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Thursday, 6 February 2014

Rwanda: Ishyaka CNR‐Intwari rimaranye igihe kirekire igitekerezo cyo gushyiraho umutwe w'ingabo

 

Rwanda: Ishyaka CNR‐Intwari rimaranye igihe kirekire igitekerezo cyo gushyiraho umutwe w'ingabo

Inkuru ya Theobald Rwaka
Umuvugizi wa CNR-Intwari
Kuwa 4 Gashyantare 2014

Gushyiraho umutwe w'ingabo zo gutabara abaturage ni igitekerezo CNR‐Intwari imaranye igihe kirekire kandi isangiye n'abandi banyarwanda.

Ntabwo rero bibangamiye na busa andi mashyirahamwe ayo ariyo yose yaba afite icyo gitekerezo nk'uko benshi bakomeje kubikwirakwiza.

 
Dore uko CNR-Intwari yabitangaje kuri muri Werurwe 2013.

 
ITANGAZO RIGENEWE ABANYARWANDA N'ABANYAMAKURU

 
CNR-Intwari yishimiye kugeza ku Banyarwanda n'Abanyamakuru Imyanzuro y'inama isanzwe y'igihembwe cya mbere ya Biro Politiki yayo yatereraniye i Buruseri ku itariki ya mbere Werurwe umwaka w'i 2013.

 
Iyobowe na Prezida wayo, Général Habyarimana Emmanuel, Inteko y'Igihugu iharanira Repubulika yatangiye inama ya Biro Politiki yayo isuzuma amaraporo atandukanye y'abayobozi b'amakomisiyo yose, n'abahagarariye CNR Intwari mu ma fasi yose y'imbere n'ayo hanze y'igihugu.

 
Inama ya Biro Politiki yasuzumanye kandi ubwitonzi n'ubushishozi inyandiko zitandukanye yagiye igezwaho n'abayoboke ba CNR-Intwari b'imihanda yose y'isi. Imaze kwumva no gusuzuma ayo maraporo yose, Biro Politiki yasanze Igihugu cyacu kigeze ku manga nyuma y'umuteremuko utagira rutangira cyashyizweho n'ubutegetsi gito buri kuyogoza igihugu n'akarere k'ibiyaga bigari.

 
Yasanze imiyoboro yose iranga ubuzima bw'igihugu yarashyizwemo ibihato k'uburyo igihugu kimaze kuba igihuru. Inzego zose z'ubutegetsi bugendera ku mahame ya demokrasi zambuwe abaturage zibumbira mu maboko y'agatsiko k'abantu bake bigize nk'Imana mu bantu.

 
Abaturage bambuwe uburenganzira ntavogerwa ku mutungo wabo bwite, birukanwa mu byabo nta ngurane bahawe, bamburwa amasambu yabo, bategekwa kwisenyera ku ngufu, bicishwa inzara, bakoreshwa uburetwa none bageze n'aho basabwa gusorera umutekano wabo, bikagaragaza rero ko leta iriho itagishoboye na busa kurangiza inshingano yayo nyamukuru yo kurinda umutekano w'abaturage.

 
Biro Politiki yasanze ko kuba umuntu ubwabyo bihagije kugirango uhabwe agaciro ka muntu bityo rero nta mpamvu n'imwe yasobanura ko umuturage agomba gusorera leta kugirango imuhe agaciro k'ubuzima bwe mu gihugu cye.

 
Kubera izi mpamvu zose n'izindi zitarondowe, Biro Politiki ya CNRIntwari yafashe ibyemezo bikurikira:

 
1. Kwegera abaturage, kurushaho kubatoza no kubamara ubwoba mu rugendo rukomeye rwo kwibohoza ingoma y'igitugu, hakoreshejwe uburyo bwose bwo kwirwanaho mu gihe baba bahohotewe.

 
2. Yasabye Perezida wayo Général Habyarimana Emmanuel kubonana vuba n'abandi bakuru b'amashyaka atavuga rumwe n'ubutegetsi buriho mu Rwanda kugirango ababyiyemeje bafatanye na CNRIntwari urugendo rwo kwibihoza yiyemeje gutangiza vuba aha ifatanije n'abaturage bose b'uRwanda.

