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 RWANDA-PAUL RUSESABAGINA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label RWANDA-PAUL RUSESABAGINA. Show all posts

Sunday, June 12, 2011

"Kagame Stop Killing": Rwandans and Congolese protest in Chicago

By Ann Garrison from the ANNGARRISON
CLick here to listen to the KPF ANNGARRSION RADION
Rwandan, Congolese, and American activists rallied at the city of Chicago's Hyatt Regency Hotel on Saturday, 06.11.2011, to protest Rwandan President Paul Kagame's presence in the city. from 


Rwandan, Congolese, and American activists demonstrate against Rwandan President Paul Kagame's presence in Chicago, 06.11.2011.



Transcript: 
KPFA Weekend News Host:  Rwandan, Congolese, and American activists rallied in Chicago today to protest the appearance of Rwandan President Paul Kagame at "Rwanda Day," a Chicago event produced by a multimillionaire commodities trader at Chicago’s Hyatt Regency Hotel.   KPFA’s Ann Garrison has more.
Rwandan opposition leader Victoire Ingabire Umuhoza
KPFA/Ann Garrison: The June 3, 2011 report from Amnesty International condemns Rwandan President Kagame’s government, saying that “the Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF), in power since the 1994 genocide, tightly controls political space, civil society and the media, contending that this is necessary to prevent renewed violence.  Human rights defenders, journalists and political opponents cannot openly criticize the government without facing repression, and Victoire Ingabire Umuhoza, leader of the FDU-Inkingi coalition of opposition parties remains in maximum security prison, charged with terrorism and genocide ideology, which means disagreeing with the government or the official government history of the Rwanda Genocide
KPFA spoke to Celestin Muhindura, a Rwandan American and President of the Initiative for Democracy and Development, a non-profit organization that advocates for peace, democracy, and development in Africa, with focus on Rwanda and Congo, whose histories and struggles have been inextricable since the 1994 Rwanda Genocide.
Celestin, can you tell us how the demonstration went today? 
Celestin Muhindura:  The demonstration went very well as planned. The goal was to show, to the American people and to the Chicago people in particular, the true color of the Rwandan government, and the true color of the leader General Paul Kagame.
As you know, Victoire Ingabire left the Netherlands to go run for president. She tried to follow the rules in Rwanda, and once she got there, she was denied the right to register her political party, and the violence against her continued until she was arrested, arbitrary. She was not able to run for president, when the Constitution allows her to run. So it's not just for Victoire Ingabire. It's the same for Bernard Ntaganda. Bernard Ntaganda was in the country. He registered his party, which presented him as a candidate, but, when the time came for running, he was put in prison. So, there are many other signs that the Rwandan government doesn't offer a political space.  Any journalist who tries to speak out is either killed or put in prison.  People who try to free the government, their spies follow them in exile, to try to kill them.  
Rwandan opposition leader Bernard Ntaganda
KPFA:  Do you believe that if she were freed from prison, Victoire Ingabire Umuhoza could bring reconciliation to Rwanda?  
Celestin Muhindura:  As I know her, Victoire Ingabire is a Rwandan patriot, who love people and who love the country, and who has the capability to bring people together. If freed, she's gonna be the hope for the country.  
KPFA:  And do you think there's any chance of her being freed?  
Celestin Muhindura:  I believe, if the international community puts pressure on Kagame, he will end up freeing her. 
KPFA:  Many people seem to fear that there could be another outbreak of violence in Rwanda, possibly even worse than before, because the Hutu majority is so repressed.  Are you worried about this yourself?
Celestin Muhindura:  I'm worried about that and that's why we put together this organization, to try to advocate for a peaceful solution.  So we are afraid because Kagame is pushing hard on people, and if he continues, the volcano will erupt.  
KPFA:  Celestin Muhindura, I certainly hope that that does not happen, and thank you for speaking to KPFA. 
Celestin Muhindura:  Thank you very much.
KPFA/Ann Garrison:  For Pacifica, KPFA, and AfrobeatRadio, I'm Ann Garrison.
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Man who inspired ‘Hotel Rwanda’ protests visit by nation’s leader

Story Image
Rwandan humanitarian Paul Rusesabagina participates in a protest outside the Hyatt Regency at 151 E. Wacker where Rwandan president Kagame is stayi
Tom Cruze~Sun-Times
By DARRYL HOLLIDAY Staff Reporter dholliday@suntimes.com
The man who inspired the award-winning film “Hotel Rwanda” led local Rwandans and others in a protest Saturday of Rwandan President Paul Kagame’s visit to Chicago for a conference. 
More than 100 Rwandan, Congolese and American protesters gathered at the Hyatt Regency Chicago to voice their anger over human rights violations committed by Kagame, including the killing of tens of thousands of Rwandans since he came to power in 1994 after the Rwandan genocide, according to a 2010 United Nations war crimes report. Leading the protest was Paul Rusesabagina, whose brave actions during the genocide were the basis for the movie “Hotel Rwanda.”
Though Kagame is given much of the credit for stopping the genocide, reports from the UN, Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch have all detailed violent abuses in the years during his regime.
“In Rwanda we say that the dancers have changed, but the music is the same,” Rusesabagina said. “I’m very much worried as I was [in the lead up to the 1994 genocide] because nothing has changed.”
Rusesabinga is well-known for his actions during the genocide when he saved 1,268 Rwandans from death by hiding them in the hotel that he was managing.
He has since made the transition from hotelier to activist.
“Today we have all gathered to tell the world that a dictator who has shed blood in Africa is now visiting the homeland of President Obama,” Rusesabagina said. “We preach equal rights and then reconciliation.”
According to many of the protestors, the event was held to raise awareness among Americans, and Chicagoans in particular, of the ongoing struggles facing the Congo and Rwanda. They said Kagame’s presence in the United States is an effort to legitimize his actions, which, according to United Nations Security Council, include driving a deadly proxy war for Congolese minerals.
Congolese protestors also denounced the rapes of more than 400,000 female soldiers from 2006 to 2007, as detailed in a report in the American Journal of Public Health, that they say were committed by Kagame’s troops with impunity.
“This is not a political party, this is a civil society,” said Patrick Ntula, 38, a Congolese-born resident of Chicago. “These are people expressing themselves to say enough is enough.”
Meanwhile, a counter-protest took place across the street as attendees of the Rwanda Day conference that Kagame attended came out to defend their president.
Rwandan, but separated by allegiance, the two groups echoed a plea for unity while disagreeing over fundamentals.
“I support Rwandans,” said 34-year-old Francis T., a Rwandan businessman, “But this protest is nonsense.”
© 2011 Sun-Times Media, LLC. All rights reserved. This material may not be copied or distributed without permission. For more information about reprints and permissions, visit www.suntimesreprints.com. To order a reprint of this article, click here.
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Saturday, June 11, 2011

