BUJUMBURA, Burundi
A Burundi
court has jailed two men and a woman for 30 years over an "attack" in
which stones were thrown at a convoy carrying President Evariste Ndayishimiye (pictured),
a judicial source told our reporter Monday.
According to the prosecution,
three stones were thrown from a petrol station at the convoy of about 50
vehicles as it drove through the northern town of Kayanza last Wednesday.
One stone hit a member of the
presidential guard, another hit a windshield of one of the cars, and another
did not hit anything.
Witnesses in Kayanza said the
convoy did not stop during the incident.
The Kayanza court on Sunday
"sentenced three young people including a woman to 30 years in prison
(each) for an attack and plot against the head of state," a judicial
source said on condition of anonymity.
The information was confirmed by
three witnesses present at the hearing.
The accused, two petrol pump
attendants and a mechanic, were initially charged with "breach of public
safety and not alerting the concerned services that the head of state was in
danger."
The prosecutor requested
sentences of seven and a half years in prison, during Sunday's hearing in which
the accused appeared without legal assistance.
All three denied throwing the
stones, or seeing who threw them.
However during her ruling, Judge
Marie-Goreth Ndayishimiye, announced the court had "decided to reclassify
the charge as 'an attack and plot against the head of state'".
She then sentenced the three to
30 years in prison, without giving further explanation as to the change in the
charge, said the judicial source.
The president's spokesman
Jean-Claude Karerwa Ndenzako did not respond to efforts to seek comment.
"This has confirmed that the
Burundian government remains paranoid about such plots, and it is one of the
first stains on the image of the new president and his slogan of fair
justice," an African diplomat said on condition of anonymity.
President Ndayishimiye, a key
member of the ruling party, was elected on May 20, and took office in June
shortly after the shock death of his predecessor Pierre Nkurunziza.
The international community had
hoped for a softening of the iron-fisted regime under a new president.
However Ndayishimiye has formed a
government of hardliners, and has shown little sign of straying from the path
of his predecessor. - Agencies
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