Rwanda: Cartographie des crimes
Rwanda: cartographie des crimes du livre "In Praise of Blood, the crimes of the RPF" de Judi Rever
Kagame devra être livré aux Rwandais pour répondre à ses crimes: la meilleure option de réconciliation nationale entre les Hutus et les Tutsis.
Let us remember Our People
Let us remember our people, it is our right
You can't stop thinking
Don't you know
Rwandans are talkin' 'bout a revolution
It sounds like a whisper
The majority Hutus and interior Tutsi are gonna rise up
And get their share
SurViVors are gonna rise up
And take what's theirs.
We're the survivors, yes: the Hutu survivors!
Yes, we're the survivors, like Daniel out of the lions' den
(Hutu survivors) Survivors, survivors!
Get up, stand up, stand up for your rights
et up, stand up, don't give up the fight
“I’m never gonna hold you like I did / Or say I love you to the kids / You’re never gonna see it in my eyes / It’s not gonna hurt me when you cry / I’m not gonna miss you.”
The situation is undeniably hurtful but we can'stop thinking we’re heartbroken over the loss of our beloved ones.
"You can't separate peace from freedom because no one can be at peace unless he has his freedom".
Malcolm X
Welcome to Home Truths
The year is 1994, the Fruitful year and the Start of a long epoch of the Rwandan RPF bloody dictatorship. Rwanda and DRC have become a unique arena and fertile ground for wars and lies. Tutsi RPF members deny Rights and Justice to the Hutu majority, to Interior Tutsis, to Congolese people, publicly claim the status of victim as the only SurViVors while millions of Hutu, interior Tutsi and Congolese people were butchered. Please make RPF criminals a Day One priority. Allow voices of the REAL victims to be heard.
Everybody Hurts
“Everybody Hurts” is one of the rare songs on this list that actually offers catharsis. It’s beautifully simple: you’re sad, but you’re not alone because “everybody hurts, everybody cries.” You’re human, in other words, and we all have our moments. So take R.E.M.’s advice, “take comfort in your friends,” blast this song, have yourself a good cry, and then move on. You’ll feel better, I promise.—Bonnie Stiernberg
KAGAME - GENOCIDAIRE
Paul Kagame admits ordering...
Paul Kagame admits ordering the 1994 assassination of President Juvenal Habyarimana of Rwanda.
Why did Kagame this to me?
Inzira ndende
Search
Hutu Children & their Mums
Rwanda-rebranding
Rwanda-rebranding-Targeting dissidents inside and abroad, despite war crimes and repression
Rwanda has “A well primed PR machine”, and that this has been key in “persuading the key members of the international community that it has an exemplary constitution emphasizing democracy, power-sharing, and human rights which it fully respects”. It concluded: “The truth is, however, the opposite. What you see is not what you get: A FAÇADE”
Rwanda has hired several PR firms to work on deflecting criticism, and rebranding the country.
Targeting dissidents abroad
One of the more worrying aspects of Racepoint’s objectives
was to “Educate and correct the ill informed and factually
incorrect information perpetuated by certain groups of expatriates
and NGOs,” including, presumably, the critiques
of the crackdown on dissent among political opponents
overseas.
This should be seen in the context of accusations
that Rwanda has plotted to kill dissidents abroad. A
recent investigation by the Globe and Mail claims, “Rwandan
exiles in both South Africa and Belgium – speaking in clandestine meetings in secure locations because of their fears of attack – gave detailed accounts of being recruited to assassinate critics of President Kagame….
Ways To Get Rid of Kagame
How to proceed for revolution in Rwanda:
- The people should overthrow the Rwandan dictator (often put in place by foreign agencies) and throw him, along with his henchmen and family, out of the country – e.g., the Shah of Iran, Marcos of Philippines.Compaore of Burkina Faso
- Rwandans organize a violent revolution and have the dictator killed – e.g., Ceaucescu in Romania.
- Foreign powers (till then maintaining the dictator) force the dictator to exile without armed intervention – e.g. Mátyás Rákosi of Hungary was exiled by the Soviets to Kirgizia in 1970 to “seek medical attention”.
- Foreign powers march in and remove the dictator (whom they either instated or helped earlier) – e.g. Saddam Hussein of Iraq or Manuel Noriega of Panama.
- The dictator kills himself in an act of desperation – e.g., Hitler in 1945.
- The dictator is assassinated by people near him – e.g., Julius Caesar of Rome in 44 AD was stabbed by 60-70 people (only one wound was fatal though).
- Organise strikes and unrest to paralyze the country and convince even the army not to support the dictaor – e.g., Jorge Ubico y Castañeda was ousted in Guatemala in 1944 and Guatemala became democratic, Recedntly in Burkina Faso with the dictator Blaise Compaoré.
Almighty God :Justice for US
Killing Hutus on daily basis
RPF Trade Mark: Akandoya
Fighting For Our Freedom?
KAGAME VS JUSTICE
Sunday, August 25, 2013
We HAVE A CARD THAT SAYS GET OUT OF JAIL FREE
(dedicated to our Umuhoza, Ingabire yacu still in Kagame’s
joal)
We feel tears running down our faces
As we sit in this quiet lonely place
We think of you and need you here
Umuhoza Wacu, Ingabire Yacu |
We hit the floor on bended knees
We ask,We beg, We start to plead
Please bring HER home
God, no longer do We want to be Alone
Is there an Angel you could send to us
And give us a miracle in God We trust
She's unlawfully detained, She needs to be free
Please God bring Her home to us
We believe in love, We believe in you
Please God is there something you could do
We'll make it up to you God, you know We will
We'll be good and honest, grateful and true
So please send us an Angel, is all We ask of you
We'll say this prayer each and every day
Until She is in our arms and home to sta
We love you & miss you so much!
RWANDA: URUBANZA
RWA MADAME VICTOIRE INGABIRE UMUHOZA
KANAMA 25,
2013
IKIGANIRO KU RUBANZA RWA MADAME VICTOIRE INGABIRE UMUHOZA
RADIYO ITAHUKA
TARIKI YA 05 KANAMA 2013
RADIYO ITAHUKA
TARIKI YA 05 KANAMA 2013
Joseph Bukeye, Komiseri
Ushinzwe Ubukangurambaga muri FDU-Inkingi
Q. Tubanze twibutse abatwumva. Harya urwo rubanza rwatangiye ryari mu
rukiko rukuru rwa Kigali ? Victoire yaregwaga iki ?
R. Madame Victoire yafashwe bwa mbere tariki ya 21/04/2010, amaze
amezi atatu gusa ageze muRwanda. Icyo gihe yaregwaga ibyaha bitatu aribyo:
ibikorwa by’iterabwoba, ingengabitekerezo ya génocide, guhakana génocide no
gukwirakwiza impuha.
Q. Kuba
madame Victoire yarajuriye byatewe n’iki ? Ni iki atishimiye mu mikirize
y’urubanza mu rukiko rukuru rwamuburanishije?
R. Mu
mikirize yarwo urukiko rukuru rwamuhanaguyeho ibyaha byose yari yarezwe
n’ubushinjacyaha, uretse kimwe cy’ibikorwa by’iterabwoba urukiko rwahinduyemo
icyaha cyo kugambana. Gusa icyatangaje ni uko urukiko rwarenze ku birego rwari
rwashyikirijwe rukiyongereraho ikindi cyo gupfobya genocide. Nkaba nakwibutsa
ko haba mu ibazwa imbere ya police, haba imbere y’ubushinjacyaha cyangwa mu
rukiko, madame Victoire ntiyigeze abazwa iby’iki cyaha gishya.
Q. Bikaba rero ari byo byatumye madame Victoire Ingabire ajurira?
Mme Ingabire Victoire Umuhoza Uwali kuba Perezida w'igihugu Iyo Kagame atamufunga |
Ikindi madame Ingabire yinubiye mu mikirize y’uru rubanza ni
ukumuhambiraho umutwe w’ingabo atazi. Byaje no kugaragara ko uwo mutwe utabaho.
Q. Twumva ariko ko ngo n’ubushinjacyaha bwari bwajuriye ?
R. Nibyo koko ubushinjacyaha bwari bwajuriye. Bwo ariko bukaba
bwarinubiraga ko ngo imyaka 8 madame Victoire yakatiwe yari mike, ugereranije
n’ibyaha bwari bwamureze. Bwageze n’aho bugereranya ibirego bye n’ibya
Mushayidi bukavuga ko butumva ukuntu atakatiwe gufungwa burundu.
Q. Reka tugaruke mu bujurire imbere y’urukiko rw’ikirenga. Iburana
ryatangiye ryari ?
R. Urukiko rw’ikirenga rwatangiye kumva ababurana tariki ya 25 mars
2013. Icyo gihe muribuka ko urubanza rwari rwitabiriwe n’abarwanashyaka benshi.
Kubera ko ubutegetsi butashakaga ko bigaragara ko madame Victoire Ingabire
afite abantu bamuri inyuma bangana gutyo, bwahisemo gukwirakwiza imishwaro abo
bantu. Ndetse Umunyamabanga Mukuru w’agateganyo w’ishyaka FDU-Inkingi, Bwana
Sylvain Sibomana nibwo yafashwe akorerwa ibya mfura mbi kugeza ubwo akutse
amenyo. Na n’ubu aracyari mu munyururu aburagizwa.
Q. Madame Victoire yifashe ate imbere y’urwo rukiko ? Uko guhutaza
abamushyigikiye ntibymutesheje umutwe cyane cyane ko abamurinda banamubujije
gusuhuza abari aho nk’uko bisanzwe ?
R. Madame Ingabire yabimbuye ubujurire ageza ku rukiko ibibazo
by’ibanze (Questions de procédure):
1) Ububasha bw’urukiko rukuru mu guhindura
amasezerano u Rwanda rwagiranye na RDC ku byerekeranye n’itahuka mu mahoro
kubahoze ari abarwanyi muri FDLR.
