NAIROBI
The anticipated signing of a Burundi peace agreement next week is
"unlikely", Burundi's army spokesman Longin Minani told IRIN. "We don't
think there will be a signing of the agreement next week," he said. "We
haven't seen the document and the population hasn't agreed on certain
issues," Minani observed. "There could only be a plenary session, but not
the signing because all those negotiating have said they are not ready." Minani blamed a "lack of communication" between the negotiators and the facilitation team leading to the presumption that there an accord would be signed on 20 July, a day after the Arusha talks resume.
The executive director of the Nyerere Foundation, Mark Bomani, told IRIN
on Tuesday that the signing of the agreement would only take place if the
document was ready and particularly, if "the negotiating groups agree so".
"As it is, there are certain issues the groups have not agreed on yet,
such as, who will lead the transition government and also who will
implement the agreement," he explained. He said delegates were divided on the latter issue with some saying they did not want foreign organisations involved in monitoring the implementation of the accord while others advocated a mixture of foreigners and Burundians.
"The date of the signing will be discussed in next week's meeting which
starts on Monday," Bomani said. He also confirmed that East African heads
of state - Kenyan President Daniel arap Moi, Tanzania's Benjamin Mkapa and
Uganda's Yoweri Museveni - would meet in Arusha on Wednesday next week to
discuss "crucial" issues of the peace process. The South African
Broadcasting Corporation (SABC) last week quoted Burundi peace facilitator
Nelson Mandela as saying he expected the peace accord to be signed on 20
July.
This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions