BUJUMBURA (AFP) — Burundi has accepted a US offer to send an FBI team to probe the murder here early in April of a prominent anti-corruption campaigner, the government said Wednesday.
Justice Minister Jean Bosco Ndikumana said that help in finding the killers of Ernest Manirumva was "welcome, especially since our police lack means, above all the forensic police."
Manirumva, the vice-president of OLUCOME (the Anti-corruption and Economic Malpractice Observatory), was stabbed to death on the night of April 8 when his offices and home were ransacked and documents stolen, police said.
Ndikumana said that the United States would be informed on Wednesday of Burundi's acceptance of the offer, while Burundian prosecutors and police will be urged fully to cooperate with the agents from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) when they arrive.
The day after the murder, deputy police chief Gervais Ndirakobuca stressed that it was not "an ordinary crime during a robbery," while OLUCOME requested an international probe, saying it was evident that Manirumva was killed because he was working on sensitive cases.
The observatory team has in recent years unearthed several graft schemes, among them the fraudulent sale of the presidential jet in 2006 in an incident that led to the sacking of the then finance minister.
The watchdog also blew the whistle on double billing of oil imports, resulting in the imprisonment of the Central Bank chief and another finance minister fleeing into exile in 2007.
On April 16, more than 200 civic associations in Burundi presented an open letter to President Pierre Nkurunziza before several Western diplomats, in which they asked for an end to "assassinations and intimidation."
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