Africa Great Lakes Democracy Watch



Welcome to
Africa Great Lakes Democracy Watch Blog. Our objective is to promote the institutions of democracy,social justice,Human Rights,Peace, Freedom of Expression, and Respect to humanity in Rwanda,Uganda,DR Congo, Burundi,Sudan, Tanzania, Kenya,Ethiopia, and Somalia. We strongly believe that Africa will develop if only our presidents stop being rulers of men and become leaders of citizens. We support Breaking the Silence Campaign for DR Congo since we believe the democracy in Rwanda means peace in DRC. Follow this link to learn more about the origin of the war in both Rwanda and DR Congo:http://www.rwandadocumentsproject.net/gsdl/cgi-bin/library


Showing posts with label HILLARY CLINTON. Show all posts
Showing posts with label HILLARY CLINTON. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Kagame's critics keep eye on SA trial

Johannesburg - Critics of Rwandan President Paul Kagame will be watching an attempted murder trial that started on Tuesday in South Africa for evidence the east African leader tried to have a former general killed.

Three Rwandans and three Tanzanians are accused of attempted murder, conspiracy to commit murder and other charges in the June 2010 shooting of Lieutenant General Faustin Kayumba Nyamwasa, once Kagame's military chief.

They each pleaded not guilty on Tuesday at the start of a trial that required French, Swahili and Kinyarwanda translation, and that drew an observer for the Rwandan embassy and family members for the accused and the victim.

Since the Kagame and Nyamwasa fell out and the former general left for exile in South Africa last year, Nyamwasa has joined other Rwandans living abroad in accusing Kagame of crushing dissent and democracy after helping to end the 1994 genocide during which extremist Hutus killed more than 500 000 Tutsis and moderate Hutus in Rwanda.

Rwanda-South Africa relations strained

Rwandan dissidents accuse Kagame's government of being behind the attack on Nyamwasa, charges that it has angrily denied.

The case has strained Rwandan-South African relations, but officials here have refused to say whether they believe Nyamwasa was the target of an official assassination attempt.

Evidence on that point might form part of the trial.

Suspicions have fallen on Kagame's government elsewhere. It emerged in May that British police had warned some Rwandan exiles living in Britain that their lives were in danger, and the threat is believed to have emanated from the Rwandan government.

In Rwanda, human rights groups say opposition politicians, journalists and civil society activists have been subjected to crackdowns.

Suspect in suit and tie

Earlier this year, in a case Human Rights Watch said was politically motivated, Rwanda's High Court sentenced an opposition leader to four years in prison and fined three others opposition figures convicted of endangering national security, attempting to organise unauthorised protests and inciting ethnic divisions.

In the Nyamwasa case, the key suspect is Pascal Kanyandekwe, a Rwandan businessman and the only suspect to appear on Tuesday in a suit and tie.

In addition to charges stemming from the shooting, Kanyandekwe is accused of plotting to kill Nyamwasa while the general was hospitalised after the shooting.

Kanyandekwe and four men not linked to the shooting are to stand trial in the hospital plot later this month.

Kanyandekwe also is accused of bribery after two police officers said he offered them $1m to let them go when they arrested him in July 2010. Kanyandekwe allegedly left South Africa after the murder attempt on Nyamwasa and was arrested at Johannesburg's OR Tambo Airport upon his return.

The other two Rwandans accused are the general's driver and another had been a Rwandan soldier, according to prosecutors.

Rwanda wants accused home

In May, Nyamwasa and three other men who had once been top aides to Kagame were convicted in absentia by a Rwandan military court of disturbing public order, threatening state security, sectarianism and criminal conspiracy.

Rwanda has demanded the four be sent home to be imprisoned, but the countries where they have found refuge - South Africa and the United States - have made no move to hand them over.

While Nyamwasa portrays himself as a champion of democracy and is a victim in the case that opened Tuesday in a downtown Johannesburg court room, he and other senior Tutsis are accused of waging an extermination campaign against Hutus in the chaotic aftermath of Rwanda's genocide.

A Spanish judge in 2008 charged Nyamwasa and 39 other members of the Rwandan military with the mass killings of civilians after they seized power in Rwanda.

A UN report last year echoed the 2008 Spanish charges, accusing invading Rwandan troops of killing tens of thousands of Hutus in 1996 and 1997.

South African refugee and human rights groups have gone to court to try to have Nyamwasa's asylum status stripped because of the allegations, which the general denies.

