,
Jill Biden, and
Angeline Ndayishimiye in late 2022|center Ndayishimiye began his seven-year term on 18 June 2020 and announced his
first cabinet on 28 June 2020. He reduced the number of cabinet ministers from 21 to 15 and mainly nominated ex-regime hardliners to take up key positions. Ndayishimiye's tenure has been noted to have been less isolationist than his predecessor Nkurunziza's, with Ndayishimiye having made four state visits, including a five-day trip to
Equatorial Guinea, and also accommodated a state visit by the
President of Ethiopia during his first ten months in office. Initially, Ndayishimiye was more active than his predecessor in pursuing a stronger response to the COVID-19 pandemic. He called the virus the nation's "worst enemy" shortly after taking office. In January 2021, he closed national borders, having previously issued a statement which said that anyone bringing
COVID-19 into Burundi would be treated as "people bringing weapons to kill Burundians". However, in October 2021, the Burundian government announced that it had received delivery of 500,000 doses of the Chinese
Sinopharm BIBP vaccine. In December 2022, he attended the
United States–Africa Leaders Summit 2022 in Washington, D.C. hosted by US President
Joe Biden. In July 2023, he attended the
2023 Russia–Africa Summit in Saint Petersburg and met with
President of Russia Vladimir Putin. In the same month, he attended the opening ceremony of the
2021 Summer World University Games held in
Chengdu, China, where on the sidelines of it, he met with
General Secretary of the Chinese Communist Party Xi Jinping. In December 2023, responding to a reporter's question on Western countries pushing for LGBT rights to be respected, Ndayishimiye stated the
homosexuals should be stoned en masse, and that to do so would not be a crime. In August 2024, in an Amnesty International report, Amnesty International denounced acts of “intimidation, harassment, arbitrary arrests and detentions” targeting activists, journalists and others by the government of Évariste Ndayishimiye. Since 2024 he advocates for private and
foreign investment in the tourism branch. On 17 July 2025, Ndayishimiye was designated by the
African Union as its special envoy to the
Sahel region. In February 2026, during the 39th Ordinary Session of the
African Union Assembly in
Addis Ababa, Ndayishimiye was elected Chairperson for the year 2026. ==References==