- Many
Burundians have
migrated to
other countries as a
result of the
civil war. In 2006, the
United States accepted approximately 10,000
Burundian refugees...
- or of
Burundian descent. For
information about the
Burundian people, see
Demographics of
Burundi and
Culture of Burundi. For
specific Burundians, see List...
- from
spontaneous violence remains heavily disputed among academics and
Burundians who
lived through the events. From the mid-1960s, the
country of Burundi...
-
Constitution was
approved by
voters in a referendum—marking the
first time
Burundians had
voted since 1994. They
voted again in July
during the parliamentary...
- The
Burundian genocide may
refer to: the
Ikiza – the 1972 m****
killings of
Hutus the 1993
ethnic violence in
Burundi against Tutsis This disambiguation...
-
peacekeeping forces to deal with the M23 offensive, with
Burundians being the
largest contributors. The
Burundian presence in the
region was controversial, as despite...
- Congo's independence, the
Belgian colonial administration formed the
Burundian National Guard (Garde
Nationale Burundaise) in 1960. It
consisted of 650...
-
language shared by its
entire po****tion. In one estimate, 98
percent of
Burundians speak Kirundi.
Under Belgian colonial rule (1919–62),
Kirundi was taught...
- Fajack's
image of
school kids in
Burundi was used on the back of the
Burundian 10,000
franc note. In 2015
Burundi launched a new
series of banknotes...
- to 2017, the CIA
World Factbook stated that 84% of
Rwandans and 85% of
Burundians are Hutu, with
Tutsis being the
second largest ethnic group at 15% and...