Rwanda opposition challenges Kagame in Chicago

Rwanda opposition challenges Kagame in Chicago AFP/File – Rwandan opposition leaders called President Paul Kagame, pictured in March 2011, a corrupt dictator and …
CHICAGO (AFP) – Rwandan opposition leaders called President Paul Kagame a corrupt dictator and war criminal Saturday at a protest outside the Chicago hotel where Kagame was set to address the Rwandan diaspora.
"Kagame is the worst dictator you can even think about because the entire political space has been closed," said Theogene Rudasingwa, Kagame's former cabinet chief and a leader of the opposition in exile.
"If you tried to write this story in Rwanda you'd be dead," he told AFP.
"Opposition leaders have been killed. Journalists have been killed."
The human rights violations resulting from Kagame's stranglehold on Rwanda and proxy war in the Democratic Republic of Congo have been well documented, Rudasingwa said.
"We are here to say can the world help us to bring accountability for these crimes and also for these crimes to stop because they are still going on," he said.
"On a positive note, the message of hope we are telling Rwandans and the international community is we Hutus and Tustis and Twa want truth, reconciliation, and healing."
Rudasingwa said he has been inspired by the democratic movements sweeping the Middle East and is hopeful that Rwanda can find a peaceful path to democracy, even though he does not believe Kagame will "easily relinquish power."
"We want freedom and of course the basics of democracy, that is something we aspire for," he said. "It's possible. We only need to work towards it."
Paul Rusesabagina, the man who inspired the film Hotel Rwanda by saving 1,268 people during the 1994 genocide, helped organize the protest.
"What happened in Rwanda in 1994 is not yet over," he said in an interview.
"It has been going on in the Congo led by these men who have been looting blood minerals and killing Congolese."
Rusesabagina cited human rights reports which show that approximately 4,500 people are killed every month in the Congo, where rape is used as a weapon of war.
Kagame's war crimes and dictatorship must end, he said, so that Rwanda can achieve reconciliation through open political dialogue and true democracy.
"What happened in Arab countries in North Africa might also be the next step in sub-Saharan Africa and if it is, it will start in Rwanda," Rusesabagina said.
"Dialogue -- not guns -- will solve our conflicts. Guns have failed. Let us silence guns and give hope."
Nathan Ndajeh was among the dozens of protesters who chanted "Kagame! War criminal!" outside the Rwanda Day conference.
"If you say something against the government you are signing your death," he said as he clutched a photograph of two jailed female journalists.
Ndajeh was out of the country when the genocide ravaged Rwanda and has been too afraid to go back.
"I know they have been killed, but I don't know how they've been killed," he said of his father and other relatives.
"It will trouble me for the rest of my life, and this is the guy who did it," he said of Kagame.
But Kagame got and extremely warm welcome inside the hotel, where thousands of Rwandan emigrants cheered his arrival and applauded his work in transforming their homeland.
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Rwanda: Memo to President Obama

June 8, 2011    Click here to view the original PDF Document         
                        No: 32/CSPR/MK/611
MEMORANDUM

MEMORANDUM
FROM RWANDAN ORGANIZATIONS BASED ABROAD

                                                                                                         
TO: His Excellency Barrack Obama
President of The United States of America
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20500


Subject: President Kagame’s visit to New York and Chicago

Your Excellency:

With our respects, we, Rwandan organizations listed below, urge your government to not welcome President Paul Kagame on the US soil for a trip that is leading him to New York and Chicago as one of the ways to pressure him and his government to open a genuine democratic process that accepts critics, dialogue with political opponents and allows freedom of speech.

We strongly praised your vision and the prospect that you would like to project on Africa through primarily the speech that you delivered in the Ghana’s parliament on July 11, 2009 addressing not only the population of Ghana but also of the whole African continent in general[1].  You did lay down your views, proposed policies and whishes for Africa which reiterated and re-energized us on our commitments to continue our fight for hope of true democracy and stronger institutions particularly in Rwanda that give everyone equal rights in front of justice and economical opportunities. It has been however deceiving on the Rwanda’s side as while the situation on the ground was getting worse with more political opponents to President Kagame and journalists being put in jail or simply killed, we’ve not only seen unweave red US aid to the current regime maintained or increased in some areas but also we are seeing President Kagame often being welcomed on the US soil.

We know how much the US people in general and your administration in particular have so generously helped Rwanda in response to the aftermaths of the 1990-1994 civil war followed by genocide, mass murder and massive population movements which devastated Rwanda’s physical infrastructure and social fabric. From the ‘‘support hope’’ mission and different forms of assistance to the Government of Rwanda and civil society groups, let alone different initiatives aiming at restoring peace in the Great Lakes region, the United States has proven to be a true friend and a key player in the economic and political landscape of post-genocide Rwanda.

