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Burundian refugees call for deal to allow them home

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A Burundian refugee holds her child as they arrive to the Nyabitare transit site after being transported from Tanzania to neighbouring Burundi, as part of a repatriation program, in the Gisuru commune, Ruyigi province, Burundi, October 3, 2019. (Reuters)

More than 60,000 Burundian refugees have been living in Mahama camp, in eastern Rwanda, since the 2015 political crisis over the late former President Pierre Nkurunziza’s bid for a third term.

A letter written by a group of Burundian refugees living in a camp in Rwanda asked their president to cooperate with Rwanda and the UN refugee agency, UNHCR, to repatriate them. However, there is not yet an agreement between the two countries and the UNHCR on how to carry it out.

According to an interview done by the BBC news agency,Emmanuel Bizimana, one of the signatories told said that “now it is time now to return home”, adding:‘’ We know our country is safe now, that’s why we wrote to our president.”

In his inaugural speech in June, President Evariste Ndayishimiye pleaded for refugees to return and since then nearly 2,000 have come back from Tanzania, UN figures show.

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