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 The Guardian. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Guardian. Show all posts

Saturday, July 17, 2010

Deadly attacks on Rwandan opposition spark warning by UN

Ban Ki-moon demands full investigation amid claims of crackdown before next month's poll
Published in the Guardian
By Peter Beaumont
 


Protests in Madrid against the visit of Rwandan president Paul Kagame. The Spanish prime minister cancelled a meeting with him. Photograph: Arturo Rodriguez/AP

The United Nations has demanded a full investigation into allegations of politically motivated killings of opposition figures in Rwanda in the run-up to the country's election next month.
The UN secretary-general, Ban Ki-moon demanded the inquiry in a meeting with Rwanda's president, Paul Kagame, after a series of attacks on figures unpopular with the regime in Rwanda and in several other African states.
Last week a senior opposition figure was beheaded near the southern Rwandan city of Butare, while a lawyer who had participated in genocide trials at a UN tribunal was shot dead in Dar es Salaam. Last week's killings come hard on the heels of the attempted murder in Pretoria, South Africa, of a former senior Rwandan general who had fallen out with Kagame, and the murder in the Rwandan capital, Kigali, of a journalist investigating that shooting.
Two opposition newspapers in Rwanda have been banned from publishing, while opposition politicians and human rights organisations have been harassed by the authorities.
A spokesman for Ban said: "The secretary-general … noted the upcoming elections in Rwanda and expressed concern about recent incidents causing political tensions. He stressed the need to uphold human rights. The secretary-general encouraged the Rwandan authorities to take immediate action, including a thorough investigation into the latest incidents, and to bring the perpetrators to justice."
The Spanish prime minister, José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, pulled out of a scheduled meeting with Kagame on Friday after receiving a petition alleging he had violated human rights. The meeting in Spain was the first to be held by a group of experts named last month by Ban to supervise the UN's Millenium Development Goals, which aim to halve extreme poverty by 2015. Ban had prompted protests by naming Kagame and Zapatero as his co-chairmen.
"The prime minister yesterday received a petition from various political groups saying that they didn't think it was appropriate for the meeting to take place," the deputy prime minister, María Teresa Fernández de la Vega, told Spanish television.
Rwandan government figures have strenuously denied orchestrating a campaign of violence and intimidation and offered alternative explanations for several of the attacks, including robbery and a vengeance killing related to the genocide trial.
The 1994 genocide – the murder of an estimated 800,000 Tutsis and politically moderate Hutus, ended by a Tutsi military intervention headed by Kagame – has continued to dominate the politics of the still fragile country.
After ending the genocide, Kagame was hailed as a hero, but critics have since accused him of trampling on political and press freedoms.
Despite remarkable progress in stabilising the country, tension has been growing in Rwanda since 19 February, when a series of grenade explosions killed three people and injured 30 more in Kigali. Some analysts attributed those attacks not to Hutu extremists but to Tutsi dissidents within Kagame's own party.
The former general who was wounded in Pretoria, Faustin Kayumba Nyamwasa, was publicly accused by Rwanda's chief prosecutor of being behind the grenade attacks, while the journalist murdered in Kigali, Jean Leonard Rugambage, was investigating government links to his attempted murder.
Since then, however, a number of other senior military figures have been arrested – allegedly those harbouring rival political ambitions to Kagame – suggesting splits within Kagame's regime. Among them was Brigadier-General Jean Bosco Kazura, the head of the country's football federation, who was taken into custody for making an "unauthorised" trip to South Africa. The government reportedly suspected that he had travelled to meet prominent Rwandan exiles living there.
The case of the decapitated politician, André Kagwa Rwisereka, is also instructive. He belonged to Rwanda's Green party, which was set up by Frank Habineza, a Tutsi exile from Uganda, like Kagame, who is also a former member of Kagame's RPF. The party was prevented from running in the elections.
Habineza, who says he has also received death threats, complained last week that the government had refused to give opposition leaders protection.
"It is very sad and shocking that we heard that our vice-president was murdered. His head was almost cut off and he was also stabbed in the chest. We would like now to call upon the Rwandan government and the national police to carry out a thorough investigation," he said.
Amnesty International set out concerns in April, echoing the view of other human rights organisations. "Recent months have seen a number of government measures against critics and opponents of the government, including restrictions on freedom of expression and association," it said. "Amnesty International urges the Rwandan government to respect freedom of expression and association, including by allowing space for human rights work.

Thursday, July 1, 2010

Editor blames security forces after Rwandan journalist shot dead


Presidential hopeful Victoire Ingabire said she had been denied the right to appear on the ballot. Photograph: Jason Straziuso/AP

David Smith, Africa correspondent

The murder of a Rwandan journalist has raised fears of a violent crackdown on freedom of the press and political opposition after his colleagues claimed the killing was a state-sponsored assassination.

News of the killing came as a leading challenger to the president, Paul Kagame, said she had been barred from standing in August's election.

The acting editor of Rwanda's Umuvugizi newspaper, Jean Leonard Rugambage, died in hospital on Thursday night after he was shot by two men who then fled in a car.

The paper's exiled editor, Jean Bosco Gasasira, said security forces had carried out the attack because Rugambage had been investigating the state's alleged role in the shooting of an exiled Rwandan general in South Africa last weekend.

"I'm 100% sure it was the office of the national security services which shot him dead," Gasasira told the Voice of America.

Gasasira said that Rugambage had complained he was under constant surveillance, but had ignored his colleague's warnings to leave Rwanda for his own safety. "I told him to cross and flee Rwanda into Uganda to see how we can handle the issue. But unfortunately they killed him before," he said.

Gasasira moved to Uganda in April after Umuvugizi and another weekly paper were suspended for six months by Rwanda's press council for inciting opposition to the government. Umuvugizi sought to circumvent the ban by publishing online instead.

Recent crackdowns have heightened concerns about an authoritarian approach to independent media and political dissent in Rwanda as it prepares for its second presidential election since the 1994 genocide.

Tensions were further raised today when Victoire Ingabire, a Hutu opposition candidate, said she was being denied the right to appear on August's election ballot because she had been charged with denying the genocide had occurred.

The opposition parties FDU-Inkingi, headed by Ingabire, and the Democratic Green party of Rwanda claim the government has prevented them from registering their parties and exercising their political rights.

"The ruling party, RPF, has indeed shown to the Rwandan people and the international community that it is too scared to compete with the real opposition and has rather resorted to getting stooge candidates to compete with," said Ingabire and Green party leader Frank Habineza.

Ingabire's party and other opposition parties tried to demonstrate against Rwanda's electoral commission yesterday , but police shut down the protest, saying it was illegal. About a hundred people were arrested, Ingabire said.

Police also arrested another presidential contender, Bernard Ntaganda, on suspicion of attempted murder.

A spokesman Eric Kayiranga said: "[He] has not been charged yet, we will continue working on it. We are still collecting evidence."

Kagame is widely expected to win a second seven-year term in the elections on 9 August. He has held de facto power since 1994 when his guerrilla force took over after ending the massacres of some 800,000 ethnic Tutsis and moderate Hutus.

Kagame is robust in his defence of Rwanda's economic growth, arguing in a recent Guardian interview: "Your model of democracy, why should it be suitable for me?"

South Africa is investigating whether the Johannesburg shooting of Lieutenant General Kayumba Nyamwasa, accused of terrorism by Rwanda, was politically motivated, as intensifying speculation holds. Nyamwasa is recovering in hospital and four suspects are under arrest