Nevertheless, over the past seventeen years, our concerns have been increasing with respect to seeing the donor community in general and the Unites States of America in particular not only fail to achieve their higher-order aims of fostering peace, justice, democracy and reconciliation values in post-genocide, but also to even run counter to them by encouraging the culture of impunity, dictatorship and state-capture practices. Indeed, Since 1994, as numerous key observers including Human Rights Watch, Freedom House and your own State Department through the annually Human Rights report have noted, the RPF (Rwandan Patriotic Front)-led government has been accused of committing numerous human rights abuses, assassinating or harassing political opponents, targeting human rights defenders and narrowing the space for freedom of expression and independent civil society. In addition to have invaded a neighboring country and deliberately massacred thousands of Rwandan refugees and Congolese people in the Democratic Republic of Congo, President Kagame’s regime has maintained security arrangements with and provided weapons to armed proxy groups who continue to operate and commit serious human rights abuses in the DRC, including killings and rape.2

On October 1, 2010, the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights published the report of its human rights mapping exercise on Congo[2]. The report covers the most serious violations of human rights and international humanitarian law committed in Congo between March 1993 and June 2003 that also shaded some light on how President Kagame’s led regime was implicated in most of those tragic events. Our organizations along with many other Human Rights organizations have urged the United Nations members with US leadership to make a concerted international effort to initiate judicial investigations into grave human rights violations in the Democratic Republic of Congo documented by the UN and bring those responsible to justice.

As Human Rights Watch (HRW) stated in its today’s Council of June 7th, 2011 titled “Rwanda: Serious Concerns Regarding Freedom of Expression[3], it remains seriously concerned that freedom of expression is not respected in practice, as evidenced by these recent cases: 
  • In February 2011, Agnès Uwimana and Saidati Mukakibibi, journalists with the newspaper Umurabyo, were found guilty of endangering public order and sentenced to 17 years and 7 years respectively, in connection with articles viewed as critical of the government. Uwimana was also found guilty of minimizing the genocide, “divisionism” and defamation.
  • Bernard Ntaganda, leader of the opposition party P.S.-Imberakuri, was sentenced to four years' imprisonment in February 2011 for endangering national security and “divisionism”, in connection with his statements criticizing government policies.
  • Several other members of the PS-Imberakuri and the FDU-Inkingi opposition parties, including FDU-Inkingi leader Victoire Ingabire, remain in detention.
  • To HRW knowledge, there has been no progress in the investigation into the murder of Democratic Green Party Vice-President André Kagwa Rwisereka in July 2010.
In addition, President Kagame has expanded his terrorist activities abroad where assassination of any critic voices has been reported. As recent as last month, U.K. police warned two Rwandans in exile of evidence that they may be assassinated by the government of Rwanda[4]. One recalls that in June 2010, Lt General Kayumba Nyamwasa, former close aide to Kagame and High Commissioner of Rwanda to India, now living in exile in South Africa, was victim of an assassination attempt in Johannesburg[5]. South Africa authorities suspected the involvement of the government of Rwanda and since then has recalled his Ambassador to Rwanda. The list of critics to President Kagame who have been assassinated abroad is long, it includes Seth Sendashonga, former Minister of Interior in post genocide government assassinated in Nairobi, Kenya in 1998, Col. Theoneste Lizinde, a RPF officer who has just fled Kagame regime was killed in Nairobi, Kenya the same year of 1998[6]. It is feared that these Kagame criminal activities towards his political opponents and critics are now in high gear mode as shown by recent activities in UK and that he may be using venue in Chicago on June 10-11, 2011 as a launching pad of the same criminal activities in North American, where American and Canadian citizens will be harmed.

We have been strongly disappointed to see how President Kagame and his RPF-led government have cynically been levering genocide as a tool used for covering some leaders and protégé’s with a mantle of impunity and for monopolizing power by capturing by force state institutions and by delegitimizing, disarming and silencing dissent voices. They skillfully exploited the guilt and debt of the international community, which means that, with genocide, international community has lost the right to ask ‘awkward’ question of President Paul Kagame and his government’s agenda.

Against this deceitful background and in response to the sheer complexity of the post-genocide challenges and the incapacity of the international community to bring down the conflict potential, we believe that time has come to break the siege of silence and give Rwandans a chance to sit down, talk openly about their tragedy and forge a common vision to shape their future as did the American people three centuries ago. This is why we strongly believe that time has come to take a bold step with courage and engage Rwandans of all walks of life in a genuine process of sincere Dialogue, Truth and Reconciliation in order to break away from the longstanding cycle of violence and impunity and to pave the way for a lasting solution.

We believe you have the potential and good will to help Rwandans bring out the best of themselves and overcome the culture of fear and despair, get rid of politics of warlordism and ethno-centric tyranny as your predecessors did in Europe a half-century ago. Above all, we believe you have the potential and good will to restore hope and America’s image in Rwanda and in the Great Lakes region of Africa. We believe that we can speak on behalf of a great many voiceless Rwandans if we tell you that Rwandan people as a whole expect from your administration policy a strong support to their hope to see sincere and inclusive dialogue about the past and the future of their country prevail over the longstanding culture of repression and the cycle of violence and humanitarian crisis it brings about.

Once again, we thank you Excellency Mr. President for all efforts you deployed in an attempt to make a positive difference in Rwanda and request your considerations in assisting us in sparing future tragedy and give the next Rwandan generations the prospect of living in harmony with a lasting peace. Your critical support can mostly be achieved by asking President Kagame to do the right thing and open a roadmap of a genuine democratic process and dialogue and only until then can he be welcomed on the US soil for either private or official visits.  In hope to hear from you soon, we wish you a productive trip and thank you for your understanding and cooperation.


Sincerely,

For the Rwandese Community
                   Pascal Kalinganire


Honorable Hillary Clinton
Secretary of State
U.S. Department of State
2201 C Street NW
Washington, DC 20520
    
Honorable Governor Pat Quinn
James R. Thompson Center
100 W. Randolph, 16-100
Chicago, IL 60601
Phone: 312-814-2121

Honorable Rahm Emanuel
Mayor of City of Chicago
121 N La Salle St
Chicago City Hall 4th Floor
Chicago, IL 60602




List of Civil Society and Political Organizations for this initiative.

