Hundreds of students seek refuge outside U.S. embassy in Burundi

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Hundreds of students from a Burundi university shuttered by the government were seeking refuge outside the U.S. embassy in the capital on Friday, amid unrest and escalating tensions ahead of the June 26 presidential vote.

The east African nation has been rocked by days of protests triggered by President Pierre Nkurunziza's decision to seek a third term, a move opponents say violates the constitution and a peace deal that ended an ethnically charged civil war in 2005.

Citing security fears, the government on Wednesday closed University of Burundi, a prestigious institution where Nkurunziza taught physical education in the mid-1990s. Students said they left halls on Thursday but feared making the journey home in case they were targeted by the government.

"We are here for security because we have been chased from the campuses," said Donation, a student who did not wish to give his surname. Hundreds of others were by at the embassy perimeter wall.

Next door at a construction site students queued for handouts of soup, bread and oranges. Several said they opposed Nkurunziza seeking a third term.

They said Dawn Liberi, U.S. ambassador to Burundi, visited them and said she had raised their plight with the authorities but did not promise them asylum, as some of them wanted. The embassy had no immediate comment.

Tom Malinowski, U.S. assistant secretary of state for democracy, human rights and labor told Nkurunziza on Thursday that Burundi risks "boiling over", especially if political space is closed for opponents.

"We have urged the government not to let the situation get past a point of no return, because if that happens the gains of the last decade really will be at risk," Malinowski said, adding there would be "consequences" if violence continued.

Bujumbura suburbs, scene of five consecutive days of protests, were generally calmer on Friday, a national Labour Day holiday.

The crisis is being closely watched in a region still scarred by the 1994 genocide that killed more than 800,000 people in neighboring Rwanda, which like Burundi is divided between ethnic Tutsis and Hutus.

Burundi's electoral commission on Friday started accepting applications to stand for president, but it was not immediately clear if any opposition figures have submitted bids. They have until May 9 to do so.

Diplomats say opposition leader Agathon Rwasa, who like Nkurunziza is a former Hutu rebel commander turned politician, stands the best chance of challenging the president.

Rwasa has trodden a cautious path during the protests that erupted on Monday, criticizing the government's heavy-handed tactics and defending people's right to rally, but refraining from calling for mass protests.

Analysts say Rwasa does not wish to give the government, who term the protests an "insurrection" and illegal, justification to detain him and exclude him from running for presidency.

The constitution and the Arusha peace accord limit the president to two terms in office, but Nkurunziza's supporters say he can run again because his first term, when he was picked by lawmakers and not elected, does not count.

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Burundi, Pierre Nkurunziza, Rwanda
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