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| Burundi independence hero Prince Louis Rwagasore, whose bust is seen here in Bujumbura, was shot dead a month after being named prime minister in 1961 |
Burundi on Sunday accused former colonial power Belgium of ordering the assassination of independence hero and Crown Prince Louis Rwagasore in 1961, a move likely to further poison ties between the two countries.
A
government statement said Belgium was the "true backer of the
assassination of Rwagasore", in the first direct accusation over the
murder by Bujumbura, which said it plans to probe the six-decade-old incident.
The
statement said that Brussels "has yet to explain itself" over the
killing of Rwagasore, who played a key role in Burundi's anti-colonial
movement.
Rwagasore
was named prime minister in the run-up to independence but was shot dead a
month later by a Greek assassin accompanied by three Burundian members of a
pro-Belgian party at a hotel in the capital -- a little over a year before
independence was achieved in July 1962.
He is one
of Burundi's most beloved heroes, with his name gracing stadiums, schools and
roads across the country.
In the
statement, the government said it "plans to launch a technical commission
to investigate the assassinations ... of Rwagasore" and his two young
children a few months later.
The Kingdom
of Burundi, believed to date to the 17th century, came under German colonial
rule in 1890, but was awarded by the League of Nations to Belgium after World
War I.
Rwagasore
was the eldest son of King Mwambutsa IV.
Burundi has
been gripped by political crisis since President Pierre Nkurunziza sought a
third term in office in 2015, provoking severe civil unrest that has left at
least 1,200 dead and displaced over 400,000 people.
In October
2016, Belgium withdrew its ambassador to Burundi and suspended several
development projects, as Bujumbura's relations with foreign allies worsened
over the crisis.
The
following month, the executive secretary of the ruling CNDD-FDD Evariste
Ndayishimiye accused Belgium of "acting as if Burundi is still under its
yoke," on Twitter, after accusing it of backing the opposition.

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