Mr. Félicien NDINDABAHIZI                                   Mr. Jean-Marie Vianney Ndagijimana
CERCI –Cote D’Ivoire (se)                                        FEIDAR-France (se)

Mr. Théobald Gakwaya Rwaka                                  Mr. Raphael Rwambonera
CNR-Switzerland (se)                                                RFIEKU-Suede (se)

Mr. Gerard Karangwa Semushi                                   Mme. Agnes Mukarugomwa
PDP-Imanzi  Netherlands (se)                         Dialogue & Convivialité – Belgium (se)

Théobald RUTIHUNZA                                             Mr. Eustache Habumuremyi
RIPRODHOR (se)                                                     Jambo-Belgium (se)

Mr. Léon Ngarukiye                                                   Mr. Joseph Matata
Amical-Rwandais  Danermark (se)                              CLIIR-Belgium (se)

Mr. Jean-Baptiste Ngarambe                                      Mme. Daphrose Nyirankundwankize
HRRF-Belgium (se)                                                    RIFDP-Belgium/Canada/Netherlands (se)

Mr. Jean-Paul Mihigo                                                 Mr. Gilbert NIZEYIMANA
RAYA-USA (se)                                                        CORWABEL-Belgium (se)

Mr. Pacifique Kabalisa                                    Mr. Pierre-Claver Nkinamubanzi                    
CPCH-Belgium (se)                                                    CRC-Canada (se)

Mr. Elysee Ndayisaba                                                 Mr. Theophile Murengerantwari          
AVICA-Belgium (se)                                                  MDPR-Intiganda  Germany (se)                                            
Mr. Etienne Mutabazi                                                  Mr. Jean-Paul Rwasamanzi
RDTJ-South Africa (se)                                              AKAGERA-RHEIN  Germany (se)                           
Mr. Ildephonse Murengezi                                          
UMUNTU-Switzerland (se)                                        

Mr. Callixte Kanani                                                     Mme. Marthe-Antoinette Balihe
CRES-Switzerland (se)                                               ARL-Luxemburg (se)

Mr. Jean-Damascene Rugomboka                              Mr. Pascal Kalinganire
CARP-Netherlands (se)                                              OPJDR-USA (se)
                                                                                 
Mr. Jean-Marie Vianney Ndagijimana
COVIGLA Collectif des victimes des crimes de masse
commis dans la région des grands lacs africains
France (se)
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Rwandan Opposition Reacts To RPF Opression