 
3. Gukomeza gukoresha inyandiko n'imvugo gusa, n'ubwo nabyo bikenewe cyane, ariko byonyine ntibihagije kugira ngo ubutegetsi bukoresha ubwicanyi, iterabwoba n'ikinyoma buve ku izima.

 
4. Urugendo rugiye gutangira ntawe ruheje. Abanyarwanda bose bifuza amahoro n'amajyambere birambye mu Rwanda basabwe kubigiramo uruhare kuko ari uburenganzira bwabo ntavogerwa bwo gushyiraho ubutegetsi bubabereye no kubuvanaho igihe butagishoboye inshingano zabwo.

Dufatane urunana maze twese twivane ku ngoyi.

 
Bikorewe i Buruseri ku itariki ya mbere Werurwe umwaka w'i 2013

 
Théobald Rwaka, Umuvugizi wa CNR-Intwari, Contact (media): 00 41 78 65 22183

Source:
 
 
Izindi Nkuru Bijyanye:





 

Mutabazi’s Last Stand: An Inside Look at Rwandan-Style Justice - Foreign Policy Journal | Foreign Policy Journal


Mutabazi's Last Stand: An Inside Look at Rwandan-Style Justice

by Judi Rever

February 5, 2014

President of Rwanda Paul Kagame at the World Economic Forum on Africa in Cape Town, South Africa, on June 11, 2009 (Eric Miller/World Economic Forum

President of Rwanda Paul Kagame at the World Economic Forum on Africa in Cape Town, South Africa, on June 11, 2009 (Eric Miller/World Economic Forum

Joel Mutabazi, a former presidential bodyguard facing terrorism charges in Rwanda, is a shadow of his former self.

"He's like a skeleton," said his emotionally frayed wife Gloria Kayitesi in an interview, commenting on pictures of him splashed on the Internet.

Shackled and abased, Mutabazi appeared in military court last week in full view of journalists. In photos, his complexion was sallow and the whites of his eyes were inflamed with tiny veins. Physically diminished and with little prospect for freedom, he had become a man with nothing to lose.

And yet the former child soldier and repository of secrets that worked for President Paul Kagame for two decades emerged defiant. In a statement that shocked the court, Mutabazi refused to be tried, said his life was in danger and he was not guilty of terrorism and other alleged crimes.

Mutabazi—viewed as the 'highest caliber target' among Rwandan Tutsi refugees in Uganda capable of incriminating Kagame and his senior officials—was seized three months ago in Kampala where he had been living in a UN safe house under police surveillance. In breach of international law, Rwanda engineered his forced return and accused him of forming an armed group and conspiring to kill the president.

"If anyone knows the circumstances under which I was deported from Uganda and how the law was ignored in this process, I do not believe that there are other laws in this country that will guarantee my innocence," Mutabazi said.

"I therefore do not wish to say anything throughout this trial, but I came here to tell my family that whatever happens to me in future, this is my stand on the charges: I am not guilty of all of them and I will not defend myself against them."

Mutabazi knows his rights and how they've been acutely violated. In 2010, he was suspected of having close ties with Kayumba Nyamwasa—now one of Kagame's enemies that used to Rwanda's defense chief—and subjected to electric shocks, beatings, waterboarding, and sensory deprivation at Camp Kami, a notorious detention center in Rwanda.

He narrowly escaped an assassination attempt in July 2012, after fleeing to Uganda and given refugee status, when armed gunman stormed his residence in Kampala. In August 2013, Rwandan agents and rogue Ugandan police abducted him from a UN safe house yet were quickly forced to return him when senior Ugandan police and the prime minister's office intervened. The botched operation highlighted the mercurial divisions among Ugandan government and police officials who are regularly bribed and infiltrated by Rwanda.

The latest plot point in Mutabazi's dramatic life occurred on October 25 when Joel Aguma, Uganda's deputy director of crime intelligence who'd just returned from a stint at Rwanda's National Police College, set up a police sting for the refugee that saw his brutal handover to Rwandan authorities.

