Pages

Saturday, 13 July 2013

No consensus on implementation of cessation clause for Rwandan refugees


No consensus on implementation of cessation clause for Rwandan refugees

KAMPALA/JOHANNESBURG, 12 July 2013 (IRIN) - The future of tens of thousands of Rwandan refugees living in Africa remains uncertain nearly two weeks after the 30 June deadline recommended by the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) for the discontinuation of their refugee status. 

UNHCR has recommended countries invoke the "ceased circumstances" clausefor Rwandans who fled their country between 1959 and 1998. The cessation clause forms part of the 1951 Refugee Convention and can be applied when fundamental and durable changes in a refugee's country of origin, such that they no longer have a well-founded fear of persecution, remove the need for international protection. Both UNHCR and the Rwandan government have pointed out that since the end of the civil war and the 1994 genocide, Rwanda has been peaceful, and more than three million exiled Rwandans have returned home. 

However, many of the estimated 100,000 Rwandans who continue to live outside the country - mainly in eastern, central and southern Africa - remain unwilling to repatriate, citing fear of persecution by the government. Refugee rights organizations have also warned that human rights abuses by the current government have caused a continued exodus of Rwandan asylum seekers.

"We have been told time and again that Rwanda is safe and there might be some truth in that. However, one wonders why the call for cessation is happening while there are still people who are seeking asylum," Dismas Nkunda, co-director of the International Refugee Rights Initiative, told IRIN.

Differing views on protection

So far only four countries in Africa - Malawi, the Republic of Congo, Zambia and Zimbabwe - have followed UNHCR's recommendation to invoke the cessation clause, a fact that, according to Nkunda, "speaks volumes" about how different African countries view this group's need for protection. 

In an article in the July issue of a newsletter produced by the Fahamu Refugee Programme, a refugee legal aid group, John Cacharani and Guillaume Cliche-Rivard accused UNHCR of pressuring states to follow its recommendation, "holding hostage the fate of more than 100,000 Rwandan refugees who, of their own volition, have decided not to repatriate, yet continue to fear the end of their international protection."

"One wonders why the call for cessation is happening while there are still people who are seeking asylum"
But in response to questions from IRIN, Clementine Nkweta-Salami, UNHCR regional representative for southern Africa, emphasized, "It is the responsibility and prerogative of states to declare the cessation of refugee status." She said UNHCR's role was only to make a recommendation based on its analysis of conditions in the country of origin and how they relate to the refugees' reasons for flight. 

That only four states had agreed to implement cessation as of 30 June did not in any way indicate that UNHCR's recommendation was premature, she insisted. At an April 2013 meeting of host states held in Pretoria, "some states underscored that, for various legal, logistical, practical or other considerations, they are not in a position to apply the cessation clauses by 30 June 2013. Others have specified that, for the time being, they will concentrate on taking forward other components of the [comprehensive durable solutions] strategy, namely voluntary repatriation and local integration".

Preparing for returnees

Meanwhile, Rwandan officials say the country is prepared to receive therefugees, and has developed a comprehensive plan to repatriate and reintegrate returnees. So far this year, an estimated 1,500 Rwandans have returned home following government-operated "go-and-see" programmes.

"The conditions that forced them to flee no longer exist," Rwandan High Commissioner to Uganda, Maj Gen Frank Mugambagye, told IRIN. "The government has established three transit centres which are well equipped with shelter, education and health services. These people will be given packages for three months. We have mobilized the local authorities to receive and help them reintegrate into the communities."

He added that for Rwandans seeking local integration in host countries rather than repatriation, the government will issue national identity cards and passports that will allow them to retain their nationality.

IRIN spoke to government officials and UNHCR representatives in several of the African countries that are hosting significant numbers of Rwandan refugees to find out how they are handling the cessation clause.

Countries invoking the clause

Malawi 

Although Malawi is among the countries said to be invoking the cessation clause, the process is still in its early stages. According to George Kuchio, UNCHR representative for Malawi, the first step of informing the 660 refugees covered by the clause of their right to apply for exemption has just been completed, and the government has yet to decide what options it will offer for local integration. 

"If there are people who still have compelling reasons for not returning, they'll be given the opportunity to have their say," Kuchio told IRIN. 

However, the principal secretary in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation, Besten Chisamile, was quoted in the local media as saying, "The situation in Rwanda stabilized long ago, and there is every reason for the remaining ones [refugees] to return to their home. We are working with UNHCR on ensuring we repatriate them."

Malawi is host to a further 500 Rwandan asylum seekers whose refugee status has yet to be determined but who are unlikely to be covered by the cessation clause.

Republic of Congo

In June, the Republic of Congo announced that it would invoke the cessation clause for the 8,404 Rwandan refugees it hosts. They will now have to choose between voluntary repatriation, naturalization or applying for exemption.

"Those who fail to choose one of these options will be subject to the laws pertaining to foreigners' entry, residence and departure," said Chantal Itoua Apoyolo, director of multilateral affairs in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Cooperation.