By Ann Garrison from the AFROBEATRADIO
Victoire Ingabire Umuhoza, chair person of Rwanda’s opposition coalition, FDU-Inkingi is spending her 236th day in Kigali’s Central prison, and the eleventh (11) consecutive week in inhumane isolation, which experts and party members have called ‘some kind of torture’. She is denied visits from members of her political party. On Friday June 3, 2011, visitors attempting to visit her at the maximum prison were ordered manu militari by Nyarugenge District police chief Mr Mutezintare to vacate the prison premises.
Victoire Ingabire Umuhoza’s trial which has been postponed three times already is now scheduled to begin on June 20, 2011. AfrobeatRadio’s Wuyi Jacobs speaks to FDU-Ikingi’s treasurer Ms. Alice Muhirwa in Rwanda’s capital, Kigali, about the upcoming trial and the likelyhood of a fair and independent trial for Victoire Ingabire. The interview was broadcast on AfrobeatRadio on WBAI 99.5 FM on Saturday June 4, 2011.
Transcript:
AfrobeatRadio/Wuyi Jacobs: Welcome to AfrobeatRadio Alice,
Alice Muhirwa: Thank you Jacobs
AfrobeatRadio: Could you describe the political space your party is working in Rwanda as we speak? Is there freedom of speech, or do you always face the risk of arrest for what you say?
Alice Muhirwa: I may say the political space here in Rwanda is highly closed. As you know, our political party registration has been denied several times. Many members of our party face serious threats of arrest and intimidation of all sorts, even the vice president was fired out from his job last year.
But we are not alone in this struggle, the green Party faces the same problems, their vice president was beheaded last year. They were also denied party registration for similar reasons.
The PS-imberakuri party is facing same threats. And so is the Ubuyanja party of former president Bizimungu and Charles Ntakirutinka.
A long list of independent media editors are exiled from the country. I can name also two female journalists who have been sentenced for a longtime; fourteen and twenty one years. Everyone and anyone who is attempting to open up a divergent voice from the ruling government, or the RPF, is getting trouble.
It is clear that the government or the RPF is not yet ready to open a real political space, for a real opposition; people who can really challenge them.
For us, we are feeling the danger every single day, but we believe in change. We have a common understanding of our country’s concerns and how to rebuild it. If South Africa can succeed, why not Rwanda? Positive change is possible, it may involve a lot in terms of people, sacrifice, and time, but we will continue until we get an effective reconciliation based on the truth of our own history.
AfrobeatRadio: Perhaps very soon, Victoire Imuhosa’s trial will begin. She has been in jail for many months now. Close to one year. The Rwandan government have stated that they can’t and don’t influence the judicial sector. I am wondering what your opinion of this is?
Alice Muhirwa: Whatever they may say or are doing is just to impress the international community that they are transparent, and the judiciary is independent. But as you know, we have seen how the government has interfered in her case.
The president himself, I remember the interview he gave in the Ugandan Daily Monitor on 5Th May 2010 where he mentioned that “before she came to contest in these elections she had been doing things that, in the end, would put her into trouble and she knew that. We have evidence, which has been brought to her attention and about 10 things she has been denying. Now she’s saying that seven of them are actually true and this has come as a result of the overwhelming evidence that was put in front of her.” That is the end of the quote.
Even the General prosecutor as well have said that since April 2010 they have had enough evidence to bring her in court, and yet his team requested the judge to prolong her detention three times with excuses that they need more time to collect evidence, and to submit interrogatory requests to some countries. They are doing this to break her spirit, we know that. If they had enough evidence since April 2010, why have they waited up May 2011 to open her trial? If the judicial system is really independent as they claim.
I guess it took some time to construct charges against her, and to look for people all over the country to act as witnesses against her. We are aware of their tricks. We believe that she will never get a fair and independent trial in Rwanda.
But for us, democracy starts with a cause. And we really know that she is innocent of the charges against her. As the chairperson of the opposition parties, she did nothing other than to criticize the major responsibilities of the ruling government. Kept in or released from prison, she switched on a light; no more silence in our hearts. We shall consider her our symbol of democracy.
AfrobeatRadio: How do you think the international community can help Victoire in the situation that she is in right now?
Alice Muhirwa: The international community has been supporting Rwanda, particularly in the aftermath of the genocide. In order to sustain the achievements and fruits of this support, it is important that they also get involved in the democratization process, and with human rights and freedoms in Rwanda.
They need to put pressure on the regime to release all political prisoners and to open up the political space. They should leave no stone unturned until Victoire and opposition leaders are set free. It is a shame to offer red carpet to oppressors and dictators. The strength of the international community needs to be seen, and now.
Wuyi Jacobs: The BBC recently reported on an alert by the MI5 that Rwanda opposition figure are in danger of being assassinated by the Rwandan government. I thought that was quite unusual, given that for the most part, the Rwandan government has been the darling of western governments and in the press here. I’m very interested to know what your party thinks of that?
Alice Muhirwa: For your information, it’s not the first time that the ruling government have assassinated or organized the elimination of Rwandans in exile. Our memories still recalls Seth Sendashonga killed in Kenya; Kayumba Nyamwasa, who was shot in South Africa. And there’re other people who were killed in the Democratic Republic of Congo. But it is the first time that MI5 has taken the responsibility to assure the security of those British based Rwanda nationals. Even if the ruling government rejected the accusation, saying that they can’t assassinate or follow Rwandan citizens in the UK, and the Rwandan foreign affairs minister added that amongst the opponents, those two figures mentioned don’t really pose any problems to the ruling government, and that maybe the MI5 got wrong information, or they have to check their sources again. But the MI5 have never said that those Rwandans in the UK are lying.
AfrobeatRadio: Many people in the West, in America, believe that Rwanda is a model developing country and a democracy. Many investors are coming to Rwanda to invest in your economy including prominent actors from Hollywood, I am sure you have heard of that, and these people present a very different picture other than the one you are presenting here?
Alice Muhirwa: Those people from the West still consider Rwanda a favorite country to invest because they think it is the only country with stability and security in the Great Lakes region for the past five years.
However, there are some other reports released recently which have ranked Rwanda’s economy 80th out 139 ranked countries. For example, the report on g global competiveness for 2011 released by the World Economic Forum; this report reveals fifteen problematic factors in doing business in Rwanda. I can tell you quickly the indexes. The first is access to financing with an index of 24.9. The second is the tax regulations. The third tax rates, saying that tax rates in Rwanda are high with an index of 13.9. The fourth is inadequate infrastructure indexed at 10.9. The fifth is inadequate workforce at 9.6 percent. The sixth, poor work ethic in the nation’s labor force and the Inflation at 3.6 percent. Foreign currency regulations is indexed at 2.1 percent. Poor public health, 2.1 percent. Corruption 0.6. Crime 0.4 and government instability is 0.
So, according to these figures, people from the West only consider the government instability which is indexed at zero percent, and the rate of corruption which is a 0.6 percent. Compared to other countries, the corruption is still high and government instability as well.
Other factors, such as loan access, tax regulation inflation don’t really affect the international investors because they save their money in their own countries. That doesn’t really affect their capital.
As for democracy in Rwanda, the political space is still restricted as I told you. Even the international communities have reacted on that recently. I remember the European cooperation minister, Ben Kinapen, during his visit to Rwanda insisted on political reform. Some others as well, including Olivier Chastell, the Belgium cooperation minister, have reacted to this. We have some information from the UK that the Queen herself wants the Rwandan government to stop intimidating the opposition.
AfrobeatRadio: How have these foreign investments affected the Rwandan people? Has it improved your lives?
Alice Muhirwa: It is very dangerous. The country is becoming more capitalist day by day. According to the figures I gave you above, we don’t have an adequate educated workforce, and for a capitalist society, it is a critical point to determine an efficient salary which can sufficiently face those tax regulations, high tax rates and inflation, or to face the market of goods and services. As a consequence, people are failing to save some money in their accounts, and their accesses to loans have become impossible. That’s how these foreign investors are affecting the national economy in discreet way. This type of economic system affects rural areas more than cities, and that also affects people from the lowest economic level, such as teachers, police, nurses and soldiers, they really suffer greatly. This class is most affected by this type of economy, and these people end up becoming voluntarily unemployed.
Wuyi Jacobs: Who owns Rwanda? Do Rwandans, I mean common people and average Rwandans feel that they own their own country?
Alice Muhirwa: I may say Rwandans are still not really interested and concerned with these issues because Rwanda has known so many crises economically, politically and so many Rwandeses are young. The Rwanda population according to recent statistics recorded by the National Division Statistic and released in a report that the Rwandan population is made up sixty-two percent young people, and those young people have seen a lot during the Genocide, and even after Genocide, they have survived so many crises, and they are not confident of themselves. They are still thinking that there going to be someone else to prepare their future.
They are not truly involved in the country’s concerns. We may need some other particular initiative from young people from all over the world. If I say that, I don’t mean only young people who are Rwanda, I also call young Rwandan living outside the country.
It is the time now to work together, to look for our own future, to start to think about how to build a good country, with hope, peace and reconciliation.
AfrobeatRadio: In what condition is Victoire being held right now?
Alice Muhirwa: She is still detained. She is awaiting her trial. The trial was postponed on twentieth of June, (2011) and most probably she will see her lawyers this coming week. They are still working on the file, but because the file has many pages, it is now a file of two thousand four hundred pages (2400). It has to be translated to English because she has a defense team of British lawyers.
It has a lot of work on it because the so called co-accused revealed so many contradictions. They need more time to cross-check so many allegations brough by the prosecutor.
AfrobeatRadio: Does she have access to visitors? Are you allowed to see her?
Alice Muhirwa: It is now ten weeks she has be denied access to get a mass visit as it used to be. Normally, members use to attend every Friday to visit her. They have since refused to give access to see her. They said that she must choose only five people who will come regularly to pay visit. She doesn’t have contact with anyone on the outside. She can’t know anyone who will come to visit her if she can’t get in touch with anyone. It is just an excuse to isolate her.
AfrobeatRadio: So for ten weeks she has had no contact with the outside world?
Alice Muhirwa: Yes (No she has none)
AfrobeatRadio: Do you know if she is held in isolation?
Alice Muhirwa: Yes, she is not detained in the lady’s hall as other normal prisoners. She is detained in a self contained room. She just had one cellmate with whom she shares everything. She is not allowed to go for collective activities like church service, collective sports, meetings. She only gets five minutes per day to get out and get her meal, and return to her cell.
AfrobeatRadio: Thank you very much Alice for talking to us and we hope you remain safe yourself.
Alice Muhirwa: Sure
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Protest for Peace in Rwanda, Chicago, June 11, 2011