In a lawsuit filed earlier this month, the refugee and rights groups acknowledge it might not be safe for Nyamwasa to return to Rwanda. The groups suggest instead he be tried in South Africa.
- SAPA

Sunday, May 22, 2011

Rwanda frustrates Ingabire’s trial

NEW YORK, NY - APRIL 25: (L-R) Eileen Newman, ...Image by Getty Images via @daylife

From Rwanda Nkunda

Rwanda frustrates Ingabire’s trial
It’s been more than a year of pain and anguish since Rwandan opposition leader Victoire Ingabire was arrested. The first arrest was made on May 24th 2010 and she was subsequently placed under house arrest. Even without clear evidence the police detained her again on the 15th of October the same year. Now, the Rwanda prosecution having failed to give her a speedy and fair trial is turning the blame on her. The Rwandan media claims that Ingabire is responsible for delaying her own case. The cynically implied message being that Ingabire enjoys detention.

On the 24th of June, the New Times released an op-ed titled “Victoire [Ingabire] should not Rush us”. It quoted the Rwandan prosecutor, Martin Ngoga as saying, "If these countries send us the information tomorrow, then we can start the case tomorrow, if it takes longer, we will wait, but from the feedback we have received, we are sure all information will trickle in." He was being open to the fact that Rwanda did not have enough evidence against Ingabire. Yet the government continued to detain her.

Interestingly, the Rwandan government is turning around to place the blame on Ingabire. According to Sunny Ntayombwa, a New Times columnist, Ingabire wants another five months in jail. The piece which is literally aimed at mocking her, insinuates that she is enjoying staying in a Rwandan cell with “a private shower, toilet, a comfy bed and a window”; as if to suggest that Ingabire was homeless before her imprisonment.

In an interview that Radio Netherlands Worldwide held with Ingabire’s lawyers, it emerges that the trial will be postponed but not for reasons given by Rwanda. First, the lawyers accuse the prosecution for failing to consult with them when setting the trial dates. This is important because two of the lawyers are British nationals, living in Britain. Another problem has to do with translation. Yes despite the government of Rwanda’s switch from French to English, they still conduct trials in Kinyarwanda and provide no English translations. Ingabire’s lawyers do not understand Kinyarwanda and have to translate over 2000 pages.

It’s been clear since day one that the Rwandan government wants to silence Ingabire ; and they are now using the legal system to achieve that end.
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Sunday, July 18, 2010

OPJDR:Condemns the Assassination of the Rwandan Opposition Political Leaders

PRESS RELEASE Nº 29/J/PK/710 July 16, 2010

OPJDR condemns the assassination of opposition political leaders and independent journalists along with multiple arrests and disappearances in the rank of opposition only few weeks ahead of the Presidential election on August 9, 2010. People of Rwanda have suffered so much in the past and unfortunately the situation is getting worse every passing day.

1. Five death squads in only one month:
On Saturday morning June 19, 2010, Lt. General Kayumba Nyamwasa, once Chief of Staff in Rwanda Military and High Commissioner in India was shot but survived the attack at Athol Mews complex in Melrose Arch, northern Johannesburg, South Africa, where he had sought asylum after fleeing Rwanda in late February 2010.

On June 20, 2010, Denis Semadwinga, a Tutsi from Rutshuru in Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and once Chief of Staff of the Rally for Congolese Democracy (RCD) Goma and then to Gen. Laurent Nkunda of National Congress for the Defense of the People (CNDP), was beheaded at his home in Gisenyi - Rwanda. He had continued to be active in the CNDP even after General Laurent Nkunda was arrested and detained by Rwanda military authorities since January 2008. According to CNDP leaders, “score of its officials have been arrested by Rwandan security forces who have privately blamed them for the recent grenade attacks in Kigali in cahoots with Lt. General Kayumba Nyamwasa”.

On June 24, 2010, Jean-Léonard Rugambage, a journalist working for a private newspaper “Umuvugizi” has been shot dead by two men in front of his house in the Rwandan capital, Kigali.
Local journalists in Kigali told the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) that Rugambage had been preparing to join Umuvugizi Editor Jean-Bosco Gasasira in exile after reporting to his friends and colleagues that he was being followed by unidentified people and had received death threats over the phone.

On July 13th 2010, Mr. Andre KAGWA RWISEREKA, the First Vice President and founding member of the Democratic Green Party of Rwanda disappeared from his home in Butare, Southern Province, and was found dead on 14th July 2010, with his head almost completely removed from his body.