Juvenal Turatsinzé, 49, who is among 2,500 Rwandan refugees living in Loukolela, in the northern Cuvette region, said: "We've been worried since hearing about the loss of our status. We'd love to go back to Rwanda, but the conditions that would allow us to do that willingly are not yet in place.

"There are often arbitrary arrests in Rwanda. There is no freedom of expression, no democracy. We don't think the time is right for voluntary repatriation... There are no security guarantees there."

He added, "I have already put in my request for naturalization as a Congolese citizen."

Zambia 

Zambia hosts 6,000 Rwandan refugees, about 4,000 of whom are covered by the cessation clause. According to Peter Janssen, a senior protection officer with UNHCR, the majority of these have applied for exemption, but most have been rejected. "Officially their refugee status has ceased, but the government has made it known that there will be a possibility for people to acquire an alternative status," said Janssen. 

"That still needs to be fine-tuned, but it is positive because, until a while ago, it looked like people would be left without a status and have to return to Rwanda."

Zimbabwe 

Zimbabwe, which is also following the recommendation to invoke the cessation clause, is further along with the process.

Prior to 30 June, 72 cases comprising over 200 individuals who left their country before 1999 were identified as falling within the scope of the clause, out of about 800 Rwandan refugee and asylum seekers living in the country. Those unwilling to repatriate who qualify for local integration, either through marriage to a local or through employment in certain professions, such as lawyers, doctors and teachers, have been encouraged to apply for permanent residence or work permits. However, they cannot be issued permits until they are in possession of Rwandan passports, which the Rwandan government have yet to issue. 

The majority who do not qualify for local integration but do not want to return home have already applied for exemption from the cessation clause. According to Ray Chikwanda, a national protection officer with UNHCR in Zimbabwe, only six out of the 60 cases that applied were successful. Those who were rejected have been encouraged to appeal.

"Our reading of the situation is that until there is a political consensus in the region [about invoking the cessation clause], these appeal decisions are unlikely to be released," said Chikwanda. 

Countries not invoking the clause

Democratic Republic of Congo 

The government of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) has said it will not immediately invoke the cessation clause for the estimated 47,500 Rwandan refugees it hosts, but will instead adopt a phased approach. 

Rwandan refugees will first be identified, registered and asked if they want to return. Following a meeting in October, a repatriation plan will be drawn up. Julien Paluku, governor of North Kivu Province, where most of the Rwandan refugees have settled, told the Associated Press that refugees who do not want to return home will be allowed to apply either for a residence permit or for Congolese nationality, which may be granted on a case-by-case basis.

UNHCR has helped some 8,000 Rwandans return home from DRC since 2012 and says it will continue to assist with repatriation.

Uganda

Out of 14,811 Rwandan refugees living in Uganda, about 4,100 individuals fall within the scope of the cessation clause. However, the government has not invoked cessation because ambiguities in the country's Immigration Act and Constitution would hinder local integration - an alternative to voluntary repatriation that host states are supposed to make available as part of the comprehensive solutions strategy. 

For example, Article 12 of the Constitution bars the children of refugees from qualifying for citizenship, while sections of the Immigration Act effectively preclude refugees from qualifying for permanent residence or work permits.

"The government of Uganda has declared that, pending the resolution of the [legal] ambiguities and the charting of a way forward towards implementing local integration and alternative legal status, they will not be invoking the ceased circumstances clause," Esther Kiragu, UNHCR assistant representative for protection, told IRIN. "They will, however, announce a date for invocation in due course once the road map is clearly drawn." 

South Africa 

At a ministerial meeting convened by UNHCR in Pretoria in April 2013, South Africa's Minister of Home Affairs Naledi Pandor said, "The position of the UNHCR in relation to Rwanda has created anguish and uncertainty among the refugee community in South Africa", suggesting that much work remained to be done to clearly articulate the reasons for the clause being invoked. 

The South African government has since informed UNHCR that it will conduct its own research into existing conditions in Rwanda and consult extensively with the local Rwandan community before making a decision on invoking the cessation clause. 

A local Rwandan refugee leader, who did not wish to be named, commended South Africa's Department of Home Affairs for "welcoming Rwandan refugee leaders, listening to their concerns and fears of being returned to Rwanda, and sharing with refugees the government of South Africa's position around the cessation clause". 

ks/kr/nl/lmm/so/rz

[This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations]

No consensus on implementation of cessation clause for Rwandan refugees


No consensus on implementation of cessation clause for Rwandan refugees

KAMPALA/JOHANNESBURG, 12 July 2013 (IRIN) - The future of tens of thousands of Rwandan refugees living in Africa remains uncertain nearly two weeks after the 30 June deadline recommended by the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) for the discontinuation of their refugee status. 

UNHCR has recommended countries invoke the "ceased circumstances" clausefor Rwandans who fled their country between 1959 and 1998. The cessation clause forms part of the 1951 Refugee Convention and can be applied when fundamental and durable changes in a refugee's country of origin, such that they no longer have a well-founded fear of persecution, remove the need for international protection. Both UNHCR and the Rwandan government have pointed out that since the end of the civil war and the 1994 genocide, Rwanda has been peaceful, and more than three million exiled Rwandans have returned home. 

