NI Global Issues for Learners of English > Issues > Africa > African War & African Peace
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African War and African PeaceWar - and working for peace - in BurundiIkaweba Bunting is a member of the team from the Mwalimu
Nyerere Foundation that is working to bring peace in Burundi. He remembers
a time when he worked with Burundian refugees, |
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REFUGEES
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BURUNDI REFUGEES are people who have been forced to leave their homes in war SHELTER: somewhere that gives protection from the weather and so on FLEE [FLED, FLED]: to leave somewhere quickly to escape danger THE HUMAN RACE: all of humanity SHARE: give a part of what one has to someone else MILITARY: soldiers
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Background to the conflict in BurundiThere has been political and ethnic violence in Burundi for many years. Traditionally, the violence has been between the Hutu majority, and the Tutsi minority. The Tutsi minority had been given more influence by the Germans and then the Belgians when Burundi was a colony. (Belgium gained Burundi after Germany was defeated in World War One.) Burundi became independent from Belgium in 1962. However, in Burundi, like other countries in Africa, the problems created by colonial rule did not go away when the colonists went home. Ethnic origins have continued to play a major part in the political, military and economic divisions in Burundi, although the situation is very complicated. |
BACKGROUND: information that explains what is happening ETHNIC: relating to different races and groups of people ETHNIC VIOLENCE: violence that is motivated by racial and group conflict MAJORITY: the larger number, the group with the larger number of people MINORITY: the smaller number, a group with a smaller number of people |
An AFRICAN PEACE PROCESS:
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INITIATIVE: a new approach GENOCIDE: the killing of an entire group of people MEDIATE: to work between groups to try to get agreement
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NyerereNyerere was known as Mwalimu, which means "teacher". His style was to be very patient; to listen to all sides, to let everyone express their hostility and their anger, and then slowly to bring them closer to agreement. After each negotiating session, Nyerere would tell Mandela what happened and hear his ideas too. By the time of Nyerere's death in 1999, it was time to move forward from discussion, and to take more active steps towards peace. MandelaMandela is a good man to try to achieve this: his life has been a fight against injustice and he spent 27 years as a political prisoner. Mandela is a man who does not compromise with what he believes to be morally right, even if it is not very diplomatic. One time, when President Buyoya invited Mandela to go to Burundi, Mandela replied that it would be difficult for him to go to Burundi, where President Buyoya put people in prison just because they disagreed with him. When Mandela finally went to Burundi, he visited the prisons and said that political prisoners had to be released. He also warned the army that they would have to leave politics. |
PATIENT: having the ability to wait calmly and accept delays HOSTILITY: strong unfriendly feelings NEGOTIATE: to talk about differences to reach agreement COMPROMISE: to give up some demands DIPLOMATIC: acting carefully so as not to upset anyone |
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Peace has not been achieved yet, but if this peace process can succeed, it will be of great importance not only for Burundi, but for all of Africa. The task is an extremely difficult one, after years of violence and suffering - to change the way people think and feel so that Africans can live together in spite of their differences, and work to build a united Africa. |
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Adapted from the article Mwalimu, Mandela and the long road to peace,
by Ikaweba Bunting, in the August 2000 issue of the New Internationalist
© 2000: the New Internationalist
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Last Modified: 3rd January 2001