Last modified: 2019-01-02 by bruce berry
Keywords: burundi | star: 6 points (fimbriated) | stars: triangle | stars: 3 | sabena | ethnic groups | motto | hutu | tutsi | twa |
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The flag was adopted
in 1967.
Stuart Notholt, 12 Mar 1996
The ratio of the flag was changed 27 September 1982 to 3:5
as published official regulations.
[Earlier de facto proportion was 2:3. Ed.]
Jaume Ollé, 05 Sep 1998
The three stars in the centre of the flag officially refer to the three words
in the national motto, “Unité, Travail, Progrès” (French for
“Unity, Work, Progress”).
The three stars are also said to represent the three ethnic groups who live
in Burundi, the Hutu, Tutsi and the Twa. Burundi has a similar ethnic mix
to Rwanda and has similar political and ethnic problems.
The Twa are a pigmy race.
The red in the flag stands for the independence struggle, the green for hope
and the white for peace.
Stuart Notholt, 12 Mar 1996
Whitney Smith (1980) also
suggests the possibility of the Burundian flag
being based on the former Sabena
airline flag, but he also says that there is no proof of that.
Željko Heimer, 02 Aug 1996
According to Flags and Arms across the World by
Whitney Smith (1980)
civilians have the right to display this flag on holidays only.
Otherwise the flag is used as a state flag and a military flag on
land while the President of the Republic has right to use a flag on buildings.
Željko Heimer, 13 Mar 1996
Colour approximations given in Album 2000 are:
Red: Pantone 186c - CMYK (%) C 0 - M 90 - Y 80 - K 5
Green: Pantone 361c - CMYK (%) C 80 - M 0 - Y 90 - K 0
Ivan Sache, 08 April 2001
Based on the length to width ratio and the image in Album 2000,
I have calculated the following dimensions for the flag:
-
white disk diameter: 3/5 of hoist
-
side of the equilateral triangle connecting centers of the stars: 1/4
of hoist
-
width of white saltire: 1/8 of hoist
-
diameter of the circle around each of the stars: 1/8 of hoist.
Construction sheets for the Burundi flag can be found
here.
One should note that the shade of green in the flag of Burundi is considerably lighter
than those in the flags of Burkina Faso and
Bulgaria (as shown in Album 2000).
Željko Heimer, 09 April 1996
The protocol manual for the London 2012 Olympics (Flags and
Anthems Manual, London, 2012)
[loc12] provides recommendations for national flag designs. Each National Olympic
Committee was sent an image of their flag, including the PMS shades, by the
London Organising Committee of the Olympic Games (LOCOG) for their approval.
Once this was obtained, the LOCOG produced a 60 x 90 cm version of the flag for
further approval. So, while these specifications may not be the official,
government, version of each flag, they are certainly what the National Olympic
Committee believed their flag to be.
For Burundi : PMS 186 red and 361 green. The vertical version is simply the flag
turned through 90 degrees clockwise.
Ian Sumner,
10 Oct 2012
The official construction sheet for the current flag is provided here.
From the Constitution (in French): Extract from http://www.burundi.gov.bi/const2.htm | English translation with notes: by Ivan Sache 17 September 2000 |
Article 8. Le drapeau du Burundi est tricolore : vert, blanc et rouge. Il a la forme d'un rectangle partagé par un sautoir, comportant en son centre un disque blanc frappé de trois étoiles rouges à six branches qui forment un triangle équilatéral fictif inscrit dans un cercle fictif ayant le même centre que le disque et dont la base est parallèle à la longueur du drapeau. La loi précise les dimensions et les autres détails du drapeau. |
Article 8. The flag of Burundi has three colours [note that "tricolore" means "with three colours", sensu stricto, but usually "with three stripes of different colours", influenced by the French Tricolore, which is obviously not case here] : green, white and red. It has a rectangular shape and is divided by a saltire, including in the middle a white disc charged with three six-point stars. [I have cut the very long, a la Marcel Proust, original sentence into three for the sake of clarity]. The stars form a fictive equilateral triangle inscribed in a fictive circle. The circle has the same centre as the disc. The triangle basis is parallel to the length of the flag. The law states the dimensions and the other details of the flag [I suppose the colours of the "quarters" and the stars, as well as the width of the saltire and the size of the stars.] |
Article 9. La Devise du Burundi est : Unité, Travail, Progrès. L'emblème de la République est un écu frappé de la tête du lion ainsi que de trois lances, le tout entouré de la devise nationale. L'hymne national est Burundi Bwacu. Le sceau de la République est déterminé par la loi. |
Article 9. [National] motto of Burundi is: Unity, Work, Progress. [Note that we use in French the same word "device" both for motto and currency.] The emblem of the Republic is a shield charged with the lion head and three spears, the whole being surrounded by the national motto. National anthem is Burundi Bwacu. The seal of the Republic is fixed by law. |
Article 10. La langue nationale est le Kirundi. Les langues officielles sont le Kirundi et les autres langues déterminées par la loi. |
Article 10. The national language is Kirundi. The official languages are Kirundi and the other languages fixed by the law [as far as I am aware, it is only French]. |
Unlike the initial information that this would be the flag of the political party called
Unité, this is the flag
of the National Unity and is a recognized national flag, agreed together by
all the ethnic
groups in the country to be used alongside the national flag. I believe that there never was a party called UNITY but only a
flag called "drapeau de l'unité". Unité is an institutional agreement (pact) between the
three ethnic groups created from initiative of the then President Buyoya prior
to 1993. Following this agreement free elections were organised and the first
Hutu president (from FRODEBU) was elected.
Jaume Ollé, 28 Feb 2005
"The World" on BBC4 TV (26 August 2005) carried a short
report about the swearing in of the newly elected President of
Burundi. A brief clip showed him passing by a blue flag (see here).
It is clearly a darker blue than the drawing shown above. It can also be seen at
www.burundi.gov.bi/presi.htm
That this is indeed a recognized national flag and not a political flag (in the sense of being the flag of a
political party) is
confirmed by a Chinese news agency report which includes the sentence: "The new president received in turn from
his predecessor the constitution, the national flag, the unity
charter, the national unity flag, the national logo and the "intahe"
(in Kirundi) - a stick that is the symbol of power and fair judgment"
[my emphasis].
André Coutanche, 28 Aug 2005
image by Ivan Sache, 20 February 2005 (unconfirmed)
While the three stars in the national flag are said to refer to the three words of the
national motto, they are also said to represent
the three ethnic groups who live in Burundi: the Hutu, Tutsi and the Twa.
According to news given by Grands-Lacs Confidentiel on 14 February
2005, the Government of Burundi is contemplating the removal of the three stars
from the national flag.
It seems that the stars are used by Tutsi extremists to back up their
claim that the Tutsis are descendants of ancient Jews. They link the
Tutsi to the Kushi and the ancient Kushit state ruled by the Queen of
Saba; the Tutsi Judaism would pre-Talmudic, like the Judaism of the
Patriarchs and Kings David and Solomon.
The Centre de Havilla (Havilla means Great Lakes), founded in
Brussels by Professor Jochanan (Jean) Bwejeri, is actively defending
this theory, and campaigns against the removal of the stars on the
flag. Grands-Lacs Confidentiel also reports that Israel, the United States and
Britain put pressure on the government of Burundi to maintain the stars
on the flag.
Sources:
Ivan Sache, 20 February 2005
Note: This information is linked to the political struggle between the Tutsis and the Hutus in Burundi and Rwanda. The reliability of the sources quoted has not been assessed. Ed.