1981 Burundian constitutional referendum

A constitutional referendum was held in Burundi on 18 November 1981. The new constitution would make the country a presidential republic with a unicameral National Assembly, as well as creating a one-party state with the Union for National Progress as the sole legal party. It was supported by 99.28% of voters with a 94% turnout.[1]

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Results

Choice Votes %
For1,582,24499.28
Against11,5390.72
Invalid/blank votes10,939
Total1,604,722100
Registered voters/turnout1,702,62394.25
Source: African Elections Database
gollark: In any case, I also didn't say mind control.
gollark: So you have mental combat which *somehow* only allows read access but still has defenses and stuff? This seems unreasonable. I don't think you can cleanly separate read/write out for brains that way.
gollark: I did NOT say mind reading.
gollark: Perhaps.
gollark: It doesn't really make sense for the reader to be able to get things that somehow the combined intellect of every in-world character for several hundred years has missed.

References

  1. Elections in Burundi African Elections Database
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