Bariya basirikare batatu bamushinja aribo : Uwumuremyi Vital,
Nditurende Tharcisse na Karuta JMV, akaba yibaza ukuntu bakurikiranwa ku bintu
bakoze muri Congo ku buryo bunyuranije n’ayo masezerano. Ku baba batazi
igikubiye muri ayo masezerano, yavugaga ko abarwanyi ba FDLR bafata icyemezo
cyo gutaha bashyize hasi intwaro batazakurikiranwa ku byaha baba barakoreye
hanze y’igihugu, uretse ibyaha bijyanye na génocide n’ibyaha by’intambara
cyangwa ibyaha by’inyokamuntu (crimes de guerre et crime contre l’humanité).
2) Ububasha bw’urukiko rukuru mu kutubahiriza
icyemezo cy’urukiko rwo mu Buholandi n’amasezerano yakozwe hagati y’u Rwanda
n’Ubuholandi m’uburyo ibyo bimenyetso byagombaga gukoreshwa.
Aha naho nakwibutsa abumva Radio Itahuka ko igihe inzego z’ubucamanza
z’igihugu cy’Ubuholandi zoherezaga bimwe mu bintu byari byavanywe
mu isakwa ryakorewe aho madame Victoire yabaga mu Buholandi, u Rwanda rwari
rwemeye ko rutazabikoresha mu rubanza uretse ku byaha by’iterabwoba. Siko byagenze
kuko ahubwo zimwe mu nyandiko zakoreshejwe mu kumuhamya icyaha cyo gupfobya
génocide.
Q. Kuki madame Ingabire atashakaga ko inyandiko zose zavuye iwe
zikoreshwa uko ubucamanza bw’u Rwanda bubishatse ? Haba hari ibyo
yashakaga guhisha ?
R. Nta kintu kirimo kidasanzwe. Gusa ubuzima gatozi bw’umuntu
ntibuvogerwa. Ni ihame rikomeye. Twese mu ngo zacu tugira icyo bita
« intimité » tutifuza ko ivogerwa. Madame Victoire nawe ni umuntu
ukeneye « intimité ». Ikindi ni ikibazo cy’irindi hame. Iyo ugiranye
amasezerano n’umuntu urayubahiriza. Inteko ishinga amategeko y’ubuholandi yari
yatanze ibintu bigomba kubahirizwa kugira ngo leta yabo igeze k’u Rwanda ibyo
bimenyetso. Izo ngingo zigomba kubahirizwa, bitaba ibyo u Rwanda rugasobanura
impamvu rutabikoze.
Q. None se ntacyo madame Ingabire yavuze ku bujurire
bw’ubushinjacyaha ?
R. Birumvikana ko nta kuntu yari kubuca iruhande cyane cyane ko
ubushinjacyaha bwamusabiraga gufungwa burundu bumwegekaho urusyo.
Madame Ingabire yatangiriye ku cyaha y’ingengabitekerezo dore ko ari cyo
cyari cyafashe umwanya munini mu kirego cy’ubushinjacyaha no mu bujururire. Mu
kirego ubushinjacyaha bwari bwatanze ingingo zirenga 10 ngo zerekana ko madame
Ingabire icyo cyaha kimuhama. Gusa kubera ko urukiko rukuru rwari rwemeje ko
ingingo 2 ari zo zonyine zubahirije amategeko, madame Ingabire yagize icyo
avuga kuri izo ngingo gusa, arizo :
- 1. Amahame ya FDU-Inkingi (charte constitutive)
- 2. Ijambo madame Ingabire yavugiye ku Gisozi
Kuri izo ngingo ebyiri madame Ingabire akaba yaranenze urukiko ndetse
n’ubushinjacyaha kuba bwaribanze kubyo bita mu matekegeko “doctrines”
(inyandiko z’abahanga). Akibaza impamvu badakoresha amategeko y’u Rwanda.
Keretse niba nabo batakiyemera. Yatanze ingero nyinshi.
Ubusanzwe mu mikirize y’imanza hakoreshwa mbere na mbere amategeko. Iyo
adahagije hakoreshwa ibyo bita “jurisprudence” aribyo umuntu yagenekereza
akabyita “uko imanza zisa n’urwo zaba zarakijijwe”. Iyo ibyo byose bidahagije
bitabaza “doctrines”, umuntu yavuga ko ari inyandiko z’abazobereye mu mategeko.
Mu rubanza rwa madame Victoire siko byagenze rero.
Q. Ikibazo se cyo gukurikiza inyandiko z’abahanga ni ikihe, cyane cyane
ko ari abahanga nyine?
R. Biroroshye gusubiza iki kibazo iyo urebye abantu biyita abahanga ku
kibazo cya genocide yabereye mu Rwanda muri 1994 ukuntu bangana n’ukuntu
bivuguruzanya. Buri wese yiyita umuhanga ku buryo uhatera umutwe. Haramutse
hari abahanga batabogamye nta kibazo. Gusa iyo ukoresheje uwitwa umuhanga ariko
abogamye birumvikana ko biyobya ubucamanza. Niko byagenze.
Q. Ibyo turabyumvise ariko ntacyo uratubwira kuri ziriya ngingo ebyiri
ari zo Amahame ya FDU-Inkingi na discours yo ku Gisozi. Abatwumva bakeneye
gusobanukirwa.
R. Ku mahame ya FDU-Inkingi, ubushinjacyaha buvuga ko madame Victoire
Ingabire apfobya genocide ngo kuko FDU yaba yarabishyize mu mahame remezo yayo.
Ndetse abambari b’ubutegetsi bavuze ko ngo mu ndahiro abantu binjira muri FDU
bagomba gukora, ibyo kwemera “double genocide” byaba birimo. Icya mbere,
nta ndahiro tugira muri FDU-Inkingi. Baribeshye bakeka ko turi FPR-Inkotanyi.
Ushaka kujya muri FDU ashyikirizwa amahame remezo y’ishyaka; yayemera
tukamwohereza mu rwego rw’ibanze, rushobora kumuha ikarita y’ubunyamuryango cg
rukayimwima. Ibyo kurahiza abantu ni ikinyoma cyambaye ubusa.
Icya kabiri muri FDU twemera mu buryo butaziguye génocide yakorewe
ubwoko bw’abatutsi. Aho dutaniye na FPR ni uko twemera ko hari abahutu bishwe,
kandi benshi. Twemera kandi ko abo bahutu bishwe na bamwe bari mu ngabo za FPR.
Si twe twenyine tubivuga. Tugasaba ko ibi byaha byakurikiranwa nk’uko byasabwe
n’abandi benshi ndetse na LONU (Mapping report). Ibi ntaho bihuriye na “double
genocide”. None se FPR yakwihandagaza ikavuga ko nta bahutu bishwe? Niba ari
byo ishaka ntabwo tuzabikora.
Q. Ibyo koko birumvikanye, cyane cyane ko FDU-Inkingi nk’ishyaka itigeze
iregwa icyo cyaha, haba hanze y’u Rwanda, haba mu Rwanda. Naho se kuri discours
madamu Ingabire yavuze ku Gisozi?
R. Aha naho ni andi mariganya. Ubushinjacyaha bwabanje kwitwaza ko
kuvuga byonyine ko hari abanyarwanda bo mu bwoko bw’abahutu bishwe na bamwe bo
mu ngabo za FPR ari ugupfobya génocide. Hagati mu rubanza ubushinjacyaha
bwavuze ko kuba byaravugiwe kuri mémorial yahariwe abatutsi ari ryo shyano.
Hanyuma buvuga ko irindi shyano ari ugukoresha ijambo « génocide » ku
bahutu bapfuye kandi nta rukiko rwigeze rubyemeza.
Biragaragara ko uku guhindura imvugo ari ukubura uko bagira. Icya mbere
ntabwo madame Victoire yagiye ku Gisozi ajyanywe no kuvuga iriya discours. Yari
azinduwe no kwibuka abanyarwanda bazize génocide. Kandi byari bimuri ku mutima.
Abanyamakuru bamubajije ikibazo yasubije uko umutima nama we umutegeka.
Ibyo yavuze ni ukuri kwambaye ubusa. Nta bwiyunge nyabwo buzagerwaho mu
Rwanda, igihe cyose buri wese atazumva akababaro k’undi. Wabyita génocide
wabyita ukundi, ikibazo cy’abahutu bishwe bazira ubwoko bwabo kigomba
kuzafuturwa. Kurenzaho bizahora bikurura urwikekwe n’inzangano mu bana b’u
Rwanda. Ntaho madame Victoire yaciye inka amabere abivuga.
Madame Ingabire ariko akaba yarasobanuye ko atigeze na rimwe ashaka
gushinyagurira abanyarwanda bo mu bwoko bw’abatutsi avuga ayo magambo.
Q. Mu yandi magambo rero madamu Ingabire yemera génocide yakorewe
abatutsi ndetse na FDU-Inkingi irayemera ?
R. Rwose nta shiti. Bitavuga ariko ko babindikiranya ubwicanyi bwakozwe
na zimwe mu ngabo za FPR. Ariko kuki FPR yakwigira indakoreka ? Ubu se
ushobora kubwira umuntu mwene wabo akiri mu muringoti haruguru y’urugo ko
uwamwishe ari indakorekwa, ko azahama aho mu muringoti adashyinguwe mu
cyubahiro? Tugomba kugira umuco mwiza wo kwubaha abacu bishwe nta vangura.
Q. Ibyo ndakeka ko bireba icyaha cyo gupfobya génocide. Hari ariko
n’icyaha cy’iterabwoba.
R. Mu isomwa ry’urubanza, urukiko rukuru rwari rwagihinduyemo « Kugambana
(conspiration)». Gusa naho harimo urujijo. Mu iburanishwa uwunganira madame
Victoire yabajije urukiko uwo bagambanye arabura kuko madame Victoire Ingabire
ari we wenyine waregwaga icyo cyaha. Ndetse ni we wenyine cyahamye. Umuntu se
agambana wenyine? Mu mikirize ariko byaje kugaragara ngo ko madame Victoire
Ingabire yaba yaragambanye na majoro Uwumuremyi Vital. Kuki rero byagizwe
ibanga mu iburanishwa ? Kuki madame Victoire Ingabire atahawe urubuga ngo
yisobanure ndetse abe yahuzwa na Vital imbere y’urukiko buri muntu yisobanure
(confrontation)?
Q. Uko kugambana ahubwo twe twakekaga ko kureba bariya basirikare
bose bahoze muri FDLR.
