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Belgium to grant US $4 million for teachers' salary arrears

Belgium will assist Burundi with a grant of 4.3 million euros (US $4,218,730) to cover a portion of public school teachers' salary arrears "as this has unsettled civil life", Belgian Prime Minister Guy Verhofstadt announced last week, at the end of a meeting with Burundi President Pierre Buyoya in Brussels. The 18,000 public school teachers in Burundi (almost the half of the total civil servants of the country) were on strike from 13 May to 4 July 2002 for an improvement of their living conditions and adoption of a special statute for teachers. The strike threatened to plunge the country into deeper crisis. The government of Burundi has since promised to increase the teachers' salaries some 30 to 40 percent beginning in 2003, AFP reported. The Belgian funding came at the request of Buyoya, IRIN learned from the office of Belgian State Secretary for Cooperation, Eddy Boutmans, who also attended the meeting. Verhofstadt and Boutmans also discussed the political situation of the country. They recalled the "need for a [peace] agreement in the coming days". Newly appointed Belgian Special Ambassador for the Great Lakes Region, Koen Vervaeke, is due to lead a mission to Burundi in the coming days in order "to place maximum pressure on all parties, including rebels, to sit around the table", Verhofstadt said.

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

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