However, many of the estimated 100,000 Rwandans who continue to live outside the country - mainly in eastern, central and southern Africa - remain unwilling to repatriate, citing fear of persecution by the government. Refugee rights organizations have also warned that human rights abuses by the current government have caused a continued exodus of Rwandan asylum seekers.

"We have been told time and again that Rwanda is safe and there might be some truth in that. However, one wonders why the call for cessation is happening while there are still people who are seeking asylum," Dismas Nkunda, co-director of the International Refugee Rights Initiative, told IRIN.

Differing views on protection

So far only four countries in Africa - Malawi, the Republic of Congo, Zambia and Zimbabwe - have followed UNHCR's recommendation to invoke the cessation clause, a fact that, according to Nkunda, "speaks volumes" about how different African countries view this group's need for protection. 

In an article in the July issue of a newsletter produced by the Fahamu Refugee Programme, a refugee legal aid group, John Cacharani and Guillaume Cliche-Rivard accused UNHCR of pressuring states to follow its recommendation, "holding hostage the fate of more than 100,000 Rwandan refugees who, of their own volition, have decided not to repatriate, yet continue to fear the end of their international protection."

"One wonders why the call for cessation is happening while there are still people who are seeking asylum"
But in response to questions from IRIN, Clementine Nkweta-Salami, UNHCR regional representative for southern Africa, emphasized, "It is the responsibility and prerogative of states to declare the cessation of refugee status." She said UNHCR's role was only to make a recommendation based on its analysis of conditions in the country of origin and how they relate to the refugees' reasons for flight. 

That only four states had agreed to implement cessation as of 30 June did not in any way indicate that UNHCR's recommendation was premature, she insisted. At an April 2013 meeting of host states held in Pretoria, "some states underscored that, for various legal, logistical, practical or other considerations, they are not in a position to apply the cessation clauses by 30 June 2013. Others have specified that, for the time being, they will concentrate on taking forward other components of the [comprehensive durable solutions] strategy, namely voluntary repatriation and local integration".

Preparing for returnees

Meanwhile, Rwandan officials say the country is prepared to receive therefugees, and has developed a comprehensive plan to repatriate and reintegrate returnees. So far this year, an estimated 1,500 Rwandans have returned home following government-operated "go-and-see" programmes.

"The conditions that forced them to flee no longer exist," Rwandan High Commissioner to Uganda, Maj Gen Frank Mugambagye, told IRIN. "The government has established three transit centres which are well equipped with shelter, education and health services. These people will be given packages for three months. We have mobilized the local authorities to receive and help them reintegrate into the communities."

He added that for Rwandans seeking local integration in host countries rather than repatriation, the government will issue national identity cards and passports that will allow them to retain their nationality.

IRIN spoke to government officials and UNHCR representatives in several of the African countries that are hosting significant numbers of Rwandan refugees to find out how they are handling the cessation clause.

Countries invoking the clause

Malawi 

Although Malawi is among the countries said to be invoking the cessation clause, the process is still in its early stages. According to George Kuchio, UNCHR representative for Malawi, the first step of informing the 660 refugees covered by the clause of their right to apply for exemption has just been completed, and the government has yet to decide what options it will offer for local integration. 

"If there are people who still have compelling reasons for not returning, they'll be given the opportunity to have their say," Kuchio told IRIN. 

However, the principal secretary in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation, Besten Chisamile, was quoted in the local media as saying, "The situation in Rwanda stabilized long ago, and there is every reason for the remaining ones [refugees] to return to their home. We are working with UNHCR on ensuring we repatriate them."

Malawi is host to a further 500 Rwandan asylum seekers whose refugee status has yet to be determined but who are unlikely to be covered by the cessation clause.

Republic of Congo

In June, the Republic of Congo announced that it would invoke the cessation clause for the 8,404 Rwandan refugees it hosts. They will now have to choose between voluntary repatriation, naturalization or applying for exemption.

"Those who fail to choose one of these options will be subject to the laws pertaining to foreigners' entry, residence and departure," said Chantal Itoua Apoyolo, director of multilateral affairs in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Cooperation.

Juvenal Turatsinzé, 49, who is among 2,500 Rwandan refugees living in Loukolela, in the northern Cuvette region, said: "We've been worried since hearing about the loss of our status. We'd love to go back to Rwanda, but the conditions that would allow us to do that willingly are not yet in place.

"There are often arbitrary arrests in Rwanda. There is no freedom of expression, no democracy. We don't think the time is right for voluntary repatriation... There are no security guarantees there."

He added, "I have already put in my request for naturalization as a Congolese citizen."

Zambia 

Zambia hosts 6,000 Rwandan refugees, about 4,000 of whom are covered by the cessation clause. According to Peter Janssen, a senior protection officer with UNHCR, the majority of these have applied for exemption, but most have been rejected. "Officially their refugee status has ceased, but the government has made it known that there will be a possibility for people to acquire an alternative status," said Janssen. 

