Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-rcrh6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-23T19:27:42.206Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Institutional Failure and Ethnic Conflicts in Burundi

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 May 2014

Abstract:

Since the military coup d'état of October 21, 1993 Burundi is experiencing a genocide, albeit at a slow pace, while the leaders engage in a series of ‘dialogue of the deaf.’ Meanwhile, half-truths are being told about the causes of the crisis and inappropriate solutions are being proposed for an incorrectly diagnosed structural social malaise. This paper examines the causes of ethnic violence by emphasizing the impact of institutional failure. The ‘privatization’ of key institutions such as the military, the judiciary, and the education system by ethnic and regional entities, has resulted in a divorce between state institutions and the population. Violence is created and maintained in a vicious cycle of frustration–claims and counterclaims–and repression as the rulers try to hold on to power while the oppressed categories of the population claim for their fair share in national resources. Restoration of peace and stability will require an extensive reform of key institutions to ensure equity and protection of rights and property for all citizens.

Résumé:

Résumé:

Depuis le coup d'état militaire du 21 Octobre 1993, le Burundi est consumé par un génocide à petit feu, pendant que les dirigeants s'engagent dans une série de dialogues de sourds. Entre temps, les causes de la crise font l'object de demi-vérités et des solutions impropres sont proposées pour un mal social structurel incorrectement diagnostiqué. Ce papier examine les causes de la violence ethnique en mettant en exergue l'impact de la faillite des institutions. La ‘privatisation’ des institutions clés comme l'armée, le système judiciaire et l'éducation par des entités ethniques et régionales a causé le divorce entre les institutions étatiques et la majorité de la population. La violence est créeé et maintenue dans un cercle vicieux de frustration—revendications et contre revendications—répression, quand les dirigeants cherchent à s'acrocher au pouvoir alors que les opprimés leur part légitime dans les ressources nationales. Le rétablissement de la paix et la stabilité nécessitera une réforme extensive des institutions clés pour assurer l'équité et la protection des droits et de la propriété pour tous les citoyens.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © African Studies Association 1998

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Aké, Claude. 1996. Development and Democracy in Africa. Washington, D.C.: The Brookings Institution.Google Scholar
Askin, Steve and Collin, Carole. 1993. “External Collusion with Kleptocracy: Can Zaire Recapture its Stolen Wealth?,” Review of African Political Economy, 57: 7285.Google Scholar
Boyce, James and Ndikumana, Leonce. 1998. “Congo's Odious Debt: External Borrowing and Capital Flight in Zaire,” forthcoming. Development and Change Vol 29.Google Scholar
Chossudovsky, Michel. 1996. “Economic Genocide in Rwanda,” Economic and Political Weekly 31 (15): 938941.Google Scholar
De Wall, Alex and Omaar, Rakiya. 1995. “The Genocide in Rwanda and the International Response,” Current History 94(591):156161.Google Scholar
D'Hertefelt, M., Trouwborst, A., and Scherer, J. 1962. LesAnciens Royaumes de la Zane Interlacustre Meridionale. London: International African Institute.Google Scholar
Ford, Robert E. 1995. “The Population-Environment Nexus and Vulnerability Assessment in Africa,” Geojournal 35(2):207216.Google Scholar
Fournaris, Olivier. 1996. “Au Commencement Etait la Surpopulation,” Jeune Afrique No. 1861, (09 4-10) :35.Google Scholar
Hakizimana, Deo. 1992. Burundi: Le Non-Dit. Geneva: Editions Remesha.Google Scholar
IMF. 19671994. World Debt Tables.Google Scholar
IMF. 1990, 1996. International Financial Statistics Yearbook.Google Scholar
Khan, Mushtaq. 1995. “State Failure in Weak States: A Critique of New Institutionalist Explanations,” in Harriss, John, Hunter, Janet, and Lewis, Colin M. (eds.) The New Institutional Economics and Third World Development. New York: Routledge, pp 7186.Google Scholar
Lemarchand, René. 1994a. Burundi. Ethnocide as Discourse and Practice. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Lemarchand, René. 1994b. “Managing Transition Anarchies: Rwanda, Burundi, and South Africa in Comparative Perspective,” Journal of Modern African Studies, 32(4):581604.Google Scholar
Lemarchand, René. 1989. “The Report of The National Commission to Study The Question of National Unity In Burundi: A Critical Comment,” Journal of Modem African Studies, 27(4):685696.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lemarchand, René. 1970. Rwanda and Burundi. London: Pall Mall.Google Scholar
Lin, Justin Yifu and Nugent, Jeffrey B. 1995. “Institutions and Economic Development,” in Behrman, J. and Srinivasan, T.N. (eds.) Handbook of Development Economics, vol. 111:23012365.Google Scholar
Mpozagara, G. 1971. La République du Burundi, Paris: Editions Berger-Levrault.Google Scholar
Mworoha, Emile. 1977. Peuples et Rois de l'Afrique des Lacs. Dakar-Abidjan: Nouvelles Editions Africaines.Google Scholar
North, Douglass. 1995. “Institutional Economies and Third World Development,” in Harriss, John, Hunter, Janet, and Lewis, Colin M. (eds.) The New Institutional Economics and Third World Development. New York: Routledge, 1726.Google Scholar
North, Douglass. 1990. Institutions, Institutional Change and Economic Performance. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Nsanze, Térence. 1970. L'édification de la République du Burundi au Carréfour de l'Afrique. Bruxelles: Editions Remarques Africaines.Google Scholar
Ntibazonkiza, Raphaël. 1993. Au Royaume des Seigneurs de la Lance: Une Approche Historique de la Question Ethnique au Burundi, Tome 2. Bruxelles: Bruxelles-Droits de L'Homme.Google Scholar
Olson, Jennifer M. 1995. “Behind The Recent tragedy in Burundi,” Geojournal, 35(2):217222.Google Scholar
Riker, William H. 1976. “Comments on Vincent Ostrom's Paper”, Public Choice, 27:1315.Google Scholar
Uvin, Peter. 1996a. “Development, Aid and Conflict. Reflections from the Case of Rwanda,” United Nations University, World Institute for Development Economic Research, Research for Action No. 24.Google Scholar
Uvin, Peter. 1996b. “Rwanda: The Making of a Tragedy,” Environment 38(3):715.Google Scholar
World Bank. 1997. World Development Indicators 1997 (CDROM version).Google Scholar