Paul KagameKagame of Rwanda
Rwandans, Congolese and Americans Join Together In Support of Peace and Reconciliation to Protest the Appearance to President Paul Kagame of Rwanda  in Chicago on June 11
Immediate Release                   Contact: Kitty Kurth 
June 8, 2011                     Cell Phone: 312-617-7288

Rwandans, Congolese and Americans Join Together In Support of Peace and Reconciliation to Protest the Appearance to President Paul Kagame of Rwanda 
in Chicago on June 11 

Paul Rusesabagina will join with his fellow Rwandans, other Africans and Americans to peacefully protest the presence of Rwandan President Paul Kagame in Chicago on Saturday, June 11 at the Hyatt Regency Chicago, 151 E. Wacker Drive at 2:00 p.m.  

According to the United Nations Human Rights Commission, President Kagame is responsible for millions of deaths of Rwandans and Congolese citizens. The UN in its Mapping report of 1 October, 2010, details those war crimes, crimes against humanity and even possible acts of genocide (http://www.ohchr.org/en/Countries/AfricaRegion/Pages/RDC ... ). For years, the United Nations Security Council has been reporting that Rwanda is responsible for driving a proxy war for minerals in neighboring Congo. 

Hotel Rwanda Rusesabagina Foundation President Paul Rusesabagina said, “I believe that the dictatorial practices of President Kagame should not be condoned by Chicagoans.  I will gather with my fellow Rwandans who wish for Truth and Reconciliation and lasting peace for our country. We will protest the presence of Kagame’s bloody hands and oppressive fists. His acts as President are creating a situation that will likely devolve in to more violence for Rwanda.”

The June 3, 2011 report from Amnesty International condemns Kagame’s government, saying “The Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF), in power since the 1994 genocide, tightly controls political space, civil society and the media, contending that this is necessary to prevent renewed violence. Human rights defenders, journalists and political opponents cannot openly and publicly criticize. 
the authorities. People who do speak out risk prosecution and imprisonment.” The report, entitled UNSAFE TO SPEAK OUT: RESTRICTIONS ON FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION IN RWANDA says "freedom of expression in Rwanda has been unduly restricted for many years.
The months leading up to the August 2010 presidential elections were marked by a clampdown on freedom of expression, which still shows no sign of abating" (http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/info/AFR47/002/2011/en ).     

Human Rights Watch published it’s latest Rwanda report on May 31, 2011, ( http://www.hrw.org/en/reports/2011/05/31/justice-compromised ) that says in Rwanda justice has been compromised, and that flaws in trials have lead to miscarriages of justice. Human Rights Watch declared that President Kagame is in crisis (http://www.hrw.org/en/news/2010/09/21/rwanda-president-crisis ), as he drives the country that has suffered genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity further into the direction of civil war and more bloodshed. 

Kagame has jailed political opposition leaders, closed political space, banned independent media, and pursues Rwandans abroad to assassinate them and harass them. Last year he sent thugs to ransack the house of Paul Rusesabagina in Belgium. Last month law enforcement in the United Kingdom warned Rwandans that "reliable intelligence states that the Rwandan government poses an imminent threat to your life" (http://www.nytimes.com/2011/05/20/world/africa/20rwanda.html ). 

The peaceful protesters who gather in Chicago on Saturday will call for an immediate end to President Kagame's war crimes and impunity, and will ask the international community to bring him to account for the crimes he has committed. The protesters will also be asking the international community, especially the United States and the United Kingdom, to support Rwandans searching for the permanent resolution to the current Rwandan refugee crisis; an end to chronic violent conflict and prevention of more bloodshed in Rwanda and the Great Lakes region of east and central Africa; support for human rights protection, dialogue, freedom, equal justice, democracy, and equitable prosperity. They will call for reconciliation and healing among many millions of Rwandans and their neighbors who have been subjected to untold suffering for so long.
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Wednesday, April 13, 2011

GERARD GAHIMA blasts Kagame's RPF evil system in Louisville, KY, USA

By Robert Kayinamura
Democracy Human Rights 3rd Annual Memorial Service in Louisville, Kentucky,
USA for the Victims of Violence, War and Genocide in Africa

Photo: Louisville Slugger Field.
On Saturday April 9, 2011, around 100 Africans from Rwanda, Burundi, the DRC, and Sudan who have experienced untold violence in their home countries, came together in Louisville, Kentucky, for a memorial service led by Most Reverend Joseph Kurtz, the Archbishop of Louisville, to remember all those who have been killed in the last 2 decades of unending conflict and violence, and make a solemn appeal for peace in the whole region.

