A climate of fear has engulfed the capital, Bujumbura, after the sound of battle could be heard throughout the day yesterday and sporadic gunfire overnight. Residents hid in their houses leaving only security personnel patrolling the streets.
Some residents ventured out of their houses Saturday but largely remained uneasily in their neighbourhoods.
An eyewitness told The Associated Press he counted 21 bodies with bullet wounds in their heads in the Nyakabiga neighbourhood today morning. Some of the dead had their hands tied behind their backs, said the witness, who insisted on anonymity due to safety concerns.
"I fear I can be killed like my friend yesterday, police came to search our house and by chance I escaped. If I had money, I would go buy a passport and flee," said Fidele Muyobera,22, who works as household help.
"What is the international community waiting for? Will they intervene when there are no more people in Burundi?" asked businessman Gerald Bigirimana in Nyakabiga while pointing at one of the bodies lying on the streets.
Six more bodies were found in Musaga, where the military said their installation was attacked, though residents said more bodies had been taken away by security forces.
Three soldiers were killed in the pre-dawn raid Friday by an unidentified group in the Ngagara, Musaga and Mujejuru areas, said two soldiers who insisted on anonymity for fear of reprisals. The army killed 12 of the attackers and 20 others were arrested, including one who was wounded and is being treated at a military hospital, army spokesman Col Gaspard Baratuza told state radio.
The UN Security Council late yesterday strongly condemned the violence, and US Ambassador Samantha Power said the council should look at "how the international community can protect civilians from mass violence, including for the possible deployment of a regionally led peace support operation.