"That still needs to be fine-tuned, but it is positive because, until a while ago, it looked like people would be left without a status and have to return to Rwanda."

Zimbabwe 

Zimbabwe, which is also following the recommendation to invoke the cessation clause, is further along with the process.

Prior to 30 June, 72 cases comprising over 200 individuals who left their country before 1999 were identified as falling within the scope of the clause, out of about 800 Rwandan refugee and asylum seekers living in the country. Those unwilling to repatriate who qualify for local integration, either through marriage to a local or through employment in certain professions, such as lawyers, doctors and teachers, have been encouraged to apply for permanent residence or work permits. However, they cannot be issued permits until they are in possession of Rwandan passports, which the Rwandan government have yet to issue. 

The majority who do not qualify for local integration but do not want to return home have already applied for exemption from the cessation clause. According to Ray Chikwanda, a national protection officer with UNHCR in Zimbabwe, only six out of the 60 cases that applied were successful. Those who were rejected have been encouraged to appeal.

"Our reading of the situation is that until there is a political consensus in the region [about invoking the cessation clause], these appeal decisions are unlikely to be released," said Chikwanda. 

Countries not invoking the clause

Democratic Republic of Congo 

The government of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) has said it will not immediately invoke the cessation clause for the estimated 47,500 Rwandan refugees it hosts, but will instead adopt a phased approach. 

Rwandan refugees will first be identified, registered and asked if they want to return. Following a meeting in October, a repatriation plan will be drawn up. Julien Paluku, governor of North Kivu Province, where most of the Rwandan refugees have settled, told the Associated Press that refugees who do not want to return home will be allowed to apply either for a residence permit or for Congolese nationality, which may be granted on a case-by-case basis.

UNHCR has helped some 8,000 Rwandans return home from DRC since 2012 and says it will continue to assist with repatriation.

Uganda

Out of 14,811 Rwandan refugees living in Uganda, about 4,100 individuals fall within the scope of the cessation clause. However, the government has not invoked cessation because ambiguities in the country's Immigration Act and Constitution would hinder local integration - an alternative to voluntary repatriation that host states are supposed to make available as part of the comprehensive solutions strategy. 

For example, Article 12 of the Constitution bars the children of refugees from qualifying for citizenship, while sections of the Immigration Act effectively preclude refugees from qualifying for permanent residence or work permits.

"The government of Uganda has declared that, pending the resolution of the [legal] ambiguities and the charting of a way forward towards implementing local integration and alternative legal status, they will not be invoking the ceased circumstances clause," Esther Kiragu, UNHCR assistant representative for protection, told IRIN. "They will, however, announce a date for invocation in due course once the road map is clearly drawn." 

South Africa 

At a ministerial meeting convened by UNHCR in Pretoria in April 2013, South Africa's Minister of Home Affairs Naledi Pandor said, "The position of the UNHCR in relation to Rwanda has created anguish and uncertainty among the refugee community in South Africa", suggesting that much work remained to be done to clearly articulate the reasons for the clause being invoked. 

The South African government has since informed UNHCR that it will conduct its own research into existing conditions in Rwanda and consult extensively with the local Rwandan community before making a decision on invoking the cessation clause. 

A local Rwandan refugee leader, who did not wish to be named, commended South Africa's Department of Home Affairs for "welcoming Rwandan refugee leaders, listening to their concerns and fears of being returned to Rwanda, and sharing with refugees the government of South Africa's position around the cessation clause". 

ks/kr/nl/lmm/so/rz

[This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations]

You Will be Whipped Like a Small Boy, Tanzania Government Warns Rwandan Dictator General Kagame


You Will be Whipped Like a Small Boy, Tanzania Government Warns Rwandan Dictator General Kagame

by AFROAMERICA NETWORK on JULY 13, 2013
Tanzanian Ambassador Mbelwa Kairuki(2nd right), Ms. Georgina Roberts, Deputy High Commissioner of New Zealand, Mr. Mkumbwa Ally (left), Acting Head of Government Communication Unit and Mr. Khatibu Makenga, Foreign Service Officer in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
Tanzanian Ambassador Mbelwa Kairuki(2nd right), Ms. Georgina Roberts, Deputy High Commissioner of New Zealand, Mr. Mkumbwa Ally (left), Acting Head of Government Communication Unit and Mr. Khatibu Makenga, Foreign Service Officer in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
"Rwandan President Paul Kagame must  give up his delusional dreams of  invading Tanzania. Otherwise, Tanzania will respond with full shock and awe force. … We will wallop him[General Kagame].  He[General Kagame] will be whipped like a small boy, " Mr. Ally Mkumbwa , Acting Head of Government Communication Unit in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs told the Tanzanian media in Dar-es-Salaam, Tanzania.
Ally Mkumbwa was reacting to recent threats by Rwandan dictator Paul Kagame against Tanzanian President Jakaya Kikwete (see our article: I will Just Wait For You At the Right Place And I will Hit You, Rwandan General Paul Kagame Threatens Tanzanian Jakaya Kikwete of July 3, 2013)
 "You know that unrest in DRC and Rwanda cannot end without both countries sitting down with their opponents to find a long lasting solution, " Ally Mkumbwa added, saying that the Tanzanian President Jakaya Kikwete had given his advice to the Rwandan dictator in good faith.
The Tanzanian official reiterated the stand of the Tanzanian President Jakaya Kikwete, stand that has since been supported by South African Development Community (SADC) (see our article here), the UN Secretary General Ban-Ki Moon and the Belgian Government (see  our article here). The stand is that the Rwandan government should meet with its armed opposition in order to bring durable peace and security in Eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC)  and  the Great Lakes Region  Africa.

