Top UN legal expert begins talks in Burundi on justice and reconciliation
The top United Nations legal expert is leading a mission of high-level UN officials to Burundi aimed at helping to set
up a truth and reconciliation commission and a special tribunal for human rights abuses committed during the country’s
12-year long civil war.
“Peace thirsts for truth and reconciliation. Durable peace thirsts for justice as well,” Under-Secretary-General for
Legal Affairs Nicolas Michel said on arriving at the Bujumbura airport on Sunday.
“We are particularly encouraged in our mission by the fact that the country authorities give a high priority to
reconciliation and to the end of impunity as essential elements for consolidating a durable peace,” he added.
Mr. Michel’s delegation, which is responding to a request by the Security Council that Secretary-General Kofi Annan
consult with the Government of Burundi, includes members of the UN Legal Department, the Office of the High Commissioner
of Human Rights (UNHCHR), the Department of Peacekeeping Operations, and the Department of Political Affairs.
According to the UN Operation in Burundi (ONUB), the delegation’s first round of negotiations with the Government began
yesterday and included the first Vice-President of Burundi and the ministers of justice, national solidarity, as well as
representatives of ONUB led by Carolyn McAskie, the Secretary-General’s Special Representative to the country.