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Domitien Ndayizeye

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Succeeded by
  
Name
  
Domitien Ndayizeye

Preceded by
  

Domitien Ndayizeye PASIDE ANADE ADR na FRODEBU Nyakuri zigiye guserukirwa


Preceded by
  
Frederic BamvuginyumviraMathias Sinamenye

Born
  
2 May 1953 (age 70) Murango, Kayanza Province, Burundi (
1953-05-02
)

Political party
  
Role
  
Former President of Burundi

Party
  
Front for Democracy in Burundi

Previous office
  
President of Burundi (2003–2005)

Presidential term
  
April 30, 2003 – August 26, 2005

Similar People
  
Melchior Ndadaye, Prince Louis Rwagasore, Pierre Nkurunziza

Vice President
  
Presidency end date
  
August 26, 2005

Summit 2013 h e domitien ndayizeye former president of burundi speaking in french


Domitien Ndayizeye (born May 2, 1951 in Murango, Kayanza Province) is a Burundian politician who was President of Burundi from 2003 to 2005. He succeeded Pierre Buyoya, as president on 30 April 2003, after serving as Buyoya's vice president for 18 months. Ndayizeye remained in office until succeeded by Pierre Nkurunziza on 26 August 2005.

Contents

Domitien Ndayizeye UBM News Amakuru agezweho y39abarundi Video Indirimbo

Ndayizeye currently serves as head of the National Gathering for Change (RANAC).

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Under his government, Ndayizeye tried to bridge the gap between the Hutu and the Tutsi people of Burundi through cooperation with other presidents in the region such as Museveni of Uganda and Mkapa of Tanzania.

The attack on Congolese Tutsi refugees at the border of Burundi was considered a test of the president's capacity to maintain law and order and stability in the country. He promised swift retaliation and that the culprits would be apprehended.

In 2004, Ndayizeye proposed a draft constitution to the parliament prior to it being put to the electorate in referendum later in the year. Relations with the Tutsi group were strained, reflected in their boycotting of the legislative session due to consider the proposal. Due to a lack of preparation, the ballot was postponed to late November 2004.

Burundi is still trying to emerge from a civil war that began in 1993 when several groups drawn from the large Hutu majority took up arms against a government and army then dominated by a Tutsi elite.

The interim government pledged to more equitably share power between the two main ethnic groups.

On 21 August 2006, Ndayizeye was arrested in Bujumbura in relation to his alleged role in a coup plot earlier in the year. The Senate lifted his immunity as Senator prior to his arrest. He denied the charges against him in court on December 19 and said that he had "never dreamed of organising a coup, in fact I had given up politics to do business and be with my family". On January 15, 2007, he was acquitted along with former vice president Alphonse-Marie Kadege and three other defendants; two others were sentenced to long prison terms.

During 2010 general elections, as his party representative, he ran for the presidential seat but decided to withdraw from the race together with all opposition parties, after they accused the ruling party of rigging previous councilors' elections.

After opposition politician Zedi Feruzi was killed during the 2015 Burundian unrest Ndayizeye and other opposition parties broke off talks with the government of President Pierre Nkurunziza.

Burundi portrait de l ancien pr sident domitien ndayizeye


References

Domitien Ndayizeye Wikipedia