Military showdown between Rwandan Defense Forces and Tanzanian People's Defense Forces To begin soon.

Despite denials from both the Rwandan and the Tanzanian government officials, a military showdown between the armies from the two countries will soon start. According to sources within both the Tanzanian and the Rwandan governments, the two sides having preparing  for war and are bracing for a military confrontation. The sources told AfroAmerican Network that the two armies will face off  in Eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo through proxies: The Tanzanian people's Defense Forces  as the main component of the UN Intervention Brigade and the Rwandan Defense Forces as the backbone of the M23 Congolese rebels.
"The Rwandans[Special Forces] are excited right now and are saying that they will hit these Tanzanians and teach them a lesson they will never forget, " a source within M23 rebels  working with Rwandan Defense Force  Special Forces embedded within M23 Rebels in Eastern DRC told AfroAmerica Network.
"The Rwandans [Special Forces] are saying that Tanzanians do not remember how to fight and will be routed without a fight,"another source within M23 rebels told AfroAmerica Network.
Whether these bravados will translate into real action or not,  Eastern DRC  may soon be the center of a power play  between Tanzanian Jakaya Kikwete and the Rwandan  General Paul Kagame and a place where the two may finally get even.

Appeal for Calm.

While the rhetoric has escalated between Tanzanian and Rwandan officials, some Tanzanian officials  have tried to appease the emotions. Recently, in front of the Tanzanian Parliament, the Tanzanian Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation Bernard Membe said  that President Jakaya Kikwete's recommendation for directs talks between the Rwandan government and its armed opposition was just an advice that General Kagame was free to accept or reject but that the Tanzanian government stand by that recommendation.
"President Jakaya Kikwete will not apologise to Rwanda or change his stand that the Rwandan government should negotiate with rebels. There is no way the Head of State could apologise for saying the truth and stating a fact, " Bernard Membe said on June 2, 2013.
Tanzanian opposition leaders have also supported the Tanzanian President Jakaya Kikwete's recommendations but asked that other regional leaders intervene to calm. One these opposition leaders is Zitto Kabwe, Deputy  chairman of the leading  opposition party, CHADEMA. Zitton Kabwe  said:
"If you don't want advice you simply refuse, why start hurling insults? You don't want advice, that's it. Why petty insults? Since Kikwete said what he said in Addis, he never spoke of it again. Membe (minister) replied in Dodoma and Tanzania didn't say anything afterwards. Why is Kigali still going on about this? 
Taliban and Al Qaeda? Children born in 1994 and Hutu refugees in Congo, are they killers too. Let us think very carefully on this. Indeed if there are genocidaires, they should be pursued, arrested, tried and convicted.  But the majority are people who have the full rights  to participate in the politics of their country Rwanda. They have been prevented from doing so by the current government of Rwandan and hence,  have  resorted to arms. With these people, the Rwandan government  must sit sit at the negotiation table, hold direct talks,  and come to an agreement.
There is no need for the two countries to go to war against each other. We have other wars to fight such as poverty. 
Neutral leaders like Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta should mediate between Kagame and Kikwete and help them iron out their differences." 
©2012 AfroAmerica Network. All Rights Reserved.

You Will be Whipped Like a Small Boy, Tanzania Government Warns Rwandan Dictator General Kagame


You Will be Whipped Like a Small Boy, Tanzania Government Warns Rwandan Dictator General Kagame