Also present were Gerald Gahima and Gervais Condo of the Rwanda National Congress (RNC), who made the trip from Washington to partake in this annual commemoration service, the third since 2009.

The Archbishop exhorted the congregants to pray for peace and exert all means necessary to collectively promote peace and unity, and shun violence and those who advocate it.

In a meeting that followed the service, members of the Rwandan and Burundian community were extensively briefed by Gahima and Condo about the progress the RNC has made since coming into existence last December, and its goal of joining hands with other Rwandans in the opposition to put an end to the RPF dictatorial regime in Kigali and bring about democracy, equitable justice and genuine reconciliation among Rwandans.

Gahima came out forcefully against what he calls a deeply flawed justice system in Rwanda, including the notorious Gacaca courts which he never believed in from the beginning, railed against the persecution, incarceration, demonization and killing of political opponents, condemned the killings of ethnic Hutus inside Rwanda and the DRC by the RPF army as documented by human rights groups, experts teams reports including the U.N. Mapping report, and blasted the insensitive, blind political exploitation of genocide memorial sites throughout Rwanda where bones and skulls of simple and unknown Rwandans are exposed while relatives of those in power are buried in dignity.

Gahima regretted not having left the RPF a lot sooner, and also regretted defending the RPF human rights record in international fora as he was blindsided by his position from atrocities being committed by the RPF army and by President Kagame and the powerful clique around him. However, Gahima vividly reminded all present that for there to be genuine reconciliation in Rwanda, Tutsis and Hutus must candidly accept the truth of the tragedy that took place in our country, and collectively move forward from there. He said that while Tutsis must accept that the RPF did kill Hutus in perhaps even bigger numbers than are made public, Hutus must also accept the reality that genocide did happen because “all those Tutsis who died did not kill themselves”.

He concluded by insisting that if Hutus and Tutsis come together as brothers and endeavor to build a common future, there is no doubt that they will defeat the RPF’s evil system put in place by President Paul Kagame. The movement for democracy has started and it will not be stopped.

Related Materials:
On The Legacy of Numerous Genocide Memorials in Rwanda


Theogene Rudasingwa "A Case For Humanity" posted by Mamadou Kouyate @ 12:51 AM
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Monday, April 11, 2011

Kagame's Rwanda: Myth and Reality


The U.S. should endorse Amnesty International's request that the UN create a structure in which the cases can be heard and trials conducted.
Paul Kagame, President of Rwanda
Paul Kagame, President of Rwanda

(SAN FRANCISCO) - In April 2010, President Barack Obama marked the 17th anniversary of the "unimaginable slaughter" of Rwanda's 1994 genocide, saying it reminded the world of its duties to civilians in places like Libya.  President Obama made no effort to dispel the myth used by Rwanda President Paul Kagame about the 1994 Rwanda genocide and the role played by the U.S. leading up to the genocide.
I used the word "myth" to describe the 1994 genocide. Yes, the 1994 Genocide was horrible, but it was just one episode in a long history of violence in that part of the world.  The U.S. and Kagame keep focusing on the 1994 Genocide, but neglect to put it in context.  If they did, their complicity in the genocide would be revealed.
For a version of the 1994 Rwanda Genocide closer to the truth, I recommend the Report of the Independent Inquiry into the United Nations during the 1994 genocide in Rwanda, dated December 15, 1999. (http://daccess-dds-ny.un.org/doc/UNDOC/GEN/N99/395/47/IMG/N9939547.pdf?OpenElement)
What actually happened in Rwanda?  Kagame was trained at the U.S. Army Command and Staff College in Leavenworth, Kansas.  Major-General Kagame returned from Leavenworth to lead the Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF) shortly after the October 1990 invasion of Rwanda by Ugandan forces.  This has been misrepresented as a "civil war" or "war of liberation" by a Tutsi-led guerilla army.
The so-called civil war was in reality a brutal struggle for political power between the Hutu-led coalition government of Habyarimana supported by France and the RPF-backed Tutsi forces backed financially and militarily by the United States.  The Hutu-Tutsi rivalry was used deliberately in the pursuit of U.S. strategic and geopolitical objectives by establishing a U.S. sphere of influence in Central Africa, a region historically dominated by France and Belgium.
What was at stake?  The region's vast geostrategic mineral wealth, i.e., cobalt, oil, natural gas, copper, uranium, tin, coltan, cassiterite, gold, and diamonds.
In April 1994, according to French anti-terrorist judge Jean-Louis Bruguière and many others, the RPF shot down the plane carrying Rwandan President Habyarimana and Burundian President Cyprien Ntaryamira, which was the catalyst for the Genocide.
By July 1994, the RPF completed its coup d’etat and consolidated its power in Rwanda.
Kagame's government has maintained political power and manipulated public sympathy by promoting a highly politicized ideology of the 1994 genocide.  Anyone who challenges the official story is branded a "genocide negationist," a "genocide revisionist, or "killers of remembrance" by the Kagame regime.  Even the Genocide Memorial Centre, which my wife and I visited in 2004, promotes his version of the genocide.
As I remember, there was a banner or sign with Rwanda's motto:
In September 2010, a draft report of the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) was leaked. The leaked OHCHR Report caused outrage in Rwanda after it was revealed that the UN intended to accuse Rwandan troops of having killed and raped Hutu refugees in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), then known as Zaire, between 1993 and 2003. According to the draft leaked Report, the Hutu militia along with Hutu civilians fled across the border into the DRC. Rwanda, aided by Congolese rebel forces, pursued them. These combined forces systematically massacred hundreds of thousands of Rwandan and Congolese Hutus, the majority of which were children, women, and the elderly. According to the leaked OHCHR report, it could be said that a second genocide occurred.
This makes a mockery of Rwanda's "never again" motto.
Rwanda threatened to pull its 3,000 plus UN peacekeeping troops out of the Sudanese region of Darfur if the draft report were endorsed for publication. Uganda made a similar threat.
In October 2010, the official report entitled Democratic Republic of the Congo, 1993-2003
Report of the Mapping Exercise documenting the most serious violations of human rights and international humanitarian law committed within the territory of the Democratic Republic of the Congo between March 1993 and June 2003, dated www.ohchr.org/Documents/Countries/ZR/DRC_MAPPING_REPORT_FINAL_EN.pdf was released.
But rather than categorically state that genocide had been carried out by those armies, groups and governments, including Rwanda, the official >OHCHR Report inserts the words "allegedly," "possibly" or "apparently" into the final version of descriptions of violations. These amendments could be linked to claims by Rwanda and others mentioned in the Report that the OHCHR Report was based on unsubstantiated documentation and testimony.  Did the UN caved in to pressure from Rwanda and other countries named in the >OHCHR Report?
The U.S. should endorse Amnesty International's request that the UN create a structure in which the cases can be heard and trials conducted.  In addition, the U.S. should reexamine its relationship with the Kagame, well on his way to becoming another president-for- life.
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Salem-News.com writer Ralph E. Stone was born in Massachusetts. He is a graduate of both Middlebury College and Suffolk Law School. We are very fortunate to have this writer's talents in this troubling world; Ralph has an eye for detail that others miss. As is the case with many Salem-News.com writers, Ralph is an American Veteran who served in war. Ralph served his nation after college as a U.S. Army officer during the Vietnam war. After Vietnam, he went on to have a career with the Federal Trade Commission as an Attorney specializing in Consumer and Antitrust Law. Over the years, Ralph has traveled extensively with his wife Judi, taking in data from all over the world, which today adds to his collective knowledge about extremely important subjects like the economy and taxation. You can send Ralph an email at this address stonere@earthlink.net
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Monday, January 10, 2011