R. Ibyo biragarura ikibazo cy’uriya mutwe mpimbano witwa CDF (Coalition
of Defense Forces) ngo waba warabonye inkunga ya madame Victoire Ingabire.
Umuntu yakivugabo ibintu bibiri :
Icya mbere, byaragaragaye ko uriya mutwe utigeze ubaho. Abari babivuze
imbere y’urukiko rukuru bose bisubiyeho basobanura ko utigeze ubaho, kandi ni
nabyo. Nta kindi kimenyetso kigeze kigaragaza ko wabayeho.
Icya kabiri madame Ingabire yibajije, ni ukuntu yahamwa ko yatanze
amafranga yo kugura intwaro z’umutwe w’ingabo utabaho. Iki ni ikindi kinyoma.
Q. None se uko kwisubiraho kw’abamushinjaga bahoze muri FDLR byaba
byaraturutse he ?
R. Sinabyita ukwisubiraho ahubwo nabyita ukuvugisha ukuri. Barashutswe
bavuga amatakira ngoyi kuko bari bafungiwe Mutobo igihe batanze ubwo buhamya.
Habonetse umutanga buhamya wabyemeje. Ubushinjacyaha bwakoze iyo bwabaga ngo
bumuteshe agaciro, ariko yerekanye uburiganya bwose bwakorewe i Mutobo.
Q. Uwo mutanga buhamya se kuki atari yaragaragaye mu rukiko
rukuru ?
R. Mu by’ukuri uwo mutangabuhamya yari azwi kandi yagombaga
gutanga ubuhamya mu rukiko rukuru. Gusa igihe madame Victoire yavaga mu rubanza
akanasaba abamwunganira kuruvamo, ntibyari bigishobotse ko uwo mutanga buhamya
aza mu rukiko. Ariko urukiko rwari ruzi ko ahari.
Q. Igishya se yazanye ni ikihe ?
R. Yemeje ko umugambi wo guhimbira madame Victoire Ingabire ibyaha
wapangiwe i Mutobo ndetse atanga ibimenyetso simusiga. Ubushinjacyaha
bwagerageze uko bushoboye kumunyomoza , ariko byabaye iby’ubusa. Ndetse
n’iterabwoba ryarakoreshejwe ariko ntacyo ryatanze.
Q. Umuntu akwumvise yavuga rero ko madame Ingabire yashoboye kwambika
ubusa ibirego byose aregwa ?
R. Kugira ngo abatwumva bibabere bigufi, madame Victoire yari
yarahamijwe ibyaha bibiri aribyo : « Ugupfobya génocide (minimisation
du génocide) », no « kugambana (conspiration) ».
Ku cyaha cyo gupfobya génocide, urukiko rwari rwitwaje discours madamu
Ingabire yavugiye ku Gisozi. Madamu Ingabire yatanze ibimenyetso bihagije ko
nta kintu kirimo gipfobya génocide. Ndetse naho bavugaga ko udashobora
gukoresha ijambo rya génocide nta rukiko rwabyemeje, yibukije ko kuri urwo
rwibutso hari inyandiko zivuga génocide yakorewe abantu bo mu gihugu cya
Armenie kandi nta rukiko rwayemeje. Yanagarutse ku yindi nyandiko ivuga
génocide y’abantu bo mu bwoko bwa Herero bwo muri Afurika y’amajy’epho nayo
ikaba nta rukiko rwemewe rwigeze ruyemeza. Biragaragara rero ko nta cyaha
cyakozwe avuga ko abahutu bishwe bagomba kwibukwa nabo, kabone n’iyo yabivugira
ku rwibutso rwagenewe abatutsi. Nkeka ko abatutsi bari bakwiye kwumva ko iyi
mvugo itagamije kubatoneka.
Ku cyaha cyo kugambana, nacyo cyataye agaciro igihe umutwe
w’ingabo bamushinja utigeze ubaho; ndetse n’abaregwaga ko bari bawuri ku isonga
bakaba barabivuze.
Q. N’ubwo bigaragara ko ibirego byose bisa n’ibyataye agaciro ntawamenya
uko urubanza ruzacibwa tariki ya mbere Ukuboza 2013. Madame Victoire Ingabire
yaba yiteguye kwakira ate imikirize y’urubanza ?
R. Biragoye gusubiriza umuntu mutari kumwe. Ariko nkurikije uko muzi,
n’ibyo mbyirwa n’abahura nawe buri munsi, nakwemeza ko madamu Ingabire ajya mu
Rwanda yari yiteguye ibigeragezo byose. Imyaka itatu amaze ari muri gereza
yerekanye ko atari umuntu ujegera gutyo gusa. Ikindi, mu butumwa yakomeje
kutugezaho abunyujije kubo bavugana, ntiyahwemye kutugaragariza ko ugufungwa
nako ari uruhare mu rugamba rwa démocratie buri munyarwanda ushaka impinduka ya
démocratie agomba kwitegura kunyuramo. Ugufungwa kwe kandi kukaba kwarerekanye
isura nyayo y’ubutegetsi bwa FPR-Inkotanyi bwirirwaga buvuga ko ntawe bwabujije
gukora politique mu gihugu.
Ikindi madame Ingabire ahora vuga ni uko nta bwoko bumwe ubwo aribwo
bwose bushobora kwiharira umurage w’u Rwanda cyangwa ngo buvuge ko ari bwo
bufite umuti w’ibibazo u Rwanda rufite. Niba hagomba kuba impinduka ya
démocratie, izagerwaho ari uko amoko yose agize u Rwanda abigizemo uruhare.
Nkeka rero ko madame Victoire Ingabire yiteguye gukomeza urugamba ariho
rwa démocratie uko imikirize y’urubanza rwe yagenda kose.
Q. Mu kurangiza ubutwumwa se wageza ku barwanashyaka no kubatwumva
bose ni ubuhe ?
R. Nabasaba gukomeza kugirira icyizere umushinga dufite wo kugera ku
mitegekere ibereye abanyarwanda bose no kwemera ko iyo nzira ishobora kuba
irimo amahwa. Nabasaba kandi kwemera ko iyo nzira ishobora kuba ari ndende.
Nkanabasaba gushishikariza abandi kudusanga, kuko tudashobora kwemera ko
akarengane kari mu gihugu cyacu gakomeza. Igihugu ntabwo ari akarima ka kanaka,
igihugu ni icya twese. Kandi nidushyira hamwe twese tuzatsinda.
The Truth can be buried and stomped into the ground where none can see, yet eventually it will, like a seed, break through the surface once again far more potent than ever, and Nothing can stop it. Truth can be suppressed for a "time", yet It cannot be destroyed. ==> Wolverine
Friday, August 16, 2013
[Since 1994, the world witnesses the horrifying Tutsi minority (14%) ethnic domination, the Tutsi minority ethnic rule with an iron hand, tyranny and corruption in Rwanda. The current government has been characterized by the total impunity of RPF criminals, the Tutsi economic monopoly, the Tutsi militaristic domination, and the brutal suppression of the rights of the majority of the Rwandan people (85% are Hutus)and mass arrests of Hutus by the RPF criminal organization =>AS International]
16 August 2013
AI Index: AFR 47/002/2013
Rwanda: Official interference in affairs of human rights NGO places independent human rights work in peril
The former leadership of the Rwandan human rights organization LIPRODHOR, the Rwandan League for the Promotion and Defence of Human Rights (la Ligue rwandaise pour la promotion et la défense des droits de l’homme) has been forced out. The circumstances in which the board was replaced strongly indicate the involvement of the Rwandan authorities.
The capacity of human rights defenders to work in Rwanda has been further weakened and the space for meaningful human rights work has all but closed up.
The move followed a decision by the former leadership to leave the Collective of Leagues and Associations for the Defense of Human Rights in Rwanda (Collectif des ligues et associations de défense des droits de l'homme au Rwanda, CLADHO), a platform of human rights organizations, on the grounds that its executive committee had been put in place by the Rwanda Governance Board (RGB), an official body charged with promoting and monitoring good governance.
On 3 July 2013, the President of LIPRODHOR wrote a letter to announce LIPRODHOR’s decision to pull out of CLADHO, questioning the selection of CLADHO’s new committee and the network’s capacity to protect member organizations. Two other partner organizations also signed the letter.
On 21 July 2013, a group of LIPRODHOR members, which included a former president of the organization, held an extraordinary general assembly to discuss the organization’s decision to leave CLADHO. The meeting was conducted without notifying LIPRODHOR’s governing board, which included the President and the Vice-President. According to the statute of the organization, members should receive an invitation letter at least eight days before the meeting. In addition, the number of participants in the meeting did not meet that required for a General Assembly, which needs an absolute majority. The meeting resulted not only in the reversal of LIPRODHOR’s withdrawal from CLADHO, but in the replacement of LIPRODHOR’s board and President. A new board, including a new President, were elected and scheduled to begin in post from 26 July 2013.
The election of the new board was swiftly recognized by the RGB, despite complaints by the ousted board regarding the legitimacy of the procedure. The former board of LIPRODHOR has since launched a legal action against the decision of the RGB to support the former board’s dismissal, as well as the cancellation of the decision to leave CLADHO. The case is on-going.
The Rwandan authorities have shown that they have too much influence in the internal workings of NGOs. Incidents such as these demonstrate how legitimate freedom of association can be curtailed and how an organization’s independence can be compromised.
The procedure for resolving internal conflicts in civil society organizations in Rwanda is governed by law. The 2012 law governing the organisation and the functioning of national NGOs specifies that all national NGO statutes shall provide for an organ charged with conflict resolution. To comply, Article 19 of LIPRODHOR’s statute provides for a Committee for Discipline and Conflict Resolution for handling such disputes, but this was not used.
Restrictions have been placed on LIPRODHOR’s activities. A workshop scheduled for 24 July 2013 was prevented from going ahead by the police. The workshop, organized by LIPRODHOR, was on how civil society organizations could submit evidence as part of the reporting process for the United Nations Universal Periodic Review.