by AFROAMERICA NETWORK on JULY 13, 2013
Tanzanian Ambassador Mbelwa Kairuki(2nd right), Ms. Georgina Roberts, Deputy High Commissioner of New Zealand, Mr. Mkumbwa Ally (left), Acting Head of Government Communication Unit and Mr. Khatibu Makenga, Foreign Service Officer in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
Tanzanian Ambassador Mbelwa Kairuki(2nd right), Ms. Georgina Roberts, Deputy High Commissioner of New Zealand, Mr. Mkumbwa Ally (left), Acting Head of Government Communication Unit and Mr. Khatibu Makenga, Foreign Service Officer in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
"Rwandan President Paul Kagame must  give up his delusional dreams of  invading Tanzania. Otherwise, Tanzania will respond with full shock and awe force. … We will wallop him[General Kagame].  He[General Kagame] will be whipped like a small boy, " Mr. Ally Mkumbwa , Acting Head of Government Communication Unit in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs told the Tanzanian media in Dar-es-Salaam, Tanzania.
Ally Mkumbwa was reacting to recent threats by Rwandan dictator Paul Kagame against Tanzanian President Jakaya Kikwete (see our article: I will Just Wait For You At the Right Place And I will Hit You, Rwandan General Paul Kagame Threatens Tanzanian Jakaya Kikwete of July 3, 2013)
 "You know that unrest in DRC and Rwanda cannot end without both countries sitting down with their opponents to find a long lasting solution, " Ally Mkumbwa added, saying that the Tanzanian President Jakaya Kikwete had given his advice to the Rwandan dictator in good faith.
The Tanzanian official reiterated the stand of the Tanzanian President Jakaya Kikwete, stand that has since been supported by South African Development Community (SADC) (see our article here), the UN Secretary General Ban-Ki Moon and the Belgian Government (see  our article here). The stand is that the Rwandan government should meet with its armed opposition in order to bring durable peace and security in Eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC)  and  the Great Lakes Region  Africa.

Military showdown between Rwandan Defense Forces and Tanzanian People's Defense Forces To begin soon.

Despite denials from both the Rwandan and the Tanzanian government officials, a military showdown between the armies from the two countries will soon start. According to sources within both the Tanzanian and the Rwandan governments, the two sides having preparing  for war and are bracing for a military confrontation. The sources told AfroAmerican Network that the two armies will face off  in Eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo through proxies: The Tanzanian people's Defense Forces  as the main component of the UN Intervention Brigade and the Rwandan Defense Forces as the backbone of the M23 Congolese rebels.
"The Rwandans[Special Forces] are excited right now and are saying that they will hit these Tanzanians and teach them a lesson they will never forget, " a source within M23 rebels  working with Rwandan Defense Force  Special Forces embedded within M23 Rebels in Eastern DRC told AfroAmerica Network.
"The Rwandans [Special Forces] are saying that Tanzanians do not remember how to fight and will be routed without a fight,"another source within M23 rebels told AfroAmerica Network.
Whether these bravados will translate into real action or not,  Eastern DRC  may soon be the center of a power play  between Tanzanian Jakaya Kikwete and the Rwandan  General Paul Kagame and a place where the two may finally get even.

Appeal for Calm.

While the rhetoric has escalated between Tanzanian and Rwandan officials, some Tanzanian officials  have tried to appease the emotions. Recently, in front of the Tanzanian Parliament, the Tanzanian Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation Bernard Membe said  that President Jakaya Kikwete's recommendation for directs talks between the Rwandan government and its armed opposition was just an advice that General Kagame was free to accept or reject but that the Tanzanian government stand by that recommendation.
"President Jakaya Kikwete will not apologise to Rwanda or change his stand that the Rwandan government should negotiate with rebels. There is no way the Head of State could apologise for saying the truth and stating a fact, " Bernard Membe said on June 2, 2013.
Tanzanian opposition leaders have also supported the Tanzanian President Jakaya Kikwete's recommendations but asked that other regional leaders intervene to calm. One these opposition leaders is Zitto Kabwe, Deputy  chairman of the leading  opposition party, CHADEMA. Zitton Kabwe  said:
"If you don't want advice you simply refuse, why start hurling insults? You don't want advice, that's it. Why petty insults? Since Kikwete said what he said in Addis, he never spoke of it again. Membe (minister) replied in Dodoma and Tanzania didn't say anything afterwards. Why is Kigali still going on about this? 
Taliban and Al Qaeda? Children born in 1994 and Hutu refugees in Congo, are they killers too. Let us think very carefully on this. Indeed if there are genocidaires, they should be pursued, arrested, tried and convicted.  But the majority are people who have the full rights  to participate in the politics of their country Rwanda. They have been prevented from doing so by the current government of Rwandan and hence,  have  resorted to arms. With these people, the Rwandan government  must sit sit at the negotiation table, hold direct talks,  and come to an agreement.
There is no need for the two countries to go to war against each other. We have other wars to fight such as poverty. 
Neutral leaders like Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta should mediate between Kagame and Kikwete and help them iron out their differences." 
©2012 AfroAmerica Network. All Rights Reserved.

Nta muhezanguni uzongera kuyobora u Rwanda; Kagame niwe wa nyuma


Nta muhezanguni uzongera kuyobora u Rwanda; Kagame niwe wa nyuma

Inkuru ya Béatrice Uwamahoro
Tariki ya 13 Nyakanga 2013.

Muri iyi minsi nashimishijwe cyane n'ukuntu Bwana Joseph Ngarambe, Umunyamabanga Mukuru w'Ihuriro-RNC, aherutse kugira icyo uvuga kuri Bwana Simeon Musengimana, umunyamakuru ufite Radiyo yitwa Ijwi rya Rubanda.

