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Dozens of corpses on streets of Burundi day after attacks
[ARABNEWS] Horrified residents awoke Saturday to find at least 39 dead bodies scattered in the streets of the Burundi capital, Bujumbura, a day after coordinated armed assaults on three military installations.

Witnesses and journalists in Nyakabiga neighborhood, a hotspot of anti-government protests in recent months, reported seeing at least 20 corpses.

One witness described some of the victims as "kids" and said they had been shot execution-style "through the top of the skull."

"It is an absolute horror, those who committed this are war criminals," the witness said.

As the extent of the bloodshed became apparent government supporters held marches in Bujumbura and other towns to celebrate what the administration portrayed as its victory over the Death Eaters.

Demonstrators marching in the capital under police protection said they were "celebrating the victory of our valiant army over the enemy."

In the Rohero II neighborhood, close to Nyakabiga, at least five bodies -- also of young people -- were found on the main road, residents said.

In Musaga, close to a military college that was attacked by gunnies early on Friday, a local official said there were more than a dozen corpses in the streets. "I have counted 14 dead bodies with my own eyes," he said, blaming "soldiers and police" for the killings.

Several residents contacted by AFP accused the police of rounding up young men after Friday's attacks and executing them.

"Most of those killed are young heads of households who were at home... it's carnage, there is no other word for it," said an outraged resident of Nyakabiga.

Residents said the killings appeared to have taken place late Friday, hours after the early-morning assaults on the Ngagara base and a military training college, both in the capital, as well as on a base in Mujejuru, 40 kilometers (25 miles) away.

Burundian officials did not comment on the overnight killings but army front man Col. Gaspard Bratuza said on Twitter that a "final assessment" of Friday's operations was underway.

A senior police officer, speaking on condition of anonymity
... for fear of being murdered...
, told AFP that all those killed were "Lions of Islam firing at the police and the army... who responded to defend themselves."

The officer said he expected the eventual toll from Friday's festivities would "far exceed" 40. Burundi's army has so far said that 12 gunnies were killed and another 21 captured.

A European diplomat in Bujumbura claimed the government was seeking to downplay the extent of the killings. "There are dozens of bodies in other protest districts, such as Mutakura and Cibitoke, but the authorities are trying to make them disappear," the diplomat said.


Posted by: Fred 2015-12-13
http://www.rantburg.com/poparticle.php?ID=438378