Kirundo Province

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Template:Short description Template:Infobox settlement Kirundo was one of the eighteen provinces of Burundi, in north of the country bordering Rwanda. In 2025, it was merged into the new province of Butanyerera.<ref name=":0">Template:Cite web</ref>

The economy was mostly based on agriculture, with a dispersed population and few sizable communities. Before 1970 large parts of the province were forested. Migrants from the south then cleared much of the vegetation to create agricultural land, and Kirundo became the breadbasket of Burundi. The civil war from 1993 to 2005 caused agricultural output to drop by more than half. Afterwards, lack of farm inputs, poor infrastructure and shortages of water caused widespread poverty.

Geography

Kirundo Province was in the north of Burundi, bounded to the north and west by Rwanda. It was bounded to the southwest by Ngozi Province, and to the south and east by Muyinga Province. It had an area of Template:Convert, or 6.1% of the area of Burundi, making it the 8th largest province at the time.Template:Sfn

Bugesera natural region

88% of the province was in the Bugesera natural region.Template:Sfn This is a vast batholithic depression carved out of granite rocks.Template:Sfn The central plateau has an altitude of Template:Convert, and the north is lower, with an average altitude of Template:Convert.Template:Sfn The Bugesera region is part of the Kirundo district, a depression in the inter-lacustrine zone of East Africa that extends across northeastern Burundi and southeastern Rwanda. It is bounded to the west by the Kanyaru River valley. To the north, east and south it was bounded by dissected plateaus that rise above it. The depression contains large valleys holding Holocene sediments, swamps and shallow lakes.Template:Sfn

Bweru natural region

12% of the province was in the Bweru natural region, including the Commune of Vumbi and the south of the Commune of Gitobe.Template:Sfn The Bweru natural region in the south of the province is mountainous.Template:Sfn The region is known for its agricultural fertility.Template:Sfn

Lakes

Kirundo Province had eight lakes: Rweru, Cohoha, Rwihinda, Kanzigiri, Gacamirindi, Nagitamo, Narungazi and Mwungere.Template:Sfn The lakes are marshy, with an average depth of Template:Convert. All eight lakes are important bird habitats, with 60 species identified in Lake Rwihinda alone. They provide a variety of fish to the surrounding populations. The wetlands leading out of and into many of the lakes are irrigated for rice and sugar cane fields, and the surrounding hillsides are developed for diverse agricultural production.Template:Sfn Wetlands include Rugamura Marsh, Kabuyenge Marsh and Nyavyamo Marsh.Template:Sfn Nyamabuno Marsh (marais de Nyamabuno).

Conservation

The Lacs du Nord Aquatic Landscape Protected Area was created in 2006, in theory conserving over Template:Convert, or 14.2 of Burundi's interior waters, up from 0.2%. The stated goals are integrated community management, agricultural production, and lake conservation. The protected aquatic landscape integrates the integrated Natural Reserve of Murehe; the managed Reserves of Lake Rwihinda, Lake Rweru and Lake Cohoha; and the integrated protected zones of Lakes Gacamirinda, Mwungere, Nagitamo, and Kanzigiri.Template:Sfn In October 2023 the Inades-Formation Burundi held a workshop on water resource management with local leaders in the capital of Kirundo Province to celebrate World Food Day. It was noted that although the 2012 water code encouraged good practices and penalized violations, some of the lakes still suffered from pollution and unsustainable illegal fishing.Template:Sfn

Protected units are:Template:Sfn

Unit Location Area
ha acre
Lake Rweru Template:Coord Template:Convert
Lake Kanzigiri Template:Coord Template:Convert
Lake Cohoha Template:Coord Template:Convert
Lake Gacamirindi Template:Coord Template:Convert
Lake Rwihinda Template:Coord Template:Convert
Lake Gitamo Template:Coord Template:Convert
Lake Narungazi Template:Coord Template:Convert
Lake Mwungere Template:Coord Template:Convert
Murehe Forest Template:Coord Template:Convert
Total 16,242 40,130

Climate

The province experienced the same wet and dry seasons as the rest of Burundi. The southeasterly monsoon brings rain in February–May, and the northeasterly monsoon brings rain in September–November.Template:Sfn Natural vegetation includes shrubs, savanna and marshland, important for its value in groundwater storage. Expansion of farmland continues to damage this vegetation and the forest plantations.Template:Sfn The Bugesera natural region has temperatures that vary from Template:Convert, with average annual rainfall of Template:Convert.Template:Sfn The Bweru natural region has a slightly different climate from Bugesera natural region, with rainfall over Template:Convert annually, and a shorter dry season lasting 5 to 6 months.Template:Sfn

Name

Kirundo Province was formerly called Muharuro. During battles between the Rwandans and Barundi in Muharuro in 1763 at Mount Shinge and Mount Rugero, near the provincial capital, the Rwandans were decisively defeated through tactics of the troops of King Mutaga Senyamwiza. The province took its current name of Kirundo (pile) from the piles of corpses of Rwandans killed there in the battle.Template:Sfn