Mu by'ukuri umuntu ashishoje neza asanga iriya Radio Ijwi rya Rubanda ya Bwana Simeon Musengimana irimo gukora umurimo yo guca ibice muri opposition ishingiye ku moko nk'uko Radiyo RTLM yabigenje mu 1994. Mwibuke ko duhereye ku mahame remezo ya Radiyo RTLM, dusanga iyi radiyo nta shyaka yakoreraga. Ariko mu by'ukuri ibyo iyi radiyo yavugaga byo kwangisha abahutu abatutsi byari intero imwe n'amashyaka nka CDR na za Power z'ayandi mashyaka. Radiyo Ijwi rya Rubanda rero na yo n'ubwo itavuga uwo ikorera ngo bigaragare, iyo urebye neza usanga ikorera amashyaka nk'Ishema ndetse n'abandi bantu barekereje bategereje gusarura aho batabibye bagasimbukira ku byiza amashyaka ya oppositition amaze kugeraho ibyo byose bakazabikora mu buryo bw'ubuhezanguni igihe nyacyo nikigera. Urugero natanga ni uko ejobundi i Brighton, UK, Bwana Padiri Thomas Nahimana, Umuyobozi Mukuri w'Ishyaka Ishema, yavuze ko Bwana Simeo Musengimana ari mucuti we mu gihe bari bamubajije impamvu amaradio amwe n'amwe abiba inzangano mu banyarwanda. Bwana Padiri Thomas Nahimana yarengeye Bwana Simeo Musengimana, aramutaka karahava. Ni yo mpamvu numva ko ishyaka Ishema ryagombye gukemangwa ku byerekeranye no guhuza abanyarwanda.

Ikigaragara kandi ni uko abahezanguni (extremistes) bashaka byanze bikunze gusarura aho opposition nziza yabibye. Ndashaka kuvuga ko opposition ihuza kandi ivugira abanyarwanda bose (cyane cyane plateforme FDU-Inkingi+Ihuriro- RNC+PC-Amahoro+PS-Imberakuri) imaze kujegeza ubutegetsi bwa Kigali ku buryo bugaragara none abahezanguni batari bafite ingufu mu baturage barashaka gukoresha ikarita y'ubwoko hutu/nyamwinshi kugira ngo bahite bafatirana ibintu mu maguru mashya, maze ibintu bijye ku ruhande rwabo (they want to hijack the momentum). Ibi bashobora kubigeraho kuko hakiri abanyarwanda benshi bagifite ibitekerezo byoroshye byo gukurikira umunyapolitiki uyu n'uyu kubera ubwoko akomokamo. Ariko nanone aba bahezanguni bashobora no kutabigeraho mu gihe opposition nziza, ishaka ubumwe bw'abanyarwanda bose, iramutse ikomeje kwerekana ko ishyize hamwe, igakomeza kwigaragariza abanyarwanda hamwe, ikanasohora inyandiko cyangwa amatangazo ahuriweho n'impande zose (communiqués conjoints) yamagana amacakubiri ashingiye ku moko.

Politiki y'amoko ni yo yoretse igihugu cyacu kuva cyabona ubwigenge kugeza uno munsi. Iyi politiki niyongera guhabwa intebe rero ibintu bizasubira iyo byavuye. Kuyirwanya birasaba ukwemera kutajegajega (conviction), gukaza umurego (courage), no kwihangana (patience). Ntabwo abahutu bagombye kwitwaza ubwinshi bwabo kuko muri iki gihe bigaragara ko n'ubwo FDLR ari nto cyane ikomeje gutesha umutwe ubutegetsi bw'i Kigali. N'abatutsi kandi baba bake ariko bagahungabanya (destabliser) igihugu.

Mu by'ukuri abanyarwanda bose bakozweho n'amahano yose yagwiriye igihugu cyacu. Muri iki gihe niba abahutu bafite ibibazo bagombye kwiyumvisha ko byabaye urujya n'uruza (cercle vicieux) amoko yombi yagiye asimburanamo. Ntabwo abatutsi bishimiye kuba icyabaye cyose barishwe (1959, 1960+, 1973, na 1994), umubare wabo utari muto ugahezwa ishyanga imyaka irenga 30, abasigaye mu gihugu ntibagire ijambo ku butegetsi bwa Repubulika ya mbere n'iya kabiri, bigeretseho no kubima amashuri. Muzi ko amwe mu mashuri yigenga nka za APACOPE yagiyeho kugira ngo azahure abana b'abatutsi bityo na bo bige.  Tuzi kandi ko hari abatutsi benshi bahirimbiriye mu byaro kandi bari abahanga muri primaire. Turabyibaza bikatuyobera. Muzi ko mu majyaruguru ishuri (classe) ryose cyangwa hafi yaryose ryimukiraga muri secondaire mu gihe ahandi gutsindisha batatu, batanu cyangwa se icumi maximum byabaga ari umuhigo ukomeye. Iringaniza se ryari rigamije iki ko ubundi hagombye kuringanira amanota? Je trouve ça totalement absurde!

