Burundi said on
Tuesday it had released six juveniles who were part of a group of 11
students jailed last week for allegedly defacing a photograph of
President Pierre Nkurunziza in a school text book.
Authorities
in the central African country have been cracking down on critics and
the opposition against a
backdrop of tension and violence sparked by
Nkurunziza's decision to run for a third term last year.
Last
Friday, police shot and wounded a student and a taxi driver during a
protest by schoolchildren against the arrest of their colleagues a day
earlier.
Agnes Bangiricenge, spokeswoman for the
ministry of justice said in a statement six of the students had been
dealt with under proceedings for juvenile offenders. "After a hearing...the juvenile judge provisionally released them,” she said.
Prosecution of the other five students, aged between 18 and 21, would proceed "normally".
In
another incident last month, more than 300 students of a school in the
capital's Ruziba neighbourhood were sent home after being accused of
defacing Nkurunziza's image.
Violence broke out in Burundi last year after Nkurunziza announced he would seek re-election for a third term.
Opponents
accused him of violating the constitution, which they said limited him
to two five-year terms. The government cited a court ruling which they
said cleared him to stand again, and Nkurunziza subsequently won
re-election last July.
More than 450 people have
been killed in violence between government security forces and various
rebel factions opposed to his continued rule. The United Nations
estimates the year-long violence has displaced over 250,000 Burundians,
who have fled mostly to Tanzania and other neighbouring countries.
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