Background information
Amnesty International has documented longstanding patterns of intimidation and harassment of human rights defenders by the Rwandan authorities. Human rights defenders are regularly intimidated, threatened, and subjected to public and personalized attacks or administrative obstacles. Reporting on human rights violations, especially if publically denounced, leads to hostile government reactions. Human rights defenders often avoid working on sensitive areas, and refrain from or delay publishing to minimize potential repercussions. Rwandan human rights defenders also face challenges within their own organizations which have been infiltrated by people close to the authorities.
Few human rights organizations left in Rwanda retain some level of independence, but LIPRODHOR has been one such organization. It was established in 1991 and became one of the only credible independent national human rights organisations. By 1999, it had significantly increased its operations, staff and monitoring presence. LIPRODHOR’s capacity to investigate and report on human rights violations incurred attacks from the Rwandan authorities. Its staff members have repeatedly been intimidated, harassed and forced into exile. The authorities have sought to discredit the work of the organization. A parliamentary commission report in March 2003 accused the Democratic Republican Movement (Mouvement démocratique républicain), a political opposition party, of propagating an alleged “divisionist” and discriminatory program and accused LIPRODHOR of obtaining foreign funding for the party. A second parliamentary commission in June 2004 alleged that LIPRODHOR, along with other organizations, was guilty of holding and disseminating genocide ideology and recommended its dissolution.
ENDS…/
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The Truth can be buried and stomped into the ground where none can see, yet eventually it will, like a seed, break through the surface once again far more potent than ever, and Nothing can stop it. Truth can be suppressed for a "time", yet It cannot be destroyed. ==> Wolverine
Tuesday, August 13, 2013
Op Paleis Huis ten Bosch is vanmorgen prins Friso overleden. Dat meldt de Rijksvoorlichtingsdienst.
Zijne Koninklijke Hoogheid Prins Johan Friso Bernhard Christiaan David, Prins van Oranje Nassau, Jonkheer van Amsberg is 44 jaar geworden.
Prins Friso met zijn vrouw prinses Mabel in 2008 |
Terug van vakantie
Koning Willem-Alexander en koningin Máxima komen in verband met het overlijden van Friso terug van hun vakantie in Griekenland.Waar prinses Beatrix op dit moment is, heeft de RVD niet bekendgemaakt.
Londen
Na dat ongeluk werd hij behandeld op de intensive care van het Landeskrankenhaus in Innsbruck. Begin maart werd de prins overgebracht naar het Wellington ziekenhuis in Londen, de woonplaats van van de prins en zijn vrouw prinses Mabel.In de medische bulletins werd vermeld dat Friso "tekenen van zeer gering bewustzijn" vertoonde. In die toestand hebben zich verder geen veranderingen voorgedaan. Begin juli 2013 werd hij overgebracht naar Paleis Huis ten Bosch.
Prinses Mabel
Prinses Mabel vierde gisteren nog haar 45ste verjaardag aan het ziekbed van haar man.In het communiqué staat verder dat de koninklijke familie iedereen bedankt voor de uitstekende en toegewijde verzorging van de prins.
Volgens bronnen komt het overlijden van de prins onverwacht voor de koninklijke familie. Zijn broer, koning Willem-Alexander, was net op vakantie gegaan.
The Truth can be buried and stomped into the ground where none can see, yet eventually it will, like a seed, break through the surface once again far more potent than ever, and Nothing can stop it. Truth can be suppressed for a "time", yet It cannot be destroyed. ==> Wolverine
Saturday, August 10, 2013
Rwanda
EXECUTIVE SUMMARYShare
Rwanda
is a constitutional republic dominated by a strong presidency. The
ruling Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF) leads a coalition that includes six
smaller parties. In August 2010 voters elected President Paul Kagame to
a second seven-year term with 93 percent of the vote. Three other
registered political parties participated in elections. Senate elections
took place in September 2011, with RPF candidates winning the majority
of seats by wide margins. International observers reported the senate
elections met generally recognized standards of free and fair elections
in most respects but noted concerns regarding the independence of
voters’ decisions. State security forces (SSF) generally reported to
civilian authorities, although there were instances in which elements of
the security forces acted independently of civilian control.
The most important human rights problems in the country remained the government’s targeting of journalists, political opponents, and human rights advocates for harassment, arrest, and abuse; disregard for the rule of law among security forces and the judiciary; restrictions on civil liberties; and support of rebel groups in the neighboring Democratic Republic of the Congo.
Other major human rights problems included arbitrary or unlawful killings, both within the country and abroad; disappearances; torture; harsh conditions in prisons and detention centers; arbitrary arrest; prolonged pretrial detention; executive interference in the judiciary; and government infringement on citizens’ privacy rights. The government restricted freedoms of speech, press, assembly, association, and to a lesser extent, religion. Security for refugees and asylum seekers was inadequate. Corruption was a problem, and the government restricted and harassed local and international nongovernmental organizations (NGOs). Violence and discrimination against women and children occurred, including the recruitment by the M23 armed group of Rwandan and refugee minors as child soldiers. There was a small but growing incidence of trafficking in persons. Discrimination and occasional violence against persons with disabilities and the Twa minority occurred. The government restricted labor rights, and forced labor, including by children, and child labor were problems.
The government generally took steps to prosecute or punish officials who committed abuses, whether in the security services or elsewhere, but impunity involving civilian officials and SSF was a problem.
During the year the government provided material, logistical, and strategic support to the M23 armed group in the eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), which committed summary executions and forcibly recruited adults and minors. The government strongly denied providing any support to the M23. SSF remained complicit in the illegal smuggling of conflict minerals from the DRC.
The most important human rights problems in the country remained the government’s targeting of journalists, political opponents, and human rights advocates for harassment, arrest, and abuse; disregard for the rule of law among security forces and the judiciary; restrictions on civil liberties; and support of rebel groups in the neighboring Democratic Republic of the Congo.
Other major human rights problems included arbitrary or unlawful killings, both within the country and abroad; disappearances; torture; harsh conditions in prisons and detention centers; arbitrary arrest; prolonged pretrial detention; executive interference in the judiciary; and government infringement on citizens’ privacy rights. The government restricted freedoms of speech, press, assembly, association, and to a lesser extent, religion. Security for refugees and asylum seekers was inadequate. Corruption was a problem, and the government restricted and harassed local and international nongovernmental organizations (NGOs). Violence and discrimination against women and children occurred, including the recruitment by the M23 armed group of Rwandan and refugee minors as child soldiers. There was a small but growing incidence of trafficking in persons. Discrimination and occasional violence against persons with disabilities and the Twa minority occurred. The government restricted labor rights, and forced labor, including by children, and child labor were problems.
The government generally took steps to prosecute or punish officials who committed abuses, whether in the security services or elsewhere, but impunity involving civilian officials and SSF was a problem.
During the year the government provided material, logistical, and strategic support to the M23 armed group in the eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), which committed summary executions and forcibly recruited adults and minors. The government strongly denied providing any support to the M23. SSF remained complicit in the illegal smuggling of conflict minerals from the DRC.
Section 1. Respect for the Integrity of the Person, Including Freedom from:Share
a. Arbitrary or Unlawful Deprivation of Life
There were several reports the government attempted to commit
arbitrary or unlawful killings within the country and abroad. The
government typically investigated SSF killings within the country and
prosecuted perpetrators. The government investigated sporadic grenade
attacks and a spate of machete killings across the country and continued
to prosecute individuals who threatened or harmed genocide survivors
and witnesses.
On October 15, Mozambique police found former Rwandan Development Board Managing Director Theogene Turatsinze floating dead and tied with ropes in a lake two days after he was reported missing. Mozambique police initially indicated Rwandan government involvement in the killing before contacting the government and changing its characterization to a common crime. Rwandan government officials publicly condemned the killing and denied involvement. Domestic political observers commented that Turatsinze had access to politically sensitive financial information related to certain Rwandan government insiders. The killing remained unsolved at year’s end.
In a June 27 addendum to its interim report, in its November 15 final report, and in a November 26 letter to the UN Security Council, the UN Group of Experts (UNGOE) accused the government of violating UN arms embargo and sanctions regimes through “direct military support” and “the provision of material and financial support to armed groups operating in eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo.” Specifically, the UNGOE claimed the government provided weapons and ammunition, recruits, intelligence, political and financial support, logistics, and direct Rwanda Defense Forces (RDF) military interventions in support of the M23 armed group rebellion in the eastern DRC, which began in April. The UNGOE asserted the de facto chain of command of the M23 started with Rwandan Minister of Defense General James Kabarebe and included Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of Defense General Jacques Nziza. The government strenuously disputed the credibility of the UNGOE report and consistently denied providing any support to the M23. Human Rights Watch (HRW) and other international experts also provided evidence in support of the claim of government assistance to the M23. In press releases dated June 3, September 11, November 8, 16, and 20, and December 28, HRW accused the M23 of arbitrary or unlawful deprivation of life, including the summary execution of at least 33 recruits, among other abuses. The UNGOE echoed such claims, alleging the M23 and RDF troops killed dozens of recruits and prisoners of war through summary executions, beatings, starvation, or by burying them alive. Fourteen international NGOs, including Global Witness, Freedom House, and The Enough Project, published an open letter on December 10 criticizing Rwanda’s support for the M23 armed group. Several of those NGOs also produced their own reports and press releases detailing human rights abuses by the M23. In addition to the M23, the UNGOE alleged the Rwandan government provided material and financial support to several other armed groups operating in the DRC, including Raia Mutomboki, the Congolese Defense Forces, and the Patriotic Resistance Forces of Ituri, among others. The UNGOE had charged each of those groups, but especially Raia Mutomboki, with committing extrajudicial killings and other human rights abuses.
Laurent Nkunda, the former leader of the Congolese armed group National Congress for the Defense of the People (CNDP), which was reported to have received support from the Rwandan government, remained under house arrest without charges. During the year, elements of the CNDP reconstituted themselves as the M23 armed group. Nkunda was arrested in 2009 by the RDF when he returned to the country reportedly for consultations with government officials. The Rwandan government has not acted on the DRC’s 2009 extradition request for Nkunda.
In September 2011 security personnel shot and injured opposition party PS-Imberakuri member Eric Nshimyumuremyi, allegedly because he was armed and seeking a fight. A PS-Imberakuri spokesperson claimed Nshimyumuremyi was not armed and was shot because he was a party member. The Rwanda National Police (RNP) defended SSF action and did not discipline those involved. Prosecutors charged Nshimyumuremyi with illegal possession of weapons, and his trial continued at year’s end.