Muzi ko Habyarimana Juvenal yafashe ubutegetsi ku mbunda, akica ikipe yakuyeho yose, agakuraho amashyaka menshi (yanize democratie aho kuyigisha no kuyikundisha abaturage), akarema akazu n'igisirikare kiyoborwa n'aba officiers bakomoka mu Ruhengeli no ku Gisenyi bigamije kubungabunga ubutegetsi ngo butava mu maboko y'amajyaruguru. Padiri Siridion Sindambiwe, Depute Felicula Nyiramutarambirwa, Colonel Mayuya n'abandi, bazize gushaka guhangara igitugu na injustice byariho icyo gihe-nizere ko hari abandusha kubimenya neza.

Kuri ubu rero na ho, umututsi wese ushyira mu gaciro azi ko abahutu bishwe cyane bikurikiye genocide yakorewe abatutsi ndetse ubu akaba nta jambo decisif abahutu bafite mu butegetsi cyangwa mu maservices yose aho bashoboye kubona akazi. Abayobozi benshi ni abatutsi cyangwa abahutu bari muri FPR par gré ou par résignation.

En fait, formules za Kagame ni nk'iza Habyarimana. Gusa Habyarimana we byaramworoheye kubera ibihe by'ubujiji abantu bari barimo. Leur mode opératoire est le même, seulement l'intensité d'application diffère selon les circonstances et l'évolution des temps! 

Mpereye kuri bintu nk'ibi mvuze haruguru, nsanga abantu munganya experience na Bwana Simeon Musengimana mukaba muzi n'ibindi byinshi kundusha mwari mukwiye kubimwumvisha, we n'abandi batekereza nka we. Ndibuka ko conference ya Brighton, UK irangiye, ndetse ahari n'igihe Kagame yajyaga Oxford, muri Rwanda Day, Bwana Serge Ndayizeye, umunyamakuru wo kuri Radiyo Itahuka yashimiye Ijwi rya Rubanda kubera ko bafatanyije akazi ko kutugezaho ibintu en direct (en tant que confrères) ariko  Bwana Simeo Musengimana wa Radiyo Ijwi Rya Rubanda n'abo bafanije ntacyo bigeze bavuga bashimira Bwana Serge Ndayizeye na Radio Itahuka n'ukuntu yari yitanze kuva muri America. Ils n'ont meme pas un minimum de politesse professionnelle!

Umwanzuro :

Kuva u Rwanda rwabaho rwatuwe n'amoko atatu ariyo abatwa, abahutu, n'abatutsi  kandi ibihe tugezemo si ibyo gupfukirana abantu. Abanyarwanda dukwiye gukuraho tabouts, tugahura tukaganira byose ingingo ku yindi.  Abakuriye amashyaka ya opposition bagomba gutoza no gukangurira abayoboke babo kwikuramo ingengabitekerezo y'ubuhezanguni bushingiye ku moko (extremisme ethnique) bakabereka ukuntu iyo mwumvire mibi ariyo yoretse igihugu cyacu. Banyamashyaka rero nimufate ingamba zose zishoboka z'ukuntu u Rwanda rwaba urwa bose nta macenga apyinagaza bamwe nk'ayaranze ubutegetsi bwose bwabayeho mu Rwanda kugeza ubu. 

Igikwiye muri iki gihe ni ukurebera hamwe ukuntu twakumira ibitugumisha muri urwo rujya n'uruza rw'imvururu (cercle vicieux). Abakuriye opposition nziza, imwe ihuza abanyarwanda bose, nimukomeze umurego rero kuko hari abahutu n'abatutsi benshi bashaka kubana neza bakishimana, bagasangira igihugu bitarimo amaceka yo gukandamiza bamwe. Ntimutezuke rero, nta muhezanguni witwaje ubwo ubu n'ubu uzongera kuyobora u Rwanda; Kagame niwe wa nyuma. Nimuramuka munaniwe, ubwo nyine ntakundi, muzamenyeko FPR-Inkotanyi izakomeza kwikorera ibyo ishaka cyangwa ikazakurweho ku ngufu n'abantu b'intagondwa, maze abanyarwanda tukaguma muri iyo cercle vicieux.

-“The root cause of the Rwandan tragedy of 1994 is the long and past historical ethnic dominance of one minority ethnic group to the other majority ethnic group. Ignoring this reality is giving a black cheque for the Rwandan people’s future and deepening resentment, hostility and hatred between the two groups.”

-« Ce dont j’ai le plus peur, c’est des gens qui croient que, du jour au lendemain, on peut prendre une société, lui tordre le cou et en faire une autre ».

-“The hate of men will pass, and dictators die, and the power they took from the people will return to the people. And so long as men die, liberty will never perish.”

-“I have loved justice and hated iniquity: therefore I die in exile.

-“The price good men pay for indifference to public affairs is to be ruled by evil men.”

READ MORE RECENT NEWS AND OPINIONS

Popular Posts

WebMD Health Channel - Sex & Relationships

Love Lectures

How We Made It In Africa – Insight into business in Africa

David DeAngelo - Dating Questions For Men

Christian Carter - Dating Questions For Women

Women - The Huffington Post

Recent Articles About Effective Communication Skills and Self Development