Freddy Mbonimpa

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Preceded bySaidi Juma
Succeeded byJimmy Hatungimana
Born
Musaga
OccupationDirecteur National de la Médiation et de l'Éducation Citoyenne at the Ombudsman Institution
Freddy Mbonimpa
Mayor of Bujumbura
In office
2015–2020
Preceded bySaidi Juma
Succeeded byJimmy Hatungimana
Personal details
Born
Musaga
OccupationDirecteur National de la Médiation et de l'Éducation Citoyenne at the Ombudsman Institution

Freddy Mbonimpa is a Burundian politician who was mayor of Bujumbura from 2015 to 2020. He held office during a period of political unrest after the decision of the President of Burundi to run for a third term.

In October 2015 the President of the National Assembly asked the constitutional court to declare that the seat of deputy Freddy Mbonimpa was vacant, since he had been named Mayor of Bujumbura by a decree of 2 September 2015. The court agreed.[1]

Security issues

Civil unrest began in April 2015 when President Pierre Nkurunziza announced his intention of running for a third term.[2] In November 2015 about ten people attacked Freddy Mbonimpa's house in Rohero, shooting and throwing grenades. There were no deaths.[3] In December 2015 the president of Burundi named Freddy Mbonimpa to the National Security Council.[4]

In February 2016 Mbonimpa banned motorbikes from the city center after motorbike taxis were used in several grenade attacks. The proposal by the African Union to deploy a peacekeeping force in Burundi had been rejected, and peace talks between the government and representatives of the opposition had broken down. Security forces and opposition activists each blamed the other side for these attacks.[5]

On just one day in May 2016 about a hundred people were arrested in the district of Musaga, where pro-opposition protest had been staged. Mbonimpa justified the operation on the basis of the need to achieve control of the movements of the population. All heads of households were required to file a "household notebook" with the municipality that named the members of the household, parents and servants. They were also required to report the names of all visitors.[2]

In June 2017 Mbonimpa banned the opposition coalition "Amizero y'Abarundi" (Hope of Burundians) from holding a press conference, saying it "does not have legal personality in the eyes of the law." The exiled president of the coalition, Pierre Célestin Ndikumana of the FNL, said the regime wanted to prevent deputies from denouncing the many cases of extrajudicial executions, arbitrary arrests or forced disappearances of FNL members.[6]

In May 2019 Freddy Mbonimpa addressed the security committees of all communes, zones and neighborhoods of the city of Bujumbura. He noted that the 2020 elections were approaching and asked the grassroots committees to monitor the movements of all people who may disturb public order, to make sure household notebooks were up to date, and to provide reports on security issues. He addressed other issues such as the trade in prohibited drinks and narcotics, noisy bars, bar opening times, bandit attacks in unlit places and closure of the Buterere garbage dump.[7]

On 16 March 2020 Mbonimpa held a meeting to discuss security with for municipal administrators, neighborhood leaders and security bodies. Participants raised concerns about drug use among young people, and products being sold at prices other than those set by the government, such as sugar, cement and Brarudi products. The Brarudi and Buceco factory executives were present at the meeting and said their prices had not been raised. They discussed tightening measures to enforce opening and closing hours of cabarets and decided to suspend mobile casino games.[8]

Other activity

References

Sources

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