Martyazo Explained

Conventional Long Name:Republic of Martyazo
Common Name:Martyazo
Status:Unrecognised state
Flag Type: Possible flag
Government Type:Republic
Area Km2:1,960
Year Leader1:1972
Event Start:Established
Life Span:1972
Date Start:1 May 1972
Event End:Disestablished
Date End:9 May 1972
P1:Burundi
Flag P1:Flag_of_Burundi.svg
S1:Burundi
Flag S1:Flag_of_Burundi.svg
Today:Burundi
Era:Ikiza

The Republic of Martyazo (French: République de Martyazo) was a short-lived secessionist state proclaimed by Hutu rebels at Vyanda in Burundi's province of Makamba in the early May 1972 during the genocidal violence of 1972 as a bid to create a political base.[1] [2] At first, the state was located inside the mountainous Vugizo commune, between Makamba and Nyanza Lac. However, it quickly expanded to its surroundings, even reaching the border with Tanzania.

A few days after the republic was declared, forces of the Tutsi-dominated government of Michel Micombero occupied the region, ending the rebellion and the existence of Martyazo. The number of people to have perished in the rebellion is believed to have ranged between 800 and 1200. Because of the nature of the government and the rebellion, many killed were Tutsi hostages held in plantations in the area tried by the self-proclaimed "people's courts" established in the secessionist state.

Academics have dubbed the state "mysterious"[3] and "ephemeral"[4] because of a lack of reliable information on it. Owing to its life span of little more than a week, no formal government structures were ever established in Martyazo. However, Antoine Serukwavu was said to have been president of the state.

The creation of Martyazo and the killing of Prince Ntare V of Burundi were two events that together marked the beginning of the 1972 civil war and genocide.

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Burundi Killings of 1972 Sciences Po Mass Violence and Resistance - Research Network. www.sciencespo.fr. en. 2019-01-10.
  2. Book: The Routledge History of Genocide. Cathie Carmichael, Richard C. Maguire. 2015. Routledge. 9781317514848 .
  3. René Lemarchand, The Dynamics of Violence in Central Africa, p. 136
  4. Jean-Pierre Chrétien & Jean-François Dupaquier, Burundi 1972, au bord des génocides, pp. 89-90