Six killed in battles as Burundi awaits vote results

People stand in a long queue to cast their votes at a polling station in Ngozi during a parliamentary election in Burundi June 29, 2015. Reuters Photo

At least six people including a policeman were killed on July 1 in the latest violence in Burundi, as it awaits results from elections boycotted by the opposition and condemned internationally.

Clashes broke out in the capital Bujumbura's Cibitoke district, an opposition area that has been one of the heartlands of protests against President Pierre Nkurunziza's defiant bid for a third term.
 
While police said the deaths followed gunbattles with an "armed group", witnesses said the police staged summary executions after being attacked.    

More than 70 people have been killed in two months of protests and a failed coup attempt sparked by the president's bid, with almost 144,000 refugees fleeing into neighbouring nations.
 
Five of those killed Wednesday were members of an armed group who were "neutralised", police said, adding that they had seized weapons, including a rifle and a rocket-propelled grenade. They said one policeman also died in the firefight.
 
Cibitoke was sealed off on July 1 by security forces, an AFP photographer said, and it was not possible to independently confirm police reports.
 
The clashes took place after a grenade was thrown at a police patrol, injuring two officers, a police official said speaking on condition of anonymity.
 
An AFP reporter who later entered the area after the shooting had ended saw the bodies of six people killed, including a moneychanger in his sixties and his two sons, shot in the head. All the dead were civilians.
 
Residents accused the police of shooting them with "their hands in the air" after ordering them out of a house where they went to look for one of the protest leaders.
 
Those fleeing the district said police were...

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