Administration

Communes

Template:Copernix Kirundo Province was divided administratively into the communes of Bugabira, Busoni, Bwambarangwe, Gitobe, Kirundo, Ntega and Vumbi. These in turn were divided into 193 collines.Template:Sfn Each commune was headed by an administrator. The population was scattered, and the small city of Kirundo is the only urban settlement.Template:Sfn Kirundo Province had one of the higher rates of population growth in Burundi.Template:Sfn In 2008, when the last census was taken, the commune populations and areas were:Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Name Type 2008
Population
Area Coords
km2 mile2
Bugabira Commune 89,259 Template:Convert Template:Coord
Busoni Commune 145,424 Template:Convert Template:Coord
Bwambarangwe Commune 66,816 Template:Convert Template:Coord
Gitobe Commune 57,326 Template:Convert Template:Coord
Kirundo Commune 93,110 Template:Convert Template:Coord
Ntega Commune 98,665 Template:Convert Template:Coord
Vumbi-Bukuba Commune 77,656 Template:Convert Template:Coord
Kirundo Province 628,256 Template:Convert Template:Coord

Health districts

The province was divided into four health districts (Template:Langx):

Health district Communes
Kirundo Kirundo and Bugabira
Vumbi Ntega and Vumbi-Bukuba
Busoni Busoni
Mukenke Gitobe and Bwambarangwe

There were hospitals in the Kirundo and Mukenke health districts, and health centers (Template:Langx), CDSs, distributed throughout the health districts. Most health centers are public (Template:Langx), but some are run by religious organizations (Template:Langx).Template:Sfn

Governors

The governor of the province must be Burundian and must live in Kirundo or come from Kirundo. The governor is appointed by the President of Burundi after confirmation by the Senate.Template:Sfn A partial list of governors of the province:

Governor Term start Term end Notes
Déo Bizimana 1993 November Assassinated.Template:Sfn
Philippe Njoni 1993 2005 Later Minister of Transport, Post and TelecommunicationsTemplate:Sfn
François Singayimiheto 2005 2010
Réverien Nzigamasabo 2010 2015
Melchior Nankwahomba 2015
Alain Tribert Mutabazi 2019
Albert Hatungimana 2020 August
Victor Segasago 2023 November Colonel de Police.Template:Sfn

Senators

Election
year
Senators
Hutu Tutsi Twa
2005 Pascal Musoro Philippe Rivuzumwami Charles Masabo
2010 Emmanuel Ndemeye Jennifer Kankindi Vital Bambanze
2015 Jean-Marie Muhirwa Jennifer Kankindi
2016 vacant
2020 Dévote Faida Jean Bosco Ntunzwenimana

Economy

Until 1970 some of the communes of Kirundo province had few people and were covered in forest. Then migrants from Ngozi and Kayanza came to the province and cleared the forests to create arable land.Template:Sfn Farmers in Kirundo province produced goods for sale in the markets.Template:Sfn Kirundo was the "breadbasket of Burundi" and supplied agricultural products such as cereals and legumes to the rest of the country before the Burundian Civil War of 1993–2005.Template:Sfn

The Burundi Tobacco Company (BTC) was founded in 1979 by Tribert Rujugiro Ayabatwa.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn In 1982 it made an agreement with farmers in Cibitoke Province and Kirundo Province to supply seed, fertilizer, pesticides, crop extension services, drying and processing, and to buy their tobacco at a price agreed upon in advance.Template:Sfn The result was rapid growth in the number of tobacco farmers and the quantity produced.Template:Sfn In the 1980s, BTC started to clear large areas of forest to supply wood to the ovens used to dry tobacco, but did not undertake reforestation.Template:Sfn

Between 1996 and 2009, agricultural output dropped by 53.9%. Poverty has increased and there are high levels of malnutrition.Template:Sfn The farmers have turned to farming for consumption by the family. Reasons for this change include inadequate labor, agricultural equipment and agricultural inputs, poor protection of the soil, persistent conflicts over land ownership and lack of microcredit.Template:Sfn The poor roads also contribute to the high levels of poverty in the province. In 2008 the OPEC Fund for International Development announced a project to build a paved road running Template:Convert from the city of Kirundo to Gasenyi and the border with Rwanda. The project would also includes upgrades to feeder roads and social infrastructure.Template:Sfn

In November 2021 Cyriaque Nshimirimana, Second Deputy-Speaker of the Senate of Burundi, met leaders of the province in the capital of the Commune of Ntega. His audience included heads of provincial and municipal services, colline chiefs, leaders of the Sangwe cooperatives and religious leaders. He urged them to preserve peace and security, fight drunkenness, polygamy, unwanted pregnancies and corruption, limit births, send their children to school, continue to build the offices of colline chiefs and join cooperatives to accomplish development projects together. He advised the leaders of cooperatives to be fiscally prudent and transparent. Concerns raised by the audience included the need to repair the RurataNtega road, the lack of teachers and teaching materials in the vocational schools, and the lack of a regional branch of the Banque d’Investissement pour les Jeunes (Investment Bank for Youth).Template:Sfn

References

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Sources

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