Officials tasked with protecting refugees called the transfer "an act of criminality" for two reasons: no Interpol arrest warrant had been approved for Mutabazi and his return was in blatant violation of the Refugee Convention, which stipulates that no refugee should be returned a country where he is likely to face persecution or torture.

Last week, after Mutabazi appeared in a Kigali courtroom, a US State Department official offered this statement:

"The United States and other concerned countries are working together to maintain a regular presence at the trial."

"We have expressed to the Ugandan government our concern that Mutabazi was handed over to Rwandan law enforcement, despite his refugee status, and reiterated our expectation that Uganda will adhere to its obligations to protect refugees on its territory in the future."

In December, the United States called on Rwanda to ensure that Mutabazi gets a fair trial—and is protected and monitored in detention.

"The United States has urged the government of Rwanda to ensure that Mr. Joel Mutabazi's rights are protected while he is in detention, and that he be provided due process, other fair trial protections, and continued access to adequate legal counsel," said Charles Hawley, public affairs officer for the US embassy in Kigali.

"We have also urged the Rwandan government to continue to grant independent monitoring organizations access to Mr. Mutabazi during his detention," Hawley added.

Despite attempts by Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch and the International Committee of the Red Cross to get access to Mutabazi in detention, he remains off limits—another breach of humanitarian norms. His lawyer in pretrial proceedings, Antoinette Mukamusoni, meanwhile announced she would no longer represent him and has refused all comment.

His lawyer's frustrations stem in part from the fact that Mutabazi changed his plea in December, admitting under apparent duress he was guilty of fomenting a rebellion. At the time, Mutabazi is alleged to have said he had contacts with the FDLR, a Hutu rebel group in neighboring Democratic Republic of Congo formed from the remnants of militants accused of carrying out genocide against Rwandan Tutsis in 1994.  He also reportedly confessed that he had ties to the Rwandan National Congress (RNC), an opposition group that includes General Nyamwasa.

Yet his wife and supporters contend that Mutabazi has been beaten and kept in inhumane conditions, spending 24 hours a day in a dark cell, his hands and feet bound, sleeping on the cement and suffering from blood in his urine after being subjected to genitalia torture.

A rights activist interviewed by this journalist said Mutabazi had been "beaten so bad that he sent a message to his family through an intermediary that he might not even recover from his injuries. During those beatings, he was told to plead guilty."

And so it was a surprise to many observers last week when Mutabazi denied all charges against him, openly defying the Rwandan government and setting himself up for more torture and possible death.


About the Author

Judi Rever

Judi Rever is a Montreal-based freelance journalist, formerly with Agence France-Presse and Radio France Internationale. She has reported from the Democratic Republic of Congo, Rwanda, Sierra Leone, Ivory Coast and the Middle East. She specializes in human rights issues, and is currently doing research for a book that would explore war crimes committed by the Rwandan Patriotic Front and its army. 

[AfricaWatch] Mutabazi’s Last Stand: An Inside Look at Rwandan-Style Justice - Foreign Policy Journal | Foreign Policy Journal

 


Mutabazi's Last Stand: An Inside Look at Rwandan-Style Justice

by Judi Rever

February 5, 2014

President of Rwanda Paul Kagame at the World Economic Forum on Africa in Cape Town, South Africa, on June 11, 2009 (Eric Miller/World Economic Forum

President of Rwanda Paul Kagame at the World Economic Forum on Africa in Cape Town, South Africa, on June 11, 2009 (Eric Miller/World Economic Forum

Joel Mutabazi, a former presidential bodyguard facing terrorism charges in Rwanda, is a shadow of his former self.

"He's like a skeleton," said his emotionally frayed wife Gloria Kayitesi in an interview, commenting on pictures of him splashed on the Internet.

Shackled and abased, Mutabazi appeared in military court last week in full view of journalists. In photos, his complexion was sallow and the whites of his eyes were inflamed with tiny veins. Physically diminished and with little prospect for freedom, he had become a man with nothing to lose.

And yet the former child soldier and repository of secrets that worked for President Paul Kagame for two decades emerged defiant. In a statement that shocked the court, Mutabazi refused to be tried, said his life was in danger and he was not guilty of terrorism and other alleged crimes.

