Burundi backs reforms that could extend Nkurunziza rule
Burundians overwhelmingly backed constitutional reforms that bolster President Pierre Nkurunziza's power and allow him to seek another two terms in office, results showed Monday.
Election commission chief Pierre-Claver Ndayicariye said 73 percent of voters had voted "Yes" in a referendum last Thursday, which the opposition and rights groups said took place in a climate of fear and repression.
Only 19 percent voted "No" in the vote which scored a turnout of 96 percent. Spoiled ballots made up four percent of votes cast.
The results -- which exclude figures from the diaspora representing 0.27 percent of the vote -- are provisional and must be validated by the constitutional court within nine days.
Observers had widely expected the reforms to pass, partly due to support Nkurunziza still holds in rural areas, but also due to a three-year crackdown on dissent, the media and civil society.
A presidential decree ruled earlier this month that anyone advising voters to boycott the vote risked up to three years in jail.
Nkurunziza, 54, who has been in power since 2005, plunged his tiny east African nation into crisis in 2015 when he circumvented a constitutional two-term limit, arguing his first term came after an election by parliament.
The move sparked angry protests, a government crackdown, coup attempt and widespread abuses which prompted the International Criminal Court to launch a probe into the atrocities.
This angered Burundi which became the first country to withdraw from the ICC.
At least 1,200 people have died and 400,000 been displaced, according to the ICC.
The constitutional reforms, which include measures that hand more power to Nkurunziza and his ruling CNDD-FDD, change term limits to seven years, meaning he could start again from scratch in 2020.
- 'Neither free nor transparent' -
The massive turnout bolstered the legitimacy of the vote, however rights groups and the opposition argue it is fear and intimidation which drove Burundians to the polls.
On election day witnesses said the feared youth militia Imbonerakure was going door-to-door telling people to vote, while polling station officials were intimidating voters to cast a "Yes" ballot.
"The electoral process has been neither free nor transparent, nor independent and still less democratic," former rebel leader and main opposition chief Agathon Rwasa said in a statement Saturday.
Rights groups agreed that the vote had been mired in intimidation, with Nkurunziza himself warning those who dared "sabotage" plans to revise the constitution would be crossing a "red line."