In December 2011 an unidentified gunman killed Charles Ingabire, a Rwandan journalist and government critic, in Kampala, Uganda. Both the press and human rights organizations reported Ingabire had survived an earlier attack in September 2011. Rwandan authorities alleged he had embezzled from a microfinance company, orphans, and a genocide survivors’ organization and was probably killed for that reason.
Five grenade attacks in January and March in Kigali’s Muhanga District and Musanze District resulted in three deaths and injuries to 37 persons. Police arrested several suspects associated with the attacks, which were widely believed to have been orchestrated by the Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR) armed group operating mainly in the eastern DRC. On January 13, judges convicted 21 defendants and acquitted eight in relation to several 2011 and earlier grenade attacks. Prosecutors earlier dropped charges against more than 70 others. Of the 29 defendants tried in court, only four had lawyers, and several maintained SSF members had tortured them into signing false confessions. Judges placed the onus of proving torture on the defendants and refused to examine defendants’ claims absent a medical report; however, Amnesty International and HRW claimed the defendants had no access to doctors during their time in detention at Kami military intelligence camp and that such medical examinations could not be obtained without endangering the doctor. Several appeals continued at year’s end.
On December 6, the High Court in Musanze District convicted 11 of 12 defendants for threatening state security in relation to 2011 and earlier grenade attacks and other “terrorist acts.” According to HRW, many of the defendants had disappeared in 2011, and the majority claimed in open court they had been tortured and forced into confessing during illegal detentions at Mukamira military camp. The criminal trial of an additional 18 SSF defendants began on December 12. An observer of the trial told HRW the majority of the defendants testified by year’s end and claimed to have been arrested between 2010 and 2011, illegally detained at Mukamira military camp, and tortured.
According to HRW, another state security trial began in December, including defendants charged with the early 2012 grenade attacks. In addition HRW reported at least three persons who disappeared in September 2011 and were illegally detained at Kami military intelligence camp until transfer to Kicukiro prison in December 2011 have been scheduled to go on trial in a group of 10 defendants in February 2013 for threatening state security and collaborating with the FDLR.
On December 20, the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR), based in Tanzania, convicted Augustin Ngirabatware, the country’s former minister of planning, of genocide and crimes against humanity. The court sentenced Ngirabatware to 35 years in prison. Ngirabatware was found to have distributed weapons at checkpoints where Hutu militias would kill ethnic Tutsis during the 1994 genocide. Ngirabatware’s trial was the last genocide case tried by the ICTR.
Police arrested 14 individuals in connection with numerous machete killings between July and September. Assailants tortured and killed at least 15 prostitutes in Kigali, while small groups indiscriminately slaughtered more than a dozen prostitutes in Muhanga District and Musanze District. According to the Association for the Defense of Human Rights (ARDHO), which received death threats for investigating the Muhanga killings, citizens were afraid to speak with authorities because the assailants attacked witnesses who provided information. Some witnesses, human rights activists, and government officials expressed fear the machete killings were a terrorist campaign instigated by the FDLR.
The government investigated and prosecuted individuals accused of threatening or harming genocide survivors and witnesses or of espousing genocide ideology, which the law defines as dehumanizing an individual or a group with the same characteristics by threatening, intimidating, defaming, inciting hatred, negating the genocide, taking revenge, altering testimony or evidence, killing, planning to kill, or attempting to kill someone. From January to September, a special protection bureau in the Office of the National Public Prosecution Authority (NPPA) registered 167 cases of genocide ideology, of which 64 were filed in court, 31 were dismissed, 10 were reclassified, and 62 were pending investigation. From January to September, the courts adjudicated 59 cases (63 individuals), convicting 52 and acquitting 11 (see section 1.e.). Police investigated six murders of genocide survivors. No information was available regarding charges filed, but according to the genocide survivors’ association Ibuka, police arrested suspects in all six cases. On October 1, in Kigali, genocide survivor Alex Rutindura, who media reported was involved in a court case over his parents’ land, survived a machete attack by six assailants, the third attempt on his life in two years.
On October 15, Mozambique police found former Rwandan Development Board Managing Director Theogene Turatsinze floating dead and tied with ropes in a lake two days after he was reported missing. Mozambique police initially indicated Rwandan government involvement in the killing before contacting the government and changing its characterization to a common crime. Rwandan government officials publicly condemned the killing and denied involvement. Domestic political observers commented that Turatsinze had access to politically sensitive financial information related to certain Rwandan government insiders. The killing remained unsolved at year’s end.
In a June 27 addendum to its interim report, in its November 15 final report, and in a November 26 letter to the UN Security Council, the UN Group of Experts (UNGOE) accused the government of violating UN arms embargo and sanctions regimes through “direct military support” and “the provision of material and financial support to armed groups operating in eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo.” Specifically, the UNGOE claimed the government provided weapons and ammunition, recruits, intelligence, political and financial support, logistics, and direct Rwanda Defense Forces (RDF) military interventions in support of the M23 armed group rebellion in the eastern DRC, which began in April. The UNGOE asserted the de facto chain of command of the M23 started with Rwandan Minister of Defense General James Kabarebe and included Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of Defense General Jacques Nziza. The government strenuously disputed the credibility of the UNGOE report and consistently denied providing any support to the M23. Human Rights Watch (HRW) and other international experts also provided evidence in support of the claim of government assistance to the M23. In press releases dated June 3, September 11, November 8, 16, and 20, and December 28, HRW accused the M23 of arbitrary or unlawful deprivation of life, including the summary execution of at least 33 recruits, among other abuses. The UNGOE echoed such claims, alleging the M23 and RDF troops killed dozens of recruits and prisoners of war through summary executions, beatings, starvation, or by burying them alive. Fourteen international NGOs, including Global Witness, Freedom House, and The Enough Project, published an open letter on December 10 criticizing Rwanda’s support for the M23 armed group. Several of those NGOs also produced their own reports and press releases detailing human rights abuses by the M23. In addition to the M23, the UNGOE alleged the Rwandan government provided material and financial support to several other armed groups operating in the DRC, including Raia Mutomboki, the Congolese Defense Forces, and the Patriotic Resistance Forces of Ituri, among others. The UNGOE had charged each of those groups, but especially Raia Mutomboki, with committing extrajudicial killings and other human rights abuses.
Laurent Nkunda, the former leader of the Congolese armed group National Congress for the Defense of the People (CNDP), which was reported to have received support from the Rwandan government, remained under house arrest without charges. During the year, elements of the CNDP reconstituted themselves as the M23 armed group. Nkunda was arrested in 2009 by the RDF when he returned to the country reportedly for consultations with government officials. The Rwandan government has not acted on the DRC’s 2009 extradition request for Nkunda.
In September 2011 security personnel shot and injured opposition party PS-Imberakuri member Eric Nshimyumuremyi, allegedly because he was armed and seeking a fight. A PS-Imberakuri spokesperson claimed Nshimyumuremyi was not armed and was shot because he was a party member. The Rwanda National Police (RNP) defended SSF action and did not discipline those involved. Prosecutors charged Nshimyumuremyi with illegal possession of weapons, and his trial continued at year’s end.
In December 2011 an unidentified gunman killed Charles Ingabire, a Rwandan journalist and government critic, in Kampala, Uganda. Both the press and human rights organizations reported Ingabire had survived an earlier attack in September 2011. Rwandan authorities alleged he had embezzled from a microfinance company, orphans, and a genocide survivors’ organization and was probably killed for that reason.
Five grenade attacks in January and March in Kigali’s Muhanga District and Musanze District resulted in three deaths and injuries to 37 persons. Police arrested several suspects associated with the attacks, which were widely believed to have been orchestrated by the Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR) armed group operating mainly in the eastern DRC. On January 13, judges convicted 21 defendants and acquitted eight in relation to several 2011 and earlier grenade attacks. Prosecutors earlier dropped charges against more than 70 others. Of the 29 defendants tried in court, only four had lawyers, and several maintained SSF members had tortured them into signing false confessions. Judges placed the onus of proving torture on the defendants and refused to examine defendants’ claims absent a medical report; however, Amnesty International and HRW claimed the defendants had no access to doctors during their time in detention at Kami military intelligence camp and that such medical examinations could not be obtained without endangering the doctor. Several appeals continued at year’s end.
On December 6, the High Court in Musanze District convicted 11 of 12 defendants for threatening state security in relation to 2011 and earlier grenade attacks and other “terrorist acts.” According to HRW, many of the defendants had disappeared in 2011, and the majority claimed in open court they had been tortured and forced into confessing during illegal detentions at Mukamira military camp. The criminal trial of an additional 18 SSF defendants began on December 12. An observer of the trial told HRW the majority of the defendants testified by year’s end and claimed to have been arrested between 2010 and 2011, illegally detained at Mukamira military camp, and tortured.
According to HRW, another state security trial began in December, including defendants charged with the early 2012 grenade attacks. In addition HRW reported at least three persons who disappeared in September 2011 and were illegally detained at Kami military intelligence camp until transfer to Kicukiro prison in December 2011 have been scheduled to go on trial in a group of 10 defendants in February 2013 for threatening state security and collaborating with the FDLR.
On December 20, the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR), based in Tanzania, convicted Augustin Ngirabatware, the country’s former minister of planning, of genocide and crimes against humanity. The court sentenced Ngirabatware to 35 years in prison. Ngirabatware was found to have distributed weapons at checkpoints where Hutu militias would kill ethnic Tutsis during the 1994 genocide. Ngirabatware’s trial was the last genocide case tried by the ICTR.
Police arrested 14 individuals in connection with numerous machete killings between July and September. Assailants tortured and killed at least 15 prostitutes in Kigali, while small groups indiscriminately slaughtered more than a dozen prostitutes in Muhanga District and Musanze District. According to the Association for the Defense of Human Rights (ARDHO), which received death threats for investigating the Muhanga killings, citizens were afraid to speak with authorities because the assailants attacked witnesses who provided information. Some witnesses, human rights activists, and government officials expressed fear the machete killings were a terrorist campaign instigated by the FDLR.
