Citation
BUJUMBURA, April 7 (Reuter) - These are the key facts about Burundi,
   the central African state whose president Cyprien Ntaryamira was killed
    along with the president of neighbouring Rwanda in a rocket attack on
                                their plane:
   POPULATION: An estimated 5.6 million. The largest tribe is the Hutu, a
   Bantu people who account for an estimated 85 percent. The Tutsi, feudal
   overlords before colonial days, make up about 15 percent and there are
     small numbers of Twi, a group related to the Pygmy people of Zaire.
   Hutu and Tutsi have no defined territories and speak the same language.
      But systematic discrimination in favour of the Tutsi assured them
        control of the government and army for most of the time since
                            independence in 1962.
     RELIGION: More than 60 percent of the people are Christian, mostly
   Roman Catholic. The rest mainly follow traditional religions, although
                  one percent of the population is Moslem.
    AREA: 27,834 square km (10,747 square miles). Burundi is bordered by
     Rwanda to the north, Zaire to the west across Lake Tanganyika, and
                       Tanzania to the south and east.
   CAPITAL: Bujumbura, population about 180,000. Gitega, with about 15,000
      people, is the second largest town. There are few other towns or
        villages since most Burundians live in the densely populated
     countryside. The World Bank estimates population density on arable
    lands at 210 per sq km (338 per sq mile), one of the densest rates in
                                 the world.
    ARMED FORCES: The army has 5,500 men in two infantry battalions, one
      parachute battalion, one commando battalion and one armoured car
   company. The 150-man Air Force has three combat aircraft, while a navy
   of 50 men has three patrol boats, two of which are in reserve. There is
                        also a 1,500-man gendarmerie.
   ECONOMY: Burundi is one of the poorest countries in the world with per
    capita income estimated by the World Bank at $259 a year. Most people
   are farmers who essentially feed themselves and sell nothing. Burundi's
    biggest export is coffee. Like Rwanda, Uganda, Tanzania and Kenya, it
       was hit hard by a slump in coffee prices and has been trying to
       diversify its exports by boosting tea production and exploring
   horticultural exports. The World Bank projects growth at between three
     and 4.4 percent between until 1996. Foreign debt is more than $530
       million. Burundi embarked on a World Bank structural adjustment
              programme in 1986, liberalising trade and prices.
     HISTORY: Tribal hatred has exploded several times since Burundi won
   independence from Belgium in 1962. An estimated 100,000 people, mainly
     Hutu, were killed in massacres in 1972. In August 1988 Hutu farmers
     along the border with Rwanda staged an uprising. An estimated 5,000
      people had died by the time the army restored calm. Major Pierre
    Buyoya's military government, shaken by the killings, sought lasting
                            political solutions.
   Buyoya, who came to power in a bloodless coup in 1987, named a cabinet
     split between the two tribes, giving Hutu their first real voice in
    government in 20 years and naming the first Hutu premier since 1965.
    Buyoya was defeated by Melchior Ndadaye in legislative elections last
                                    June.
      Until then, Burundi had been governed by military men ever since
   Captain Michel Micombero overthrew King Ntare V in 1966. His coup ended
    a monarchy which started in the 15th century and survived the German
     colonial administration and Belgian rule which followed the end of
     World War One. Micombero ended the old king's system of alternately
       appointing Hutu and Tutsi prime ministers and helped the Tutsi
              consolidate control over the government and army.
   Micombero was overthrown in 1976 by Colonel Jean-Baptiste Bagaza, whose
   1977 land reforms put an end to Tutsi feudal overlords. But Bagaza soon
     clashed with the Roman Catholic church, accusing it of aggravating
      tribal tensions. He banned weekday masses and nationalised church
      schools. In 1985, he expelled 90 missionaries and jailed several
                                  priests.
         Buyoya's coup against him was largely aimed at ending those
     church-state tensions, which antagonised many of Burundi's western
                                   donors.
   Ndadaye, Buyoya's successor and the country's first Hutu president, was
     killed by renegade troops from the Tutsi-dominated army in a failed
   coup last October. His murder unleashed a wave of Hutu-Tutsi slaughter
        throughout Burundi in which up to 50,000 people were killed.
    Cyprien Ntaryamira, elected in January to succeed Ndadaye, was killed
   on Wednesday night along with Rwandan President Juvenal Habyarimana in
     a rocket attack on their plane when they returned to Kigali from a
                   regional peace conference in Tanzania.
                          (c) Reuters Limited 1994