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Wednesday, 11 July, 2001, 14:19 GMT 15:19 UK
SA troops earmarked for Burundi
![]() The conflict has raged for nearly a decade
Burundian President Pierre Buyoya has said that South Africa, Nigeria, Senegal and Ghana have agreed to send peacekeeping troops to his country.
President Buyoya told a news conference at an African summit in Zambia that defence ministers of the four states and Burundi met last week in Pretoria, but deployment would not take place until an agreed ceasefire was in place
The breakthrough comes after leaders of the country's 19 political parties attended Pretoria peace talks chaired by former South African President Nelson Mandela, who is mediating in the conflict. Peace deal President Buyoya, a member of the minority Tutsi community, is to remain head of state for the first 18 months of a new three-year transitional government. He will have a Hutu politician as his vice-president, before the roles are reversed half-way through the three-year term.
Efforts to implement a peace accord signed last year had been stalled by wrangling among the main parties over who should hold the first rotating leadership. A majority of Burundi's politicians had rejected Mr Buyoya as the Tutsi leader, but they could not agree on a replacement. Mr Mandela, however, said that obstacle had now been overcome. "This is a fixed decision," he told reporters after lengthy talks in Pretoria.
Hutu leader Domitien Ndayizeye will serve as vice-president for the first 18 months. The presidency and vice-presidency for the second 18 months are still to be decided. Burundi's Hutu rebels are not party to the peace agreement, but Mr Mandela said he remained optimistic they would "come on board". Terms of accord The Tutsi minority make up only 15% of the population of Burundi. Correspondents say they have long been fearful of the Hutu majority - especially after the genocide in neighbouring Rwanda where the balance of the two ethnic groups is identical. Mr Buyoya is reported to have agreed to abide by 11 conditions laid down by Mr Mandela and his team, amongst them:
Most importantly, Mr Buyoya must leave office at the end of the 18-month term. A regional summit is scheduled for 23 August, before which he must commit himself to all 11 conditions.
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