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Senate (Burundi)

Upper house of the Burundian legislature


Upper house of the Burundian legislature

FieldValue
nameSenate of Burundi
native_name
coa_picCoat of arms of Burundi.svg
coa_res150px
foundation
house_typeUpper house
bodyParliament of Burundi
leader1_typePresident
leader1Gervais Ndirakobuca
party1CNDD-FDD
election15 August 2025
members13 senators
structure1Burundi Sénat 2025.svg
structure1_res300px
structure1_altComposition of the Burundi Senate
political_groups1
term_length5 years
voting_system1Electoral college
first_election1
last_election123 July 2025
new_session23 July 2025
next_election1[July 2030](2030-burundi-senate-election)
meeting_placeGitega
website

The Senate (Kirundi: * Inama nkenguzamateka*) is the upper chamber of Parliament in Burundi. It consists of between 13 members who serve 5-year terms. The current Senate was elected on 23 July 2025 and consists of 13 members.

Under the newly promulgated 2018 constitution and following the new administrative division, the senate similarly to the national assembly saw its number of seats reduced. The senate goes from 39 seats to 13 seats starting from the 2025 legislative elections.

This change was first enacted with the recent election that was held on 23 July 2025.

Election process

In each of the country's 5 provinces, two Senators (one Hutu and one Tutsi) are chosen by electoral colleges of communal councilors. Voting takes place using a three round system. In the first two rounds, a candidate must receive a supermajority of two-thirds of the vote to be elected. If no candidate is elected in these rounds, a third round is organized for the two leading candidates, of which the candidate receiving the majority of votes is elected. Three Senators represent the Twa ethnic group and additional members may be co-opted to meet the 30% gender representation quota for women. Former heads of state were Senators by right under the previous constitution. Under the newly promulgated 2018 constitutions, this clause was removed.

History

The 1962 constitution of the Kingdom of Burundi provided for the creation of the Senate at the discretion of the Mwami and the National Assembly. A royal decree formally establishing the body was issued on 1 April 1965. Following the 1965 National Assembly elections, the 16-member Senate was constituted. Eight members of the Senate were elected by the members of the National Assembly—each representing one of the county's provinces, all of which were UPRONA members. The eight Senate members elected a further four members, with a further four appointed by the King. It was empowered to review legislation but not propose bills on its own accord. and the country's system of government was completely altered following Michel Micombero's successful coup in 1966.

The Senate was re-established following Arusha Accords. The transitional constitution was adopted on 18 October 2001. The transitional senate was designated by the President and Vice-President of Burundi, and by the Office of the National Assembly, and was designed to balance political, ethic and regional representation. It was chaired by Libère Bararunyeretse and included the three former heads of state, three Twa people and at least two people with different ethnicity from each province. It had 57 members.

In a popular referendum on 28 February 2005 the people of Burundi overwhelmingly approved a post-transitional constitution. Senate members were indirectly elected on 29 July 2005 by an electoral college of commune and provincial councils. The National Council for the Defense of Democracy-Forces for the Defense of Democracy (CNDD-FDD), which obtained the majority of seats in communal elections held in June, won an overwhelming majority (30) of the seats. The Front for Democracy in Burundi (FRODEBU) won 3 seats, while the remaining seat went the National Council for the Defense of Democracy (CNDD), a breakaway faction of the CNDD-FDD.

Four former heads of state - Jean-Baptiste Bagaza (PARENA), Pierre Buyoya (UPRONA), Sylvestre Ntibantunganya (FRODEBU), and the current transitional president Domitien Ndayizeye (FRODEBU) will occupy seats in the Senate along with three Twa members. In order to meet the 30% quota for women, eight seats were co-opted giving the chamber of total of 49 seats.

On 19 August 2005, the Senate and National Assembly (acting as an Electoral College) elected Pierre Nkurunziza president of the republic. He took office on 26 August 2005.

Gervais Rufyikiri, a member of the CNDD-FDD, was elected president of the Senate on 17 August 2005. On 25 June 2015, he fled the country saying he felt threatened after opposing President Nkurunziza's bid for a third term. His replacement, Révérien Ndikuriyo, had made remarks comparing political opponents to cockroaches, similar to what politicians did during the Rwandan genocide, raising fears of another genocide.

References

Sources

  • {{citation |url=https://2009-2017.state.gov/outofdate/bgn/burundi/125402.htm |accessdate=2024-06-25
  • {{citation |url=https://senat.bi/en/liste-des-senateurs/ |accessdate=2024-06-26 |language=fr
  • {{citation |url=https://senat.bi/en/historique/senat-de-transition/ |accessdate=2024-06-25 |language=fr

References

  1. (29 July 2025). "Provisional results of the July 23, 2025 senate elections announced". ABP Burundi News Agency.
  2. (29 July 2025). "Provisional results of the July 23, 2025 senate elections announced". ABP Burundi News Agency.
  3. "Sénat sous la constitution monarchique". Senate of Burundi.
  4. [http://africanelections.tripod.com/indirect.html#BI_1965Senate Indirect Legislative Elections in Sub-Saharan Africa: Burundi] African Elections Database
  5. (14 June 1965). "Senate Election, Regulations Are Announced". United States [[Foreign Broadcast Information Service]].
  6. Ndayizeye, Jean Bosco. (10 December 2011). "Historique". National Assembly of Burundi.
  7. (25 June 2015). "Burundi Vice-President Gervais Rufyikiri flees". [[BBC News]].
  8. (23 April 2016). "Sliding towards anarchy". [[The Economist]].
  9. (10 November 2015). "Burundi: President's Speech Instills Fear as Killings Increase". [[Human Rights Watch]].
  10. (27 April 2016). "Hearing the same rhetoric used in Rwanda in 1994". Vue Weekly.
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