
Cyprien Ntaryamira
'Cyprien Ntaryamira' (
March 6,
1955 -
April 6,
1994), was President of
Burundi from
February 5,
1994 until he died in
a plane crash on
April 6,
1994.
Ntaryamira was born in the Mageyo zone's
commune of Mubimbi,
Bujumbura Rural Province, in what was then the
Belgian-dominated
United Nations Trust Territory of Burundi. He entered school in
Bujumbura but after an abortive
Hutu rebellion in
1972, he and thousands of other ethnic Hutus fled the country.
Ntaryamira eventually receive a degree in
agriculture from the
National University of Rwanda in
Kigali in
1982. During this time, he became politically active in
socialist movements. He returned to his native country in
1983 to work as an agricultural official. He was a
political prisoner of the regime of Col.
Jean-Baptiste Bagaza briefly in
1985.
In August
1986 he became a founding member and economic policy director of the Hutu-dominated
Front for Democracy in Burundi party (FRODEBU). FRODEBU gained power after Burundi's first democratic elections in
1993, ending a long history of rule by the
Tutsi minority and the
Union for National Progress (UPRONA). New president
Melchior Ndadaye appointed Ntaryamira Minister of Agriculture.
In October
1993, however, Ndadaye and his two top officials were
assassinated, sparking parliamentary deadlock and
civil war. Nteryamira was selected president on
February 5,
1994 as a compromise; he was Hutu but considered a moderate in Ndadaye's tradition, while Anatole Kanyenkiko, a UPRONA figure, was made prime minister.
The respite would be brief, as the
airplane carrying Ntaryamira and
Rwandan president
Juvénal Habyarimana, a fellow Hutu, crashed under suspicious circumstances while landing at the Rwandan
capital of
Kigali, killing both. The deaths touched off the
Rwandan Genocide.
On
April 8 power was passed to Ntaryamira's longtime associate
Sylvestre Ntiybantunganya, president of the national assembly.
References
★
À la Mémoire de FEU S.E. Cyprien Ntaryamira (in
French)