#FreeOurGirls: Twitter users back detained Burundi schoolgirls
- Published

Twitter users have rallied to the cause of three schoolgirls arrested for defacing photos of Burundian President Pierre Nkurunziza by following their example.
Crudely doctored images of the leader are being circulated online under the hashtag, #FreeOurGirls.
The girls were charged last week with insulting the head of state and could spend up to five years in prison.
Burundian authorities are routinely accused of cracking down on human rights and dissent.
The schoolgirls, aged 15,16 and 17, were arrested two weeks ago after the president's image was defaced in textbooks. Four other students arrested with them were later released.
Here are some of the images that have been circulating online in support of the girls.
Hey @pnkurunziza, looking good.
— Lomé Raumay (@kiwidrank) March 22, 2019
SCRIBBLING IS NOT A CRIME - FREE THOSE GIRLS #Burundi #FreeOurGirls pic.twitter.com/Z8SD0vfLuJ
This @pnkurunziza's "presidential" advisor challenged ppl in the free world to doodle on pictures of their leaders. What followed was a worldwide mvt to doodle on Nkurunziza's pictures in solidarity w/ jailed schoolgirls in #Burundi.
— Thierry Uwamahoro (@ThierryU) March 23, 2019
Poor guy thinks repressive gvts are the norm https://t.co/gKYe7S7LQ7
The father of one of the detained girls told campaign group Human Rights Watch that they were too scared to eat.
HRW has urged the government to release the schoolgirls and concentrate on curbing abuses by the security forces.
"Authorities should focus on holding perpetrators of serious rights violations to account instead of jailing schoolchildren for doodles, the group's Central Africa director, Lewis Mudge, said.
In a similar case in 2016, several schoolchildren were imprisoned and hundreds expelled for scribbling on images of the president's face.