention exacerbated social differences between the Tutsi and Hutu, and contributed to political unrest in the region. Burundi gained independence in 1962 and initially had a monarchy, but a series of assassinations, coups, and a general climate of regional instability culminated in the establishment of a republic and one-party state in 1966. Bouts of ethnic cleansing and ultimately two civil wars and genocides during the 1970s and again in the 1990s left the country undeveloped and its population as one of the world's poorest.[9] 2015 witnessed large-scale political strife as President Pierre Nkurunziza opted to run for a third term in office, a coup attempt failed and the country's parliamentary and presidential elections were broadly criticized by members of the international community.
In late April 1972, two events led to the outbreak of the First Burundian Genocide. On April 27, 1972, a rebellion led by some Hutu members of the gendarmerie broke out in the lakeside towns of Rumonge and Nyanza-Lac and the rebels declared the short-lived Martyazo Republic. The rebels attacked Tutsi and Hutu who refused to join their rebellion. It is estimated that during this initial Hutu outbreak, anywhere from 800 to 1200 people were killed. At the same time, King Ntare V of Burundi returned from exile, heightening political tension in the country. On 29 April 1972, the 24-year-old Ntare V was murdered and in the subsequent months, the Tutsi-dominated government of Micombero used the army to combat the Hutu rebels and commit genocide in which they targeted members of the Hutu majority. The total number of casualties was never established, but contemporary estimates show that between 80,000 to 210,000 people were killed. In addition, several hundred thousand Hutu are estimated to have fled the genocide into Zaïre, Rwanda, and Tanzania.
Following the civil war and genocide, Micombero became mentally distraught and withdrawn. In 1976, Colonel Jean-Baptiste Bagaza, a Tutsi, led a bloodless coup and toppled Micombero. He then set about promoting various reforms. His administration drafted a new constitution in 1981, which maintained Burundi as a one-party state. In August 1984, Bagaza was elected head of state. During his tenure, Bagaza suppressed political opponents and religious freedoms.
Major Pierre Buyoya (Tutsi) overthrew Bagaza in 1987 and suspended the constitution, dissolving the political parties. He reinstated military rule under the Military Committee for National Salvation (CSMN).[23] Anti-Tutsi ethnic propaganda disseminated by the remnants of the 1972 UBU, which had re-organized as PALIPEHUTU in 1981, led to killings of Tutsi peasants in the northern communes of Ntega and Marangara in August 1988. The death toll was put at 5,000 by the government, though some international NGOs believe this understates the losses.
Between 1993 and 2003, many rounds of peace talks, overseen by regional leaders in Tanzania, South Africa, and Uganda, gradually established power-sharing agreements to satisfy the majority of the contending groups. Initially the South African Protection Support Detachment was deployed to protect Burundian leaders returning from exile. These forces became part of the African Union Mission to Burundi, deployed to help oversee the installation of a transitional government. In June 2004, the UN stepped in and took over peacekeeping responsibilities as a signal of growing international support for the already markedly advanced peace process in Burundi. 
The mission’s mandate, under Chapter VII of the United Nations Charter, has been to monitor cease-fire; carry out disarmament, demobilization, and reintegration of former combatants; support humanitarian assistance and refugee and IDP return; assist with elections; protect international staff and Burundian civilians; monitor Burundi’s troublesome borders, including halting illicit arms flows; and assist in carrying out institutional reforms including those of the Constitution, judiciary, armed forces, and police. The mission has been allotted 5,650 military personnel, 120 civilian police, and about 1,000 international and local civilian personnel. The mission has been functioning well. It has greatly benefited from the transitional government, which has functioned and is in the process of transitioning to one that will be popularly elected.
In April 2015 protests broke out after the ruling party announced President Pierre Nkurunziza would seek a third term in office. Protestors claimed Nkurunziza could not run for a third term in office but the country's constitutional court agreed with the President (although some of its members had fled the country at the time of its vote). An attempted coup d'état on 13 May failed to depose Nkurunziza  who returned to Burundi began purging his government and arrested several of the coup leaders. Following the attempted coup, protests however continued and over 100,000 people had fled the country by 20 May causing a humanitarian emergency. Despite calls by the UN, AU, U.S., France, South Africa, Belgium and various other governments, the ruling party held parliamentary elections on 29 June but these were boycotted by the opposition.
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jayvoicetrg · 4 years
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Obituary: Burundi's President Pierre Nkurunziza
Obituary: Burundi’s President Pierre Nkurunziza
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Nkurunziza took over the country’s highest office in August 2005 [File: Jean Pierre Aime Harerimana/Reuters] EDITOR’S PICKS
Burundi says President Pierre Nkurunziza has died of heart attackyesterday
Burundi court upholds poll results, says Ndayishimiye president6 days ago
Burundi opposition takes presidential election dispute to courtlast week
Burundi election results: What next?2 weeks ago
Bur…
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saynaija · 4 years
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Condolence Message On Death Of President Pierre Nkurunziza Of Burundi By President Buhari
Condolence Message On Death Of President Pierre Nkurunziza Of Burundi By President Buhari
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Condolence Message On Death Of President Pierre Nkurunziza Of Burundi By President Buhari
Condolence Message On Death Of President Pierre Nkurunziza Of Burundi By President Buhari
President Muhammadu Buhari’s statement on the death of President Pierre Nkurunziza of Burundi:
“It is with profound grief and sadness that we received the news of the death of President Pierre Nkurunziza.…
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newsaryavart · 4 years
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अफ्रीकी देश बुरुंडी के राष्ट्रपति का निधन, अगस्त में छोड़ने वाले थे सत्ता Edited By Priyesh Mishra | नवभारतटाइम्स.कॉम | Updated: 10 Jun 2020, 09:53:00 AM IST बुरुंडी के राष्ट्रपति
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