Mutabazi—viewed as the 'highest caliber target' among Rwandan Tutsi refugees in Uganda capable of incriminating Kagame and his senior officials—was seized three months ago in Kampala where he had been living in a UN safe house under police surveillance. In breach of international law, Rwanda engineered his forced return and accused him of forming an armed group and conspiring to kill the president.

"If anyone knows the circumstances under which I was deported from Uganda and how the law was ignored in this process, I do not believe that there are other laws in this country that will guarantee my innocence," Mutabazi said.

"I therefore do not wish to say anything throughout this trial, but I came here to tell my family that whatever happens to me in future, this is my stand on the charges: I am not guilty of all of them and I will not defend myself against them."

Mutabazi knows his rights and how they've been acutely violated. In 2010, he was suspected of having close ties with Kayumba Nyamwasa—now one of Kagame's enemies that used to Rwanda's defense chief—and subjected to electric shocks, beatings, waterboarding, and sensory deprivation at Camp Kami, a notorious detention center in Rwanda.

He narrowly escaped an assassination attempt in July 2012, after fleeing to Uganda and given refugee status, when armed gunman stormed his residence in Kampala. In August 2013, Rwandan agents and rogue Ugandan police abducted him from a UN safe house yet were quickly forced to return him when senior Ugandan police and the prime minister's office intervened. The botched operation highlighted the mercurial divisions among Ugandan government and police officials who are regularly bribed and infiltrated by Rwanda.

The latest plot point in Mutabazi's dramatic life occurred on October 25 when Joel Aguma, Uganda's deputy director of crime intelligence who'd just returned from a stint at Rwanda's National Police College, set up a police sting for the refugee that saw his brutal handover to Rwandan authorities.

Officials tasked with protecting refugees called the transfer "an act of criminality" for two reasons: no Interpol arrest warrant had been approved for Mutabazi and his return was in blatant violation of the Refugee Convention, which stipulates that no refugee should be returned a country where he is likely to face persecution or torture.

Last week, after Mutabazi appeared in a Kigali courtroom, a US State Department official offered this statement:

"The United States and other concerned countries are working together to maintain a regular presence at the trial."

"We have expressed to the Ugandan government our concern that Mutabazi was handed over to Rwandan law enforcement, despite his refugee status, and reiterated our expectation that Uganda will adhere to its obligations to protect refugees on its territory in the future."

In December, the United States called on Rwanda to ensure that Mutabazi gets a fair trial—and is protected and monitored in detention.

"The United States has urged the government of Rwanda to ensure that Mr. Joel Mutabazi's rights are protected while he is in detention, and that he be provided due process, other fair trial protections, and continued access to adequate legal counsel," said Charles Hawley, public affairs officer for the US embassy in Kigali.

"We have also urged the Rwandan government to continue to grant independent monitoring organizations access to Mr. Mutabazi during his detention," Hawley added.

Despite attempts by Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch and the International Committee of the Red Cross to get access to Mutabazi in detention, he remains off limits—another breach of humanitarian norms. His lawyer in pretrial proceedings, Antoinette Mukamusoni, meanwhile announced she would no longer represent him and has refused all comment.

His lawyer's frustrations stem in part from the fact that Mutabazi changed his plea in December, admitting under apparent duress he was guilty of fomenting a rebellion. At the time, Mutabazi is alleged to have said he had contacts with the FDLR, a Hutu rebel group in neighboring Democratic Republic of Congo formed from the remnants of militants accused of carrying out genocide against Rwandan Tutsis in 1994.  He also reportedly confessed that he had ties to the Rwandan National Congress (RNC), an opposition group that includes General Nyamwasa.

Yet his wife and supporters contend that Mutabazi has been beaten and kept in inhumane conditions, spending 24 hours a day in a dark cell, his hands and feet bound, sleeping on the cement and suffering from blood in his urine after being subjected to genitalia torture.

A rights activist interviewed by this journalist said Mutabazi had been "beaten so bad that he sent a message to his family through an intermediary that he might not even recover from his injuries. During those beatings, he was told to plead guilty."