The government investigated and prosecuted individuals accused of threatening or harming genocide survivors and witnesses or of espousing genocide ideology, which the law defines as dehumanizing an individual or a group with the same characteristics by threatening, intimidating, defaming, inciting hatred, negating the genocide, taking revenge, altering testimony or evidence, killing, planning to kill, or attempting to kill someone. From January to September, a special protection bureau in the Office of the National Public Prosecution Authority (NPPA) registered 167 cases of genocide ideology, of which 64 were filed in court, 31 were dismissed, 10 were reclassified, and 62 were pending investigation. From January to September, the courts adjudicated 59 cases (63 individuals), convicting 52 and acquitting 11 (see section 1.e.). Police investigated six murders of genocide survivors. No information was available regarding charges filed, but according to the genocide survivors’ association Ibuka, police arrested suspects in all six cases. On October 1, in Kigali, genocide survivor Alex Rutindura, who media reported was involved in a court case over his parents’ land, survived a machete attack by six assailants, the third attempt on his life in two years.
b. Disappearance
There were fewer reports of disappearances and politically motivated
abductions or kidnappings than in previous years, but local human rights
organizations ceased investigating disappearances during the year after
reporting pressure from government officials, including threats and
allegations of treason. Amnesty International, the Rwandan League for
the Promotion and Defense of Human Rights (LIPRODHOR), and other
observers alleged SSF, including the RDF J-2 Military Intelligence
Directorate, the National Intelligence and Security Services (NISS), and
the RNP’s Department of Intelligence, orchestrated the disappearances.
The government occasionally made efforts to investigate occurrences but
did not punish any perpetrators.
On September 5, unknown persons abducted Alexis Bakunzibake, vice president of the unregistered faction of PS-Imberakuri, from a bus station in Kigali. Two days later Bakunzibake reappeared across the border in Uganda, claiming his kidnappers interrogated him about PS-Imberakuri’s plans to register and compete in the 2013 parliamentary elections, its funding sources and supporters, and his conversations with HRW, Amnesty International, and foreign diplomats. Bakunzibake further alleged his kidnappers bound and blindfolded him before staging a mock execution and then warned him to get out of politics. Bakunzibake and other PS-Imberakuri members fled the country soon thereafter. The RNP did not launch an investigation into the incident, claiming Bakunzibake did not file a formal complaint in person.
On September 5, unknown persons abducted Alexis Bakunzibake, vice president of the unregistered faction of PS-Imberakuri, from a bus station in Kigali. Two days later Bakunzibake reappeared across the border in Uganda, claiming his kidnappers interrogated him about PS-Imberakuri’s plans to register and compete in the 2013 parliamentary elections, its funding sources and supporters, and his conversations with HRW, Amnesty International, and foreign diplomats. Bakunzibake further alleged his kidnappers bound and blindfolded him before staging a mock execution and then warned him to get out of politics. Bakunzibake and other PS-Imberakuri members fled the country soon thereafter. The RNP did not launch an investigation into the incident, claiming Bakunzibake did not file a formal complaint in person.
c. Torture and Other Cruel, Inhumane, or Degrading Treatment or Punishment
The constitution and law prohibit such practices, and there were
fewer reports of abuse of detainees and prisoners by military and NISS
officials than in 2011; however, reports of abuse by police intelligence
officials increased. Authorities dismissed or disciplined some police
officers for use of excessive force and other abuses during the year.
Police investigations led to formal criminal charges filed in court in
more serious cases.
On May 2, the government signed into law a new penal code that upgrades torture from an aggravating circumstance to a crime in itself. The new law mandates the maximum penalty, defined by extent of injury, for SSF and other government perpetrators.
There were numerous new reports during the year of detainee abuse and lengthy illegal detention by police intelligence at Kwa Gacinya detention center in Kigali, despite government assertions the center had been closed. Former detainees told HRW they were detained in isolation and repeatedly beaten by police intelligence with plastic batons or bare hands to secure information and force confessions. Between May and August, police arrested at least 15 persons in connection with an electronics theft ring in Kigali. According to HRW, several of the defendants told the judge during a September pretrial detention hearing police had illegally detained and beaten them into forced confessions, but the judge accepted the prosecution’s argument, based on precedent set by the 2011 “grenade case,” that illegal detention could be excusable by investigative prerogative and that claims of torture and abuse could not be examined without a medical report.
Amnesty International reports published in April and October documented 18 allegations of torture and other cruel, inhumane, or degrading treatment or punishment perpetrated by military intelligence and other SSF personnel in 2010 and 2011 to secure information or force confessions at Kami military intelligence camp, Ministry of Defense (MINADEF) headquarters, Mukamira military camp, and safe houses. Former detainees repeatedly alleged to Amnesty International, HRW, and LIPRODHOR they endured sleep deprivation, sensory deprivation, starvation, extraction of fingernails, electrocution, scalding, melting of plastic bags over the head, suffocation, burning or branding, beating, and simulated drowning through confinement in cisterns filled with rain water. Local and international human rights organizations reported the RDF took positive steps during the year to reform military interrogation methods and detention standards, resulting in fewer reports of torture and other cruel, inhumane, or degrading treatment or punishment at Kami and other military detention facilities; however, they cautioned the increased use of safe houses by NISS, RDF J-2, and RNP Intelligence made monitoring more difficult.
In addition to torture, former detainees repeatedly alleged to Amnesty International, HRW, and LIPRODHOR that, while in military intelligence detention in 2010 and 2011 at Kami, they had been held in solitary confinement, without light and without communication with the outside world, they were allowed only two bathroom visits per day, they had to eat next to their feces, and they were sometimes told the food was poisoned. RDF reforms led to a reduction in such reports during the year, according to local and international human rights organizations, but the increased use of safe houses complicated monitoring efforts.
On May 2, the government signed into law a new penal code that upgrades torture from an aggravating circumstance to a crime in itself. The new law mandates the maximum penalty, defined by extent of injury, for SSF and other government perpetrators.
There were numerous new reports during the year of detainee abuse and lengthy illegal detention by police intelligence at Kwa Gacinya detention center in Kigali, despite government assertions the center had been closed. Former detainees told HRW they were detained in isolation and repeatedly beaten by police intelligence with plastic batons or bare hands to secure information and force confessions. Between May and August, police arrested at least 15 persons in connection with an electronics theft ring in Kigali. According to HRW, several of the defendants told the judge during a September pretrial detention hearing police had illegally detained and beaten them into forced confessions, but the judge accepted the prosecution’s argument, based on precedent set by the 2011 “grenade case,” that illegal detention could be excusable by investigative prerogative and that claims of torture and abuse could not be examined without a medical report.
Amnesty International reports published in April and October documented 18 allegations of torture and other cruel, inhumane, or degrading treatment or punishment perpetrated by military intelligence and other SSF personnel in 2010 and 2011 to secure information or force confessions at Kami military intelligence camp, Ministry of Defense (MINADEF) headquarters, Mukamira military camp, and safe houses. Former detainees repeatedly alleged to Amnesty International, HRW, and LIPRODHOR they endured sleep deprivation, sensory deprivation, starvation, extraction of fingernails, electrocution, scalding, melting of plastic bags over the head, suffocation, burning or branding, beating, and simulated drowning through confinement in cisterns filled with rain water. Local and international human rights organizations reported the RDF took positive steps during the year to reform military interrogation methods and detention standards, resulting in fewer reports of torture and other cruel, inhumane, or degrading treatment or punishment at Kami and other military detention facilities; however, they cautioned the increased use of safe houses by NISS, RDF J-2, and RNP Intelligence made monitoring more difficult.
In addition to torture, former detainees repeatedly alleged to Amnesty International, HRW, and LIPRODHOR that, while in military intelligence detention in 2010 and 2011 at Kami, they had been held in solitary confinement, without light and without communication with the outside world, they were allowed only two bathroom visits per day, they had to eat next to their feces, and they were sometimes told the food was poisoned. RDF reforms led to a reduction in such reports during the year, according to local and international human rights organizations, but the increased use of safe houses complicated monitoring efforts.
Prison and Detention Center Conditions
Prison and detention center conditions were harsh, although the
government made numerous improvements during the year. Police sometimes
beat newly arrested suspects to obtain confessions. There were numerous
reports of detainee abuse and lengthy illegal detention by police
intelligence at Kwa Gacinya detention center in Kigali. There were
reports that J-2 military intelligence personnel employed torture and
other cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment or punishment to obtain
confessions in military detention centers, although less frequently than
in the previous year (see section 1.c). The SSF increasingly used safe
houses to detain and interrogate “security” detainees and military
officials accused of insubordination. The government selectively
permitted visits by independent human rights observers.
Physical Conditions: At year’s end the prison population was 55,618, over 90 percent of whom were men. A total of 333 prisoners were juveniles. The system was designed for 54,700. Men and women were held separately in similar conditions, although overcrowding was more prevalent in male wards. Fewer than 100 children under the age of three lived with their parents in prison. The Rwanda Correctional Services (RCS) provided five nursery schools, one psychosocial center, and fresh milk for such children. All juveniles were held at Nyagatare Rehabilitation Center or in special wings of regular prisons. There were no reports of abuse of juveniles, and the RCS continued to improve access to lawyers, education, and job training for juveniles. Individuals convicted of genocide-related offenses comprised a majority of the adult prison population. Authorities generally separated pretrial detainees from convicted prisoners; however, there were numerous exceptions due to the large number of detainees awaiting trial.
The government continued to hold eight prisoners of the Special Court for Sierra Leone in a purpose-built detention center, which the UN deemed met international standards for incarceration of prisoners convicted by international criminal tribunals. The government held international transfers and some high-profile “security” prisoners in similarly upgraded maximum security wings of Kigali Central “1930” Prison.
Unlike in the previous year, there were no prison riots. A riot at Huye Prison in July 2011 resulted in the deaths of five prisoners, who reportedly were shot by guards.
