UN investigators urge ICC to probe Burundi crimes against humanity

President of the United Nations (UN) Commission of Inquiry on Burundi, Fatsah Ouguergouz, attends a press conference on the commission's report on September 4, 2017 in Geneva. UN investigators on September 4, 2017, accused Burundi's government of crimes against humanity, including executions and torture, urging the International Criminal Court to open a case "as soon as possible". (AFP)
Updated 04 September 2017
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UN investigators urge ICC to probe Burundi crimes against humanity

GENEVA: UN investigators on Monday accused Burundi’s government of crimes against humanity, including executions and torture, and urged the International Criminal Court to open a case “as soon as possible.”
The United Nations Commission of Inquiry on Burundi said it had “reasonable grounds to believe that crimes against humanity have been committed and continue to be committed in Burundi,” pointing a finger at “the highest level of the state.”
The three investigators, appointed by the Human Rights Council last September, described a “climate of fear” in the crisis-hit east African country.
The report detailed widespread and systematic abuses including extrajudicial executions, forced disappearances, torture and sexual violence.
“We are struck by the scale and the brutality of the violations,” commission president Fatsah Ouguergouz said in a statement.
Decrying impunity in Burundi and the “strong likelihood that the perpetrators of these crimes will remain unpunished,” the investigators asked “the International Criminal Court to open an investigation ... as soon as possible.”
If it wants to follow that advice, the ICC will indeed need to move quickly: last year, Burundi formally announced it was withdrawing from the court, with the move set to take effect on October 27.
After that date, the ICC can only open a case if asked to do by the Security Council.
Burundi was thrown into a political crisis in April 2015 when President Pierre Nkurunziza decided to run for a third term that his opponents said was unconstitutional.
He won elections in July that year which were boycotted by the opposition.
Between 500 and 2,000 people have been killed in clashes in the country, according to UN and NGO sources. More than 400,000 people have fled and dozens of opposition activists have been forced into exile.
In its report Monday, the Commission of Inquiry put blame for the likely crimes against humanity in Burundi at “the highest level of the state.”
The perpetrators included members of Burundi’s National Intelligence Service, including high-ranking officers, the national police, military officials and members of the ruling party’s youth league, the Imbonerakure, investigators said.
Nkurunziza himself, surrounded by a close-knit circle of “generals,” was behind “big decisions, including ones that led to serious human rights violations,” it said.
Armed opposition groups were also responsible for rights violations in Burundi, the report said, noting that these abuses had been more difficult to document.
The UN investigators were never permitted to enter Burundi, forcing them to conduct their probe from neighboring countries, where they interviewed more than 500 victims and witnesses.
They said they were drafting a confidential list of suspected perpetrators of crimes against humanity, along with detailed information about the acts they are accused of committing or ordering.
The UN is prepared to share the list with any competent judicial body capable of “conducting credible investigations,” with the aim of bringing the perpetrators to justice, the report said.
Burundi suffered a civil war from 1993 until 2006 between majority Hutus and minority Tutsis, which claimed an estimated 300,000 lives.
The current unrest has also sparked fear of a wider crisis in Africa’s volatile Great Lakes region, with the 1994 genocide in neighboring Rwanda having been fueled by similar ethnic tensions.


Number of UK young people not in work or education nears 1 million

Updated 2 sec ago
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Number of UK young people not in work or education nears 1 million

  • Rate of young people not in employment, education or training (NEET) is sometimes seen as a better guide to labor market difficulties
  • The latest NEET rate is equivalent 12.8 percent of the workforce, up from 12.7 percent in the last quarter
LONDON: Nearly 1 million Britons ‌aged 16-24 were not in employment, education or training at the end of last year, the second-highest level in more than a decade, according to official data released on Thursday.
The rate of young people not in employment, education or training (NEET) is sometimes seen as a better guide to labor market difficulties than the headline youth unemployment rate, which was the highest in 10 years in the last quarter of 2025.
Thursday’s data showed that the number of NEETs aged ‌16-24 rose to 957,000 ‌in the last quarter of 2025 ‌from ⁠946,000 the quarter before — ⁠just short of 971,000 in the final quarter of 2024 which was the highest since 2014.
The latest NEET rate is equivalent 12.8 percent of the workforce, up from 12.7 percent in the last quarter but below a 10-year high of 13.2 percent a year earlier and compares to an unemployment rate ⁠of 16.1 percent for 16-64 year olds.
Earlier this week, ‌Bank of England Chief Economist ‌Huw Pill told a parliament committee that a rise in the ‌minimum wage and employer social security charges had contributed to ‌the difficulty young people face in getting a foothold in the job market.
This view is shared by many academic economists: 15 out of 19 in a poll by Britain’s National Institute of ‌Economic and Social Research and the London School of Economics’ Center for Macroeconomics judged that government ⁠policy had ⁠a were a “very” or “moderately important” driver of youth unemployment.
LSE economics professor Ricardo Reis said “government policy changes are the most likely proximate cause for such large movements in young joblessness,” though he added that there was not conclusive evidence, and others pointed to broader economic weakness and artificial intelligence as factors.
Louise Murphy, a senior economist at the Resolution Foundation think tank, said finance minister Rachel Reeves should use a fiscal statement next week to widen eligibility for work placements and to pause plans to narrow the gap between the minimum wage rates for 18-20 year olds and older workers.