And so it was a surprise to many observers last week when Mutabazi denied all charges against him, openly defying the Rwandan government and setting himself up for more torture and possible death.


About the Author

Judi Rever

Judi Rever is a Montreal-based freelance journalist, formerly with Agence France-Presse and Radio France Internationale. She has reported from the Democratic Republic of Congo, Rwanda, Sierra Leone, Ivory Coast and the Middle East. She specializes in human rights issues, and is currently doing research for a book that would explore war crimes committed by the Rwandan Patriotic Front and its army. 

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[RwandaLibre] Mutabazi’s Last Stand: An Inside Look at Rwandan-Style Justice - Foreign Policy Journal | Foreign Policy Journal

 


Mutabazi's Last Stand: An Inside Look at Rwandan-Style Justice

by Judi Rever

February 5, 2014

President of Rwanda Paul Kagame at the World Economic Forum on Africa in Cape Town, South Africa, on June 11, 2009 (Eric Miller/World Economic Forum

President of Rwanda Paul Kagame at the World Economic Forum on Africa in Cape Town, South Africa, on June 11, 2009 (Eric Miller/World Economic Forum

Joel Mutabazi, a former presidential bodyguard facing terrorism charges in Rwanda, is a shadow of his former self.

"He's like a skeleton," said his emotionally frayed wife Gloria Kayitesi in an interview, commenting on pictures of him splashed on the Internet.

Shackled and abased, Mutabazi appeared in military court last week in full view of journalists. In photos, his complexion was sallow and the whites of his eyes were inflamed with tiny veins. Physically diminished and with little prospect for freedom, he had become a man with nothing to lose.

And yet the former child soldier and repository of secrets that worked for President Paul Kagame for two decades emerged defiant. In a statement that shocked the court, Mutabazi refused to be tried, said his life was in danger and he was not guilty of terrorism and other alleged crimes.

Mutabazi—viewed as the 'highest caliber target' among Rwandan Tutsi refugees in Uganda capable of incriminating Kagame and his senior officials—was seized three months ago in Kampala where he had been living in a UN safe house under police surveillance. In breach of international law, Rwanda engineered his forced return and accused him of forming an armed group and conspiring to kill the president.

"If anyone knows the circumstances under which I was deported from Uganda and how the law was ignored in this process, I do not believe that there are other laws in this country that will guarantee my innocence," Mutabazi said.

"I therefore do not wish to say anything throughout this trial, but I came here to tell my family that whatever happens to me in future, this is my stand on the charges: I am not guilty of all of them and I will not defend myself against them."

Mutabazi knows his rights and how they've been acutely violated. In 2010, he was suspected of having close ties with Kayumba Nyamwasa—now one of Kagame's enemies that used to Rwanda's defense chief—and subjected to electric shocks, beatings, waterboarding, and sensory deprivation at Camp Kami, a notorious detention center in Rwanda.

He narrowly escaped an assassination attempt in July 2012, after fleeing to Uganda and given refugee status, when armed gunman stormed his residence in Kampala. In August 2013, Rwandan agents and rogue Ugandan police abducted him from a UN safe house yet were quickly forced to return him when senior Ugandan police and the prime minister's office intervened. The botched operation highlighted the mercurial divisions among Ugandan government and police officials who are regularly bribed and infiltrated by Rwanda.

The latest plot point in Mutabazi's dramatic life occurred on October 25 when Joel Aguma, Uganda's deputy director of crime intelligence who'd just returned from a stint at Rwanda's National Police College, set up a police sting for the refugee that saw his brutal handover to Rwandan authorities.

Officials tasked with protecting refugees called the transfer "an act of criminality" for two reasons: no Interpol arrest warrant had been approved for Mutabazi and his return was in blatant violation of the Refugee Convention, which stipulates that no refugee should be returned a country where he is likely to face persecution or torture.

Last week, after Mutabazi appeared in a Kigali courtroom, a US State Department official offered this statement:

"The United States and other concerned countries are working together to maintain a regular presence at the trial."

"We have expressed to the Ugandan government our concern that Mutabazi was handed over to Rwandan law enforcement, despite his refugee status, and reiterated our expectation that Uganda will adhere to its obligations to protect refugees on its territory in the future."

