Jump to navigation

Rwanda

Western pressure grows against Kagame over rights abuses

UK and US critique of Kigali's political record raises questions about its hosting of the Commonwealth summit

The death in custody of revered Rwandan musician Kizito Mihigo and the coming trial of Paul Rusesabagina, the hero of the movie Hotel Rwanda, are focusing renewed attention on President Paul Kagame's governance record. A book to be published next month about the murder of Patrick Karegeya, former head of military intelligence turned opposition activist, is likely to add to international concern*.

Rights activists say this should raise doubts about the choice of Rwanda to host the twice-delayed Commonwealth Heads of Government summit in June. 

Kigali has established a favoured reputation for convenience and efficiency as a conference venue but there are public health concerns about the viability of organising such an event attended by thousands of delegates with the second wave of the coronavirus pandemic coursing through Africa and Europe.

Kagame's regime was sharply criticised in the country's Universal Periodic Review (UPR) at the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva last month, receiving 284 recommendations from 99 countries. It accepted 160 recommendations, but has consistently rejected demands that it should sign up to the Convention against Enforced Disappearances and to allow the UN Sub-committee on Prevention of Torture and other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment to resume its visits.

Meanwhile, the UK government raised criticisms of the 'continued restrictions to civil and political rights and media freedom' in Rwanda.

British and US officials joined Human Rights Watch in calling for an independent probe into the death in police custody last year of Kizito Mihigo, the celebrated activist and singer (AC Vol 55 No 8, Militant remembrance). The request has been ignored by Rwanda's justice ministry.

And the European Parliament demanded the 'immediate release' of Paul Rusesabagina, describing his arrest as an 'enforced disappearance' in a resolution adopted last week. Although the resolution is non-binding, it is the strongest attack on Kagame's government by an EU institution. 

Rusesabagina is likely to face trial this week on charges of terrorism and financing an armed rebel group, having been detained since August (AC Vol 61 No 18, Exile flies into a trap). 

For now, there is no sign of concessions from Kagame's government, which has dismissed the US and UK claims as having 'no basis in reality'. However, his ministers are said to have been taken aback by the ferocity of the criticism from two of its major donors.



Related Articles

Militant remembrance

Formally entitled 'Kwibuka 20' (we remember), with the motto 'Remember, Unite, Renew', the concerns of the present were never far away from the commemoration of the past. That...


Exile flies into a trap

The celebrated hotel manager turned regime opponent was flown to arrest in Kigali by the President's favourite charter jet company

Paul Rusesabagina, the real-life character behind the 2004 Hollywood movie Hotel Rwanda, ended up on show in Kigali in handcuffs on 4 September raising myriad questions of international...


Who gets the money?

The governing Rwandan Patriotic Front has been quarrelling about money as well as politics. In recent years the RPF has been privatising its assets, notably Tri-Star Holdings, a...


La grande rupture

A French judge warms up some old allegations and creates a diplomatic storm

The break in diplomatic relations between Paris and Kigali will not heal quickly. It came after France's Judge Jean-Louis Bruguière asked a higher court to issue international arrest...


Arusha verdicts

After four years of existence, the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda has reached its first two verdicts. On 2 September in Arusha it found Jean-Paul Akayezu, a former...