2005 Burundian constitutional referendum explained

Country:Burundi
Yes:2,577,883
No:216,060
Invalid:57,676
Electorate:3,413,624

A constitutional referendum was held in Burundi on 28 February 2005. The new constitution was approved by 92% of voters.[1]

Proposed constitution

The proposed new constitution guaranteed representation for both Hutu and Tutsi ethnic groups by setting out ethnic quotas for parliament, government and the army, which had been dominated by Tutsis since independence;

Campaign

Most political parties urged a "Yes" vote in the poll, but some Tutsi parties urged a "No" vote, stating that the new constitution doesn't give Tutsis enough guarantees.

Results

ChoiceVotes%
For2,607,85292.02
Against226,2357.98
Invalid/blank votes60,285
Total2,894,372100
Registered voters/turnout3,132,49492.40
align=left colspan=3Source: African Election Archive

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://africanelections.tripod.com/bi.html Elections in Burundi