Prisoner deaths resulted from anemia, HIV/AIDS, respiratory diseases, malaria, and other diseases at rates similar to those found in the general population. Medical care in prisons was commensurate with care for the public at large. The government enrolled all prisoners in the national health insurance plan. Prisoners had access to potable water. The Ministry of Internal Security (MININTER) implemented a 2011 directive taking full responsibility to provide food for prisoners through contracted cafeteria services, canteens, and prison gardens. Family members were permitted to supplement the diets of vulnerable prisoners with health issues. Ventilation and temperature conditions improved as overcrowding continued to decline. According to the RCS, each prison had dormitories, toilets, sports facilities, a health center, a guest hall, a kitchen, water, and electricity, as required by a 2006 presidential order governing prison conditions.
Conditions in police and military detention centers varied. Overcrowding was common in police detention centers, and poor ventilation often led to high temperatures. Provision of food and medical care was inconsistent, and some detainees claimed to have gone for several days without food. There were complaints regarding inadequate sanitation in some detention centers, and not all detention centers had toilets. There were numerous reports of substandard conditions for civilians held in military detention centers.
Gikondo Transit Center, where Kigali authorities held street children, vagrants, suspected prostitutes, and street sellers, continued to operate despite a Senate committee’s 2008 call for its closure due to substandard conditions (see section 1.d.). Two other transit centers, where conditions generally met basic international standards, operated under the management of the Ministry of Gender and Family Promotion (MIGEPROF), as did one transit center under church management. Hundreds of male transit center detainees and at-risk youth between the ages of 18 and 35 were transferred to the Iwawa Rehabilitation and Vocational Development Center on Iwawa Island, where substandard sanitation and nutrition resulted in disease outbreaks and several deaths. During the year there were reports of individuals drowning while attempting to escape. There were also reports the RDF recruited individuals from Iwawa to join the M23 armed group in the DRC (see sections 1.a. and 6, children.).
Administration: Recordkeeping on prisoners and detainees remained inadequate, but authorities took steps to transfer paper files to an electronic database. Domestic and international human rights organizations reported numerous instances of long delays and failures to locate prisoners and detainees. There were reports of forgotten detainees and of prisoners who remained incarcerated beyond their release date due to misplaced records. The RCS provided additional training to its staff on the shift from penal to rehabilitative detention as it coped with the July 2011 merger of the National Prisons Service and the Works for General Interest (TIG) community service program for perpetrators of the genocide. The Nyagatare Rehabilitation Center for juveniles continued renovations with the assistance of the Dignity in Detention Foundation and UNICEF to align with rehabilitative priorities. In May the government amended the penal code to allow community service as alternative sentencing for misdemeanors and petty offenses, and the Ministry of Justice (MINIJUST) instructed judges to utilize alternative sentencing to incarceration for nonviolent offenders during the first half of the year. MININTER granted conditional release to 1,421 prisoners in May. The law provides for an ombudsman who has the power to carry out investigations of prisons. The ombudsman also receives and examines complaints from individuals and independent associations relating to civil servants, state organs, and private institutions. Prisoners and detainees had weekly access to visitors and were permitted religious observance. Prison staff held regular meetings with prisoners and detainees to listen to inmates’ complaints and take action to resolve them when possible. The MININTER permanent secretary personally inspected all prisons and took steps to hire staff for a human rights inspectorate within the ministry. The chief of defense staff supervised detention reform efforts in MINADEF.
Monitoring: The government permitted independent monitoring of prison conditions by diplomats, as well as the International Committee of the Red Cross, which reported unimpeded access on an unannounced basis to all the prisons, police stations, and military facilities that it visited during the year. HRW obtained access to visit prisons, but the government repeatedly blocked access to individual prisoners and subsequently ruled HRW did not have the right to request access to individual prisoners. Amnesty International was unable to visit prisons due to government delays in permit approval. Journalists may access prisons with a valid press card but must request permission from the RCS commissioner to interview or take photos. The government did not permit independent monitoring of safe houses. It also denied local human rights NGOs, including LIPRODHOR and the Youth Association for Human Rights Promotion and Development (AJPRODHO-JIJUKIRWA), permits to visit prisons and police detention centers.
Improvements: There were continued improvements in treatment of the general prison population. Overcrowding in prisons continued to decline. MININTER took full responsibility to provide food for prisoners. Unannounced quarterly inspections by the MININTER permanent secretary led to improved recordkeeping and treatment of prisoners in RCS facilities, while periodic monitoring by the MINADEF chief of defense staff led to a reduction in reported abuses at military detention facilities. Under the RCS Strategic Plan 2012-17, RCS undertook renovations of some of the 14 existing prison facilities and began construction of Butamwa Prison, which will replace Kigali Central “1930” Prison upon completion. As part of a shift to rehabilitative detention, RCS had 2,848 regular prisoners and 650 TIG camp prisoners in vocational training programs at year’s end. Also, 4,432 regular prisoners and 849 TIG camp prisoners were participating in literacy and language education. RCS established a psychosocial center for children under the age of three who lived with their parents in prison. All juvenile cases were recorded and submitted to MINIJUST and other government institutions on a quarterly basis, and increased efforts were made to provide juveniles legal assistance through Legal Aid Week.
Physical Conditions: At year’s end the prison population was 55,618, over 90 percent of whom were men. A total of 333 prisoners were juveniles. The system was designed for 54,700. Men and women were held separately in similar conditions, although overcrowding was more prevalent in male wards. Fewer than 100 children under the age of three lived with their parents in prison. The Rwanda Correctional Services (RCS) provided five nursery schools, one psychosocial center, and fresh milk for such children. All juveniles were held at Nyagatare Rehabilitation Center or in special wings of regular prisons. There were no reports of abuse of juveniles, and the RCS continued to improve access to lawyers, education, and job training for juveniles. Individuals convicted of genocide-related offenses comprised a majority of the adult prison population. Authorities generally separated pretrial detainees from convicted prisoners; however, there were numerous exceptions due to the large number of detainees awaiting trial.
The government continued to hold eight prisoners of the Special Court for Sierra Leone in a purpose-built detention center, which the UN deemed met international standards for incarceration of prisoners convicted by international criminal tribunals. The government held international transfers and some high-profile “security” prisoners in similarly upgraded maximum security wings of Kigali Central “1930” Prison.
Unlike in the previous year, there were no prison riots. A riot at Huye Prison in July 2011 resulted in the deaths of five prisoners, who reportedly were shot by guards.
Prisoner deaths resulted from anemia, HIV/AIDS, respiratory diseases, malaria, and other diseases at rates similar to those found in the general population. Medical care in prisons was commensurate with care for the public at large. The government enrolled all prisoners in the national health insurance plan. Prisoners had access to potable water. The Ministry of Internal Security (MININTER) implemented a 2011 directive taking full responsibility to provide food for prisoners through contracted cafeteria services, canteens, and prison gardens. Family members were permitted to supplement the diets of vulnerable prisoners with health issues. Ventilation and temperature conditions improved as overcrowding continued to decline. According to the RCS, each prison had dormitories, toilets, sports facilities, a health center, a guest hall, a kitchen, water, and electricity, as required by a 2006 presidential order governing prison conditions.
Conditions in police and military detention centers varied. Overcrowding was common in police detention centers, and poor ventilation often led to high temperatures. Provision of food and medical care was inconsistent, and some detainees claimed to have gone for several days without food. There were complaints regarding inadequate sanitation in some detention centers, and not all detention centers had toilets. There were numerous reports of substandard conditions for civilians held in military detention centers.
Gikondo Transit Center, where Kigali authorities held street children, vagrants, suspected prostitutes, and street sellers, continued to operate despite a Senate committee’s 2008 call for its closure due to substandard conditions (see section 1.d.). Two other transit centers, where conditions generally met basic international standards, operated under the management of the Ministry of Gender and Family Promotion (MIGEPROF), as did one transit center under church management. Hundreds of male transit center detainees and at-risk youth between the ages of 18 and 35 were transferred to the Iwawa Rehabilitation and Vocational Development Center on Iwawa Island, where substandard sanitation and nutrition resulted in disease outbreaks and several deaths. During the year there were reports of individuals drowning while attempting to escape. There were also reports the RDF recruited individuals from Iwawa to join the M23 armed group in the DRC (see sections 1.a. and 6, children.).
Administration: Recordkeeping on prisoners and detainees remained inadequate, but authorities took steps to transfer paper files to an electronic database. Domestic and international human rights organizations reported numerous instances of long delays and failures to locate prisoners and detainees. There were reports of forgotten detainees and of prisoners who remained incarcerated beyond their release date due to misplaced records. The RCS provided additional training to its staff on the shift from penal to rehabilitative detention as it coped with the July 2011 merger of the National Prisons Service and the Works for General Interest (TIG) community service program for perpetrators of the genocide. The Nyagatare Rehabilitation Center for juveniles continued renovations with the assistance of the Dignity in Detention Foundation and UNICEF to align with rehabilitative priorities. In May the government amended the penal code to allow community service as alternative sentencing for misdemeanors and petty offenses, and the Ministry of Justice (MINIJUST) instructed judges to utilize alternative sentencing to incarceration for nonviolent offenders during the first half of the year. MININTER granted conditional release to 1,421 prisoners in May. The law provides for an ombudsman who has the power to carry out investigations of prisons. The ombudsman also receives and examines complaints from individuals and independent associations relating to civil servants, state organs, and private institutions. Prisoners and detainees had weekly access to visitors and were permitted religious observance. Prison staff held regular meetings with prisoners and detainees to listen to inmates’ complaints and take action to resolve them when possible. The MININTER permanent secretary personally inspected all prisons and took steps to hire staff for a human rights inspectorate within the ministry. The chief of defense staff supervised detention reform efforts in MINADEF.
Monitoring: The government permitted independent monitoring of prison conditions by diplomats, as well as the International Committee of the Red Cross, which reported unimpeded access on an unannounced basis to all the prisons, police stations, and military facilities that it visited during the year. HRW obtained access to visit prisons, but the government repeatedly blocked access to individual prisoners and subsequently ruled HRW did not have the right to request access to individual prisoners. Amnesty International was unable to visit prisons due to government delays in permit approval. Journalists may access prisons with a valid press card but must request permission from the RCS commissioner to interview or take photos. The government did not permit independent monitoring of safe houses. It also denied local human rights NGOs, including LIPRODHOR and the Youth Association for Human Rights Promotion and Development (AJPRODHO-JIJUKIRWA), permits to visit prisons and police detention centers.
