Thank you, ladies and gentlemen members of Parliament for the honour of welcoming me here. I was supposed to meet with General Dallaire, but when I heard that you were inviting me I said that I wanted to come here.
I am here as a mother. I am here because I decided 25 years ago to create Maison Shalom for a new generation that would break the cycle of violence. Unfortunately, I am currently a refugee and have been since 2015. I live in a refugee camp in Rwanda because there was an attempt on my life.
I am here to convey a mother's cry. My message is for the parents, the mothers in the room. People may not know that in Burundi, the killing continued. I can attest to that because I decided to live among these mothers. What upsets me most is to see mothers lose their children. My tears are for them. Burundi has become a glorified prison. The silence of death hangs over Burundi. Many mothers can no longer bury their children. Many mothers are raped. I work with them every day.
I created a community centre, which I called Oasis of Peace, in order to console these mothers. They are inconsolable because everyone has abandoned them. The people who were supposed to protect them are the very people who are killing them. There are enforced disappearances. There are children who can no longer find their parents and I don't know what to tell them. The press has been silenced. Everything was shut down, even Voice of America and Deutsche Welle.
Mothers are tortured and treated cruelly. There is a 12-year-old girl who stopped speaking after witnessing the rape of her grandmother and mother in front of her father. These three generations are staying with me.
I am here because I know that we are all part of one big human family. I know that we can console each other. You can call for the disarmament of the Imbonerakure militia. The young people who make up this militia are our children. Mothers call me to ask me whether there is any way to disarm our children, who are killing people all around.
We can no longer accommodate our neighbours and friends because in Burundi we are now required to record the names of our visitors.
Refugees in Tanzania are also being harassed. They are forced to return because refugees there are being killed. They are killed in the camp when the Imbonerakure militia finds them there.
I am here as the voice of these mothers at the camp who can no longer feed their children or send them to school. As you know full well, more than 460,000 Burundi refugees are displaced in Congo, Tanzania, Uganda, and even Rwanda. This situation for these refugees breaks my heart as a mother. I think about these mothers who are raped, burned with melted plastic or candles, and who have to ignore their injuries and march into exile.
I am here because I know that if you wanted to you can speak out at the UN, the African Union, the Organisation internationale de la Francophonie, the International Conference of the Great Lakes and call for the return of these soldiers, Burundi police officers, and all those taking part in the peacekeeping missions. That is the strength of the government: the more these people kill, the more they are compensated. The money given to these soldiers, whose role is to keep the peace, indirectly allows the militia to keep killing our children. It is the cry of a mother begging you to listen. If you want, you can call for sanctions. You can also call for visas to be denied to these dignitaries who send their children and spouses here to Canada. They are stealing from both sides. They torture people in Burundi, but their children are sheltered.
My dear brothers and sisters, I know that we are one big human family. If you break the silence of indifference, mothers will once again be able to cradle their children and sing them lullabies.
Thank you for giving me these seven minutes and for listening to my plea.
Thank you very much.