In December, the United States called on Rwanda to ensure that Mutabazi gets a fair trial—and is protected and monitored in detention.

"The United States has urged the government of Rwanda to ensure that Mr. Joel Mutabazi's rights are protected while he is in detention, and that he be provided due process, other fair trial protections, and continued access to adequate legal counsel," said Charles Hawley, public affairs officer for the US embassy in Kigali.

"We have also urged the Rwandan government to continue to grant independent monitoring organizations access to Mr. Mutabazi during his detention," Hawley added.

Despite attempts by Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch and the International Committee of the Red Cross to get access to Mutabazi in detention, he remains off limits—another breach of humanitarian norms. His lawyer in pretrial proceedings, Antoinette Mukamusoni, meanwhile announced she would no longer represent him and has refused all comment.

His lawyer's frustrations stem in part from the fact that Mutabazi changed his plea in December, admitting under apparent duress he was guilty of fomenting a rebellion. At the time, Mutabazi is alleged to have said he had contacts with the FDLR, a Hutu rebel group in neighboring Democratic Republic of Congo formed from the remnants of militants accused of carrying out genocide against Rwandan Tutsis in 1994.  He also reportedly confessed that he had ties to the Rwandan National Congress (RNC), an opposition group that includes General Nyamwasa.

Yet his wife and supporters contend that Mutabazi has been beaten and kept in inhumane conditions, spending 24 hours a day in a dark cell, his hands and feet bound, sleeping on the cement and suffering from blood in his urine after being subjected to genitalia torture.

A rights activist interviewed by this journalist said Mutabazi had been "beaten so bad that he sent a message to his family through an intermediary that he might not even recover from his injuries. During those beatings, he was told to plead guilty."

And so it was a surprise to many observers last week when Mutabazi denied all charges against him, openly defying the Rwandan government and setting himself up for more torture and possible death.


About the Author

Judi Rever

Judi Rever is a Montreal-based freelance journalist, formerly with Agence France-Presse and Radio France Internationale. She has reported from the Democratic Republic of Congo, Rwanda, Sierra Leone, Ivory Coast and the Middle East. She specializes in human rights issues, and is currently doing research for a book that would explore war crimes committed by the Rwandan Patriotic Front and its army. 

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Mutabazi’s Last Stand: An Inside Look at Rwandan-Style Justice - Foreign Policy Journal | Foreign Policy Journal


Mutabazi's Last Stand: An Inside Look at Rwandan-Style Justice

by Judi Rever

February 5, 2014

President of Rwanda Paul Kagame at the World Economic Forum on Africa in Cape Town, South Africa, on June 11, 2009 (Eric Miller/World Economic Forum

President of Rwanda Paul Kagame at the World Economic Forum on Africa in Cape Town, South Africa, on June 11, 2009 (Eric Miller/World Economic Forum

Joel Mutabazi, a former presidential bodyguard facing terrorism charges in Rwanda, is a shadow of his former self.

"He's like a skeleton," said his emotionally frayed wife Gloria Kayitesi in an interview, commenting on pictures of him splashed on the Internet.

Shackled and abased, Mutabazi appeared in military court last week in full view of journalists. In photos, his complexion was sallow and the whites of his eyes were inflamed with tiny veins. Physically diminished and with little prospect for freedom, he had become a man with nothing to lose.

And yet the former child soldier and repository of secrets that worked for President Paul Kagame for two decades emerged defiant. In a statement that shocked the court, Mutabazi refused to be tried, said his life was in danger and he was not guilty of terrorism and other alleged crimes.

Mutabazi—viewed as the 'highest caliber target' among Rwandan Tutsi refugees in Uganda capable of incriminating Kagame and his senior officials—was seized three months ago in Kampala where he had been living in a UN safe house under police surveillance. In breach of international law, Rwanda engineered his forced return and accused him of forming an armed group and conspiring to kill the president.

"If anyone knows the circumstances under which I was deported from Uganda and how the law was ignored in this process, I do not believe that there are other laws in this country that will guarantee my innocence," Mutabazi said.