UK: Rwandan Refugees Warned of Elimination Plans

UK Exiled Rwandans Protesting in Front of Embassy
From The Proxy Lake by Claire Umurungi
Rwandan government allegedly might be planning a series of eliminations and acts of division within the Rwandan exiled community in UK by means of assassinations, poisoning and false accusations.
Newspaper Umuvugizi claims to have received intelligence materials that, following a meeting between military and intelligence authorities in Kigali, there are plans to eliminate exiled dissidents currently living in United Kingdom. The article containing the allegations was published on Saturday, 8th January 2011.
(Read Umuvugizi Newspaper full article translation here)
According to Umuvugizi newspaper, on this meeting, a Rwandan military officer, Colonel Mupenzi might have received approval and budget to carry out his proposed plan.
A list of UK local representatives and supporters of FDU-Inkingi, RNC and Imvura political parties might have been drawn.
Umuvugizi also revealed that Rwandan officials might be concerned over the involvement of BBC Journalists with the opposition.
Harassment of Rwandan ex-soldiers is also claimed. It is alleged that two days after his return, officer Mupenzi instructed the Rwandan Embassy to call a certain lady Lieutenant Jeanne D’Arc Umulisa, a former Rwanda Defense Force servicewoman now in exile in UK since 2000. She was called in a meeting in a Nandos Restaurant in Huston, London where they met at around 17h30.
The article said that the meeting was led by Rwandan Ambassador Ernest Rwamucyo and was attended by Intelligence officer Jimmy Uwizeye and Mr. Murego also an intelligence officer.
It is claimed that Mr. Murego had fled his country in the past as did Lieutenant Jeanne, but he has been brought back to work under Kagame’s umbrella. Lieutenant Jeanne is a founder of “Wariyo Baka”, an association of Rwandan exiled ex-soldiers living in UK, Umuvugizi revealed.
Allegedly, Lieutenant Jeanne d’Arc was instructed to dissolve the association and to join RPF party or, otherwise, she would face serious consequences and soon realise her mistakes, in case she refuses to apologize and rejoin the ranks.
According to Umuvugizi, the Ambassador Rwamucyo might have warned her that, if she fails to dissolve the association of exiled RDF servicemen and to apologize, he would take steps to dissolve it and prove her wrong.
Umuvugizi’s exiled Chief Editor Jean-Bosco Gasasira claims that the Rwandan Embassy’s intelligent officers are currently tasked with locating certain refugees in the UK and to lure them into the plan. Other refugees will have to be watched closely to know where they live and what they do.
The plan also include silencing dissidents by ways of false accusations, using hired English people to be sent to wherever they are or in their homes, according to the Newspaper.
The newspaper Chief Editor claims that one of the main secret agents is a certain Mrs Abera, who resides in UK as a refugee. Abera allegedly is acting under the Diaspora initiative in locating Rwandans through her association with their wives.
Mrs Abera might have transformed her home into a pub to allegedly offer a place of meeting to the embassy agents and other refugee-disguised agents who are living off the UK taxpayer’s money.
The Umuvugizi article goes on to say that Rwandan embassy is using some of the defected soldiers who had exiled into UK and now living poverty. These young men have joined the intelligence network of spies and are targeting relatives of the late former President Habyalimana, supporters of Rwanda National Congress, United Democratic Forces as well as local BBC journalists.
“This intelligence Network has a deep hierarchy with different branches in the country. At the top of the largest branch is intelligent officer Jimmy who is an experienced spymaster” says Jean-Bosco Gasasira.
“Another branch of the network is the so-called Diaspora initiative. They use this organisation to locate Rwandans, learn what they do and what their political aspirations are that may be opposed to Kagame’s and to RPF policies.”
Umuvugizi warned “Rwandans living in UK especially those who are opposed to Kagame to be vigilant. They should avoid attending diner parties or same restaurants frequently“.
Full article translation here
Original Article in Kinyarwanda language
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