On July 13th, 2010, a Tanzanian Professor Jwani Mwaikusa, was shot dead by unknown assailants in front of his Salasala residence in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. Professor Jwani Mwaikusa, was a Lawyer, and a lead defense counsel for Yusuf Munyakazi, a Rwandan genocide convicted, who was sentenced to a 25-year term last month by the UN International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR). Professor Jwani Mwaikusa strongly opposed the Prosecutor's motion requesting transfer of Yusuf Munyakazi to Rwanda filed on 7 September 2007, saying that Rwandan judiciary lacked competence and impartiality. "It is absurd to transfer a case to a system which should be answering the same charges," he said, apparently referring to the alleged atrocities committed by the ruling party Rwanda Patriotic Front (RPF) during the 1994 genocide and the indictments issued by French and, more recently, by Spanish judges charging the RPF leadership of genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity.

2. Arrests, kidnappings, tortures and disappearances:
On June 24th, 2010, several members of opposition political parties: Social Party, PS Imberakuri, Unified Democratic Forces - FDU INKINGI, and Democratic Green Party of Rwanda were arrested while preparing to attend a peaceful demonstration. Those arrested include , Maitre Bernard NTAGANDA, President and Founder of PS IMBERAKURI, Theobald MUTARAMBIRWA, Secretary General of PS Imberakuri, Mrs. Alice MUHIRWA, the FDU party’s treasurer, Mr. Sylvain SIBOMANA, the FDU party’s General Secretary, Mr. Theoneste SIBOMANA, Martin NTAVUKA, and the FDU’s lawyer Mr. Theogene MUHAYEYEZU.
Mrs. Victoire Ingabire Umuhoza, Chairperson of FDU INKINGI was held at home as she is in an extended house arrest since March 2010. In addition Mr. SIBOMANA RUSANGWA Aimable, Private Secretary for the PS IMBERAKURI party founder and President was reported missing since June 13, 2010 and his whereabouts are still unknown up today.
During their appearances before the Judge on July 7 and 8, all the defendants showed physical signs of tortures and Mrs. Alice Muhirwa, fainted in court room and was rushed to the hospital as she has been profusely bleeding due to the coups she received on lower stomach areas. On July 9, the Judge found two defendants not guilty of any wrongdoing, six where granted bail with interdiction to travel abroad, and Maitre Bernard NTAGANDA was denied bail.

The state of insecurity is felt not only in capital city, Kigali but also across the country. Here are few examples: The following are people recently arrested in Bugarama, Cyangugu whose whereabouts are unkown. They are Jean Damascene Ngarambe, an employee at the Banque Populaire, Anatole Kayisire, a medical assistant in Bugarama, Muzeye, a Branch Manager at Banque Populaire in Bugarama, a certain Reverand, a driver in Nzahaha, Steven Buturu, a motocycle operator in Bugarama, Theoneste Mazimpaka of Bugarama and Jacques, a Teacher in Mushaka.

On June 27, 2010, Mr. Dominiko Makeli, a former Rwanda journalist living in exile in Uganda has been kidnapped by four people from his home in Kampala. They told him that they were bringing him to Rwanda but later dropped him on the highway near Kampala after they realized that a neighbor who has seen their car should report them. They promised to Mr. Makeli that they will come to get him on a later date.

On July 8, 2010, Agnes Uwimana, the editor of the independent newspaper UMURABYO, has been arrested. According to the Police spokesman Eric Kayiranga, Mrs Uwimana is accused of “incitement to civil disobedience, contempt of the head of state, spreading rumors to cause public disorder and denying the genocide of the Tutsis.”

On July 12, 2010, Saidati Mukakibibi, another journalist who works for the above independent newspaper Umurabyo, was arrested for comparing President Paul Kagame with the Nazi German leader Adolf Hitler, accusation reformulated as defamation, inciting public disorder and ethnic “divisionism”.

On July 14, 2010, Rwanda security forces entered Uganda territory and with the complicity of Uganda authorities forcibly repatriated more than 2000 refugees who have been living in Nakivale and Kyaka camps in Southern of Uganda. According to UN High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR), operation was performed with an unprecedented brutality that score of refugees have died and many other seriously injured among them babies and six pregnant women.

3. Recommendations:
To the Government of Rwanda
OPJDR calls on the Rwandan authorities for the constitutional obligations to protect the Rwandan population against these severe and endless human rights abuses.