"I therefore do not wish to say anything throughout this trial, but I came here to tell my family that whatever happens to me in future, this is my stand on the charges: I am not guilty of all of them and I will not defend myself against them."

Mutabazi knows his rights and how they've been acutely violated. In 2010, he was suspected of having close ties with Kayumba Nyamwasa—now one of Kagame's enemies that used to Rwanda's defense chief—and subjected to electric shocks, beatings, waterboarding, and sensory deprivation at Camp Kami, a notorious detention center in Rwanda.

He narrowly escaped an assassination attempt in July 2012, after fleeing to Uganda and given refugee status, when armed gunman stormed his residence in Kampala. In August 2013, Rwandan agents and rogue Ugandan police abducted him from a UN safe house yet were quickly forced to return him when senior Ugandan police and the prime minister's office intervened. The botched operation highlighted the mercurial divisions among Ugandan government and police officials who are regularly bribed and infiltrated by Rwanda.

The latest plot point in Mutabazi's dramatic life occurred on October 25 when Joel Aguma, Uganda's deputy director of crime intelligence who'd just returned from a stint at Rwanda's National Police College, set up a police sting for the refugee that saw his brutal handover to Rwandan authorities.

Officials tasked with protecting refugees called the transfer "an act of criminality" for two reasons: no Interpol arrest warrant had been approved for Mutabazi and his return was in blatant violation of the Refugee Convention, which stipulates that no refugee should be returned a country where he is likely to face persecution or torture.

Last week, after Mutabazi appeared in a Kigali courtroom, a US State Department official offered this statement:

"The United States and other concerned countries are working together to maintain a regular presence at the trial."

"We have expressed to the Ugandan government our concern that Mutabazi was handed over to Rwandan law enforcement, despite his refugee status, and reiterated our expectation that Uganda will adhere to its obligations to protect refugees on its territory in the future."

In December, the United States called on Rwanda to ensure that Mutabazi gets a fair trial—and is protected and monitored in detention.

"The United States has urged the government of Rwanda to ensure that Mr. Joel Mutabazi's rights are protected while he is in detention, and that he be provided due process, other fair trial protections, and continued access to adequate legal counsel," said Charles Hawley, public affairs officer for the US embassy in Kigali.

"We have also urged the Rwandan government to continue to grant independent monitoring organizations access to Mr. Mutabazi during his detention," Hawley added.

Despite attempts by Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch and the International Committee of the Red Cross to get access to Mutabazi in detention, he remains off limits—another breach of humanitarian norms. His lawyer in pretrial proceedings, Antoinette Mukamusoni, meanwhile announced she would no longer represent him and has refused all comment.

His lawyer's frustrations stem in part from the fact that Mutabazi changed his plea in December, admitting under apparent duress he was guilty of fomenting a rebellion. At the time, Mutabazi is alleged to have said he had contacts with the FDLR, a Hutu rebel group in neighboring Democratic Republic of Congo formed from the remnants of militants accused of carrying out genocide against Rwandan Tutsis in 1994.  He also reportedly confessed that he had ties to the Rwandan National Congress (RNC), an opposition group that includes General Nyamwasa.

Yet his wife and supporters contend that Mutabazi has been beaten and kept in inhumane conditions, spending 24 hours a day in a dark cell, his hands and feet bound, sleeping on the cement and suffering from blood in his urine after being subjected to genitalia torture.

A rights activist interviewed by this journalist said Mutabazi had been "beaten so bad that he sent a message to his family through an intermediary that he might not even recover from his injuries. During those beatings, he was told to plead guilty."

And so it was a surprise to many observers last week when Mutabazi denied all charges against him, openly defying the Rwandan government and setting himself up for more torture and possible death.


About the Author

Judi Rever

Judi Rever is a Montreal-based freelance journalist, formerly with Agence France-Presse and Radio France Internationale. She has reported from the Democratic Republic of Congo, Rwanda, Sierra Leone, Ivory Coast and the Middle East. She specializes in human rights issues, and is currently doing research for a book that would explore war crimes committed by the Rwandan Patriotic Front and its army. 

-“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.”

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