Kampala — The leader of a Burundi opposition party was killed on Saturday by unknown assailants in the nation’s capital, Bujumbura, local media reported. Iwacu, a prominent news organisation in Burundi, reported on its website that Zedi Feruzi of the UPD-Zigamibanga party was slain late Saturday in a drive-by shooting in which at least one of his bodyguards was also killed.

Feruzi was outside his house when a car approached and its occupants sprayed him with bullets, according to Iwacu.

His killing, which took place in Bujumbura’s Ngangara district, is likely to raise tensions in this Central African country that has been hit by political unrest since the announcement late last month that President Pierre Nkurunziza would seek another term in office.

The UN secretary-general condemned the killing and said it threatens to “entrench mistrust and trigger further violence,” a statement from Ban Ki-moon’s spokesperson said.

There have been almost daily street protests in Bujumbura over Nkurunziza’s third-term bid, a decision that also sparked a failed move by some senior military officers to oust the president.

At least 20 people have died and 431 people have been wounded in street protests against the president’s decision to run in the elections scheduled for June 26.

Protesters say Nkurunziza’s bid for a third term is illegal because the constitution only allows for two five-year terms, and some protesters are vowing to stay on the streets until Nkurunziza rescinds his decision to seek a third term.

Nkurunziza maintains he can seek re-election because parliament — not the people — elected him for his first term.

Amid the unrest, the international community has been urging Nkurunziza to delay the elections, and the US has expressed disappointment over Nkurunziza’s decision to seek more time in office.

Up to 200,000 Burundians have fled to neighbouring countries, citing fears over political violence. Many of them have sought refuge in unsanitary refugee camps in Tanzania, where they also face a cholera outbreak in which more than 30 people have died in recent days. Others have fled to Congo and Rwanda.

Burundi, a poor country which exports mostly coffee and depends heavily on foreign aid, experienced an ethnic-based civil war from 1993 to 2003 which killed at least 250,000 people.

Observers say that, while the current crisis is mostly political, it may boil over into ethnic strife if political violence over the president’s third term intensifies.

Nkurunziza, an ethnic Hutu, first came to power in 2005 and was re-elected unopposed in 2010 after an opposition boycott.

Ban’s statement encouraged parties in Burundi to pursue a UN-led political dialogue that resumed on Thursday. — AFP

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