OPJDR calls on the Government of Rwanda, especially on President Paul Kagame, to open political space in the country by allowing opposition political parties to register and to operate freely;

OPJDR calls on the Government of Rwanda to guarantee freedom of expression, freedom of association and peaceful assembly as stated in the Constitution of the Republic of Rwanda.

To the International Community:
OPJDR calls the United Nations, European Union, United States of America, African Union, Commonwealth members and other friends of Rwanda to stand up for the people of Rwanda by publically and officially asking President Paul Kagame to open political space in Rwanda, to respect human rights and to promote freedom of expression and association.

OPJDR asks all donors of Rwanda to freeze all non direct humanitarian assistance until President Paul Kagame complies with the basic standard rules for a democratic country.

OPJDR asks the international community to withdraw its supports to upcoming presidential elections including financial support and on ground observers as no real opposition party has been allowed to participate.


OPDJR highly appreciated the Prime Minister of Spain, Mr. Jose Luiz Zapatero who refused on July 16, 2010 to meet with President Paul Kagame for his questionable human rights and undemocratic records. OPJDR recommends all world leaders to emulate the Primer Minister of Spain as a starting point to put pressure on Kagame’s regime for change.

Sincerely,
Pascal Kalinganire
Coordinator General
Copies:
Honorable Ms. Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
U.S. Department of State
2201 C Street NW
Washington, DC 20520

Excellence Mr. Herman Van Rompuy
President of European Union Council
Rue de la Loi, 175 B-1048 Brussels

Excellency Dr. Bingu Aa Mutharika,
President of the Republic of Malawi
Chairperson of the African Union
African Union Headquarters
P.O. Box 3243
Roosvelt Street
- W21K19
Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

Excellency Mr. Kamalesh Sharma
Secretary General of the Commonwealth
Marlborough House, Pall Mall
London SW1Y 5HX, UK
Excellence Mr. Zhang Yesui
China Ambassador to the United Nations
Permanent Mission of the People's Republic of China to the United Nations
350 East 35th Street
New York, NY 10016

Excellence Mr. Jean-Maurice Ripert
France Ambassador to the United Nations
Permanent Mission of France to the United Nations
245 East 47th Street, 44th Floor
New York, NY 10017

Excellence Mr. Vitaly Churkin
Russian Federation Ambassador to the United Nations
Permanent Mission of the Russian Federation to the United Nations
136 East 67th Street
New York, NY 10065
Excellence Sir John Sawers
United Kingdom Ambassador to the United Nations
Permanent Mission of the United Kingdom
One Dag Hammarskjold Plaza
, 885 Second Avenue
P.O. Box 5238
New York, NY 10017


Excellence Mrs. Susan E. Rice
US Ambassador to the United Nations
Permanent Mission of the United States to the United Nations
140 East 45th Street
New York, N.Y. 10017

Honorable Ban Ki-Moon
UN Secretary-General
760 United Nations Plaza,
Manhattan, NY 10017

Honorable U.S. Senator John Kerry
Chair of Foreign Relations Committee
218 Russell Bldg; Second Floor
Washington D.C. 20510

Honorable U.S. Senator Russ Feingold
US Senate Subcommittee on African Affairs
506 Hart Senate Office Building
Washington, DC 20510-4904

Sunday, June 20, 2010

Clinton questions Rwanda’s democracy


Kampala

The US Secretary of State, Ms Hilary Clinton, has said that recent political developments in Rwanda threaten to undermine its young democracy and its path development. The former US First Lady stressed this at her Diplomacy Briefing on Sub-Saharan Africa countries on Monday where she talked about her country’s relationship with countries in the Sub-Saharan countries.

“Recent events in Rwanda threaten to undermine its own remarkable progress by beginning to move away from a lot of the very positive actions that undergirded its development so effectively,” Ms Clinton said in a statement that was sent to Daily Monitor from the Africa Media Hub based at the US Embassy in Pretoria, South Africa.

Officers arrested
She added: “The US remains very supportive of Rwanda, however, and is in discussion with Rwanda’s government to see steps taken to reverse those actions.” Recently, senior army officers in Rwanda have been arrested while some like former Chief of Staff Lt. Gen.Kayumba Nyamwasa have fled to exile.

Opposition leader Victoire Ingobire is facing charges of allegedly participating in the 1994 genocide. The head of the country’s football governing body Brig. Gen. Jean Bosco Kazura was also arrested for travelling to South Africa to watch World Cup football without clearance.