Improvements: There were continued improvements in treatment of the general prison population. Overcrowding in prisons continued to decline. MININTER took full responsibility to provide food for prisoners. Unannounced quarterly inspections by the MININTER permanent secretary led to improved recordkeeping and treatment of prisoners in RCS facilities, while periodic monitoring by the MINADEF chief of defense staff led to a reduction in reported abuses at military detention facilities. Under the RCS Strategic Plan 2012-17, RCS undertook renovations of some of the 14 existing prison facilities and began construction of Butamwa Prison, which will replace Kigali Central “1930” Prison upon completion. As part of a shift to rehabilitative detention, RCS had 2,848 regular prisoners and 650 TIG camp prisoners in vocational training programs at year’s end. Also, 4,432 regular prisoners and 849 TIG camp prisoners were participating in literacy and language education. RCS established a psychosocial center for children under the age of three who lived with their parents in prison. All juvenile cases were recorded and submitted to MINIJUST and other government institutions on a quarterly basis, and increased efforts were made to provide juveniles legal assistance through Legal Aid Week.
The Truth can be buried and stomped into the ground where none can see, yet eventually it will, like a seed, break through the surface once again far more potent than ever, and Nothing can stop it. Truth can be suppressed for a "time", yet It cannot be destroyed. ==> Wolverine
The former US President
Bill Clinton
The US dilemma
President Clinton: Get away from Rwandans and let them fight for their basic liberties.
President Clinton: Get away from Rwandans and let them fight for their basic liberties.
“Truth is the first casualty of war.” George Orwell
What will happen next?
"We have come to almost expect them. And while most Presidential scandals have to do with corruption or running guns or just flat out lying about things (*cough* yellowcake *cough*), occasionally these scandals head into the territory of the absurd, the hilarious and the outright embarrassing. It is to these wonderful scandals that this list is devoted. What better way to bring us together as a nation than to look back and laugh at our betters? ..."
Bill Clinton has more blood on his hands as he still supports and collaborates with General Kagame, the architect of the Rwandan genocide. the former US President Bill clinton continues to build up a win-win relationship with the Rwandan dicator that antagonizes President Obama's foreign policy.
STAY OUT ! Rwandans need you out of their country |
We must all
ask the question: If there were no lootings of mineral resources in the Eastern
region of the DRC, would we be so concerned with the region?
A matter of
fact: Foreign policy is and has always been in the best interest of the US.
But what you see is what you get: On one hand,
The White House and the state Department’s position on Rwanda’s occupation of
the Democratic Republic of The Congo through different armed groups and the M23 in particular and political
grievances of the former US President Bill Clinton in some key-countries in
Africa should serve to draw much-needed attention to an increasingly untenable
contradiction in U.S. policy toward Rwanda. Bill Clinton continues to support
or encourages Kagame’s terror in the African Great lakes region.
Bill
Clinton should not interfere in the African Great lakes Region if he was not
interested. Without Clinton’s involvement, the situation in Rwanda as well as in
the Democratic of the Congo wouldn’t be in a much worse state. Since 1994, the
region became an unstable region, of which the political and economic power is in
the hands of the Tutsi minority ethnic group under the rule of bloody Tutsi dictators
General Kagame of Rwanda and Museveni of Uganda.
In this
context, the involvement of Bill Clinton appears in different experts’ analysis
to make these countries much more economically and politically unstable. The
existing Clinton organization’s interests antagonize President Obama and John
Kerry’s foreign policy on Rwanda.
Clinton sees the ruin that Obama has caused the country ....., and must wail and gnash his teeth at night.
To make matters worse: Bill Clinton has granted a war criminal the current Kagame's regime makes it worse with it's support to the M23, responsible of rapes, assassinations and mass-slaughters in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
The time has come to arrest, prosecute and indict Him. The UN investigators saw evidence of genocide in both Rwanda and DRC against the Hutus.
The Worst Human Rights Abusers in the Western Hemisphere Are U.S. Allies.
Kagame and the Tutsi-led government is supported politically, economically and equipped with weapons by the United States and Great Britain and individuals like Bill Clinton, with full knowledge that they are used in a campaign of genocide, torture and war crimes both inside Rwanda against the Hutus and in the DRC against the Congolese people through the M23 support and ammunition.
They don't care about us!
|
One of the important justifications for the Clinton administration’s support of General Kagame may sound earily familiar: The US intervention in the 1994 RPF (to make it happen) and Ugandan invasion of Rwanda, Clinton's organization supporting Kagame's wars in the neighbouring Congo, Bill Clinton's support of the Kagame's torture, imprisonment and conducting extrajudicial killings of politcal opponents, human rights activists and journalists in an organized capacity . The former US president is not forced into supporting Kagame and the RPF dictatorship by circumstances.Bill Clinton is doing so because he's afraid the world will be knowing how he made everything to make the genocide happen in Rwanda by refusing the UN intervention in the 1994 bloody war.That made him the best friend of Paul Kagame, the Rwandan dictator. Is it necessary to prove that Bill Clinton is aside with kagame, the mastermind of the Rwandan Genocide?. No there is no need to do so, it's bloody obvious.
The US government and Bill Clinton in particular does not and did not care about 8 million mass-slaughtered s Hutus in Congo, most of them children and women so long as the end result was control of the country by a U.S. ally: General Paul Kagame.
“Truth is the first casualty of war.” George Orwell
The Truth can be buried and stomped into the ground where none can see, yet eventually it will, like a seed, break through the surface once again far more potent than ever, and Nothing can stop it. Truth can be suppressed for a "time", yet It cannot be destroyed. ==> Wolverine
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Profile
I am Jean-Christophe Nizeyimana, an Economist, Content Manager, and EDI Expert, driven by a passion for human rights activism. With a deep commitment to advancing human rights in Africa, particularly in the Great Lakes region, I established this blog following firsthand experiences with human rights violations in Rwanda and in the DRC (formerly Zaïre) as well. My journey began with collaborations with Amnesty International in Utrecht, the Netherlands, and with human rights organizations including Human Rights Watch and a conference in Helsinki, Finland, where I was a panelist with other activists from various countries.
My mission is to uncover the untold truth about the ongoing genocide in Rwanda and the DRC. As a dedicated voice for the voiceless, I strive to raise awareness about the tragic consequences of these events and work tirelessly to bring an end to the Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF)'s impunity.
This blog is a platform for Truth and Justice, not a space for hate. I am vigilant against hate speech or ignorant comments, moderating all discussions to ensure a respectful and informed dialogue at African Survivors International Blog.
Genocide masterminded by RPF
Finally the well-known Truth Comes Out.
After suffering THE LONG years, telling the world that Kagame and his RPF criminal organization masterminded the Rwandan genocide that they later recalled Genocide against Tutsis. Our lives were nothing but suffering these last 32 years beginning from October 1st, 1990 onwards. We are calling the United States of America, United Kingdom, Japan, and Great Britain in particular, France, Belgium, Netherlands and Germany to return to hidden classified archives and support Honorable Tito Rutaremara's recent statement about What really happened in Rwanda before, during and after 1994 across the country and how methodically the Rwandan Genocide has been masterminded by Paul Kagame, the Rwandan Hitler. Above all, Mr. Tito Rutaremara, one of the RPF leaders has given details about RPF infiltration methods in Habyarimana's all instances, how assassinations, disappearances, mass-slaughters across Rwanda have been carried out from the local autority to the government,fabricated lies that have been used by Gacaca courts as weapon, the ICTR in which RPF had infiltrators like Joseph Ngarambe, an International court biased judgments & condemnations targeting Hutu ethnic members in contraversal strategy compared to the ICTR establishment to pursue in justice those accountable for crimes between 1993 to 2003 and Mapping Report ignored and classified to protect the Rwandan Nazis under the RPF embrella . NOTHING LASTS FOREVER.
Human and Civil Rights
Human Rights, Mutual Respect and Dignity
For all Rwandans :
Hutus - Tutsis - Twas
Rwanda: A mapping of crimes
Rwanda: A mapping of crimes in the book "In Praise of Blood, the crimes of the RPF by Judi Rever
Be the last to know: This video talks about unspeakable Kagame's crimes committed against Hutu, before, during and after the genocide against Tutsi in Rwanda.
The mastermind of both genocide is still at large: Paul Kagame
KIBEHO: Rwandan Auschwitz
Kibeho Concetration Camp.
Mass murderers C. Sankara
Stephen Sackur’s Hard Talk.
Prof. Allan C. Stam
The Unstoppable Truth
Prof. Christian Davenport
The Unstoppable Truth
Prof. Christian Davenport Michigan University & Faculty Associate at the Center for Political Studies
The killing Fields - Part 1
The Unstoppable Truth
The killing Fields - Part II
The Unstoppable Truth
Daily bread for Rwandans
The Unstoppable Truth
The killing Fields - Part III
The Unstoppable Truth
Time has come: Regime change
Drame rwandais- justice impartiale
Carla Del Ponte, Ancien Procureur au TPIR:"Le drame rwandais mérite une justice impartiale" - et réponse de Gerald Gahima
Sheltering 2,5 million refugees
Credible reports camps sheltering 2,500 million refugees in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo have been destroyed.
The UN refugee agency says it has credible reports camps sheltering 2,5 milion refugees in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo have been destroyed.
Latest videos
Peter Erlinder comments on the BBC documentary "Rwanda's Untold Story
Madam Victoire Ingabire,THE RWANDAN AUNG SAN SUU KYI
Rwanda's Untold Story
Rwanda, un génocide en questions
Bernard Lugan présente "Rwanda, un génocide en... par BernardLugan Bernard Lugan présente "Rwanda, un génocide en questions"
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Everything happens for a reason
Bad things are going to happen in your life, people will hurt you, disrespect you, play with your feelings.. But you shouldn't use that as an excuse to fail to go on and to hurt the whole world. You will end up hurting yourself and wasting your precious time. Don't always think of revenging, just let things go and move on with your life. Remember everything happens for a reason and when one door closes, the other opens for you with new blessings and love.
Hutus didn't plan Tutsi Genocide
Kagame, the mastermind of Rwandan Genocide (Hutu & tutsi)