Joseph Cimpaye

Joseph Cimpaye
1st Prime Minister of Burundi
In office
26 January 1961 – 28 September 1961
MonarchMwambutsa IV
GovernorJean-Paul Harroy
Succeeded byLouis Rwagasore
Personal details
Born1929 (1929)
Mugera, Gitega Province, Ruanda-Urundi
(modern-day Burundi)
Diedc.May 1972 (aged 42–43)
Burundi
Political partyUnion des parties populaires
Known forAuthor of first Burundian novel

Joseph Cimpaye (1929 – c.May 1972) was a Burundian politician and writer.

Born into an educated family from the Hutu ethnic group, Cimpaye was considered one of Burundi's leading intellectuals in the late colonial period. He became involved in politics under Belgian colonial rule, co-founding the Union of Popular Parties (Union des parties populaires, UPP), a cartel which was opposed by the more popular anti-colonial Union for National Progress (Union pour le Progrès national, UPRONA). Cimpaye briefly held the position of prime minister in 1961 before UPRONA was decisively returned in the country's first elections ahead of Burundi's independence in July 1962. Although retiring from politics, he was later arrested under the regime of Michel Micombero in 1969.

While imprisoned, he wrote L'Homme de ma colline which has been acclaimed as the first Burundian novel but which remained unpublished in his lifetime. He was among a number of influential Hutus killed in the genocidal violence of 1972 instigated by the Micombero regime.


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