Ghana troops earmarked for Burundi…

LUSAKA — The Organization of African Unity’s summit to plan an economy-focused alliance was dominated by conflict on Wednesday as Burundi announced an agreement for peacekeeping troops after a cease-fire in its brutal ethnic war.

Burundian President Pierre Buyoya said that South Africa, Nigeria, Senegal and Ghana had agreed to send peacekeeping troops to the Central African country after a cease-fire in its five-year-old conflict.

More than 200,000 people have been killed in the fighting between ethnic Hutus and Tutsis in the tea- and coffee-growing nation since 1996.

Buyoya told a news conference that defense ministers of the four countries and that of Burundi met in Pretoria last week to prepare the deployment once a cease-fire had been agreed.

“All the disposition to implement this is ready once the cease-fire is there,” Buyoya said, speaking in English. The four states responded to a call for troops by former South African President Nelson Mandela, mediator in the Burundi conflict.

Source: GhanaWeb

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