BUJUMBURA, Burundi
Burundi on Monday kicked off its national Census of the Population, Housing, Agriculture and Livestock, and President Evariste Ndayishimiye called on the citizens to give the correct information to help in planning for projects.
The census was officially
launched on the night of August 15-16 and is scheduled to concluded on
September 15.
On Monday, President
Ndayishimiye and his family were registered by census agents led by the
president of Central Bureau of the Census, Nicolas Ndayishimiye, at their home
on Mt Vugizo in Kiriri Quarter, Bujumbura.
The head of state implored
Burundians as well as foreigners living in Burundi to be available to be
counted and to be honest and truthful with information.
“Everyone must know that this
census is important for the country and for the population. On the basis of
this census, we will be able to get the right state of the country, its
economic situation, and enable us to make good project plans, because it is difficult
to plan for the future without knowing the current situation. I call on
residents of Burundi to respond truthfully and honestly in the questionnaire
because wrong information may hinder project planning,” the President said.
Vice-President Prosper
Bazombanza and his family also took part in the exercise on Monday, and he
reiterated the President’s message, saying the right data would help in
planning for education and other social services.
The last population and
housing census in Burundi was held in 2008.
This year’s count has come
with challenges, though, with enumerators saying locating some people has been
difficult, as they often find homesteads abandoned.
The agents are also
grappling with transport and accommodation challenges due to delays in
disbursement of their allowances and they have had to walk long distances
during the day to reach the residential areas.
Central Bureau of Census head
Nicolas Ndayishimiye, in a press briefing last week, said the government had
set aside BIF66 billion ($22.85 million) to finance the activities, and the
World Bank had pledged another $6.5 million.
Since independence in 1962,
Burundi has conducted three censuses -- in 1979, 1990 and 2008. Today, the
country has five provinces: Gitega, the political capital, Bujumbura, the
economic capital, and Butanyera, Buhumuza and Burunga.
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