Yes, we do. I work on Rwanda as well as Burundi, so I'm sensitive to that, as we all are.
It's a complicated situation. Many of the Burundians who fled last year ended up in Rwanda. It's one of the closest and easiest places to go, not so much now, because they're actually trying to stop people from fleeing, but in the beginning, it was where many went, especially the opposition figures. Many of the activists and journalists ended up in Rwanda.
There is, as you probably know, a very tense relationship between the governments of Rwanda and Burundi. Even at the presidential level, they frequently publicly trade insults and hostile language. There was information last year that we and others documented of recruitment among the Burundian refugee camps in Rwanda, recruitment of Burundians to join armed opposition groups in exile.
We don't know what the Rwandan government's role was in that, if any, but Rwanda is a country where the government exercises quite a tight control over everything that happens, so at the very least we could say that it wouldn't have happened without their knowledge. We haven't had more recent incidents of that kind of thing, but that doesn't mean it's not happening.
I share your concerns about the conflict spilling over into the region, not only into Rwanda but also into the Democratic Republic of the Congo to the west, with quite a number of Burundian armed opposition also operating from Congo. That has been the case for a while. Congo, as I'm sure you know, has its own share of problems and is in a very fragile state at the moment. The regional aspect is indeed very worrying.