LAGOS, Nigeria (AP) — The killing
of Rwanda's former spy chief in South Africa has critics revisiting
serious allegations against Western-backed President Paul Kagame that go
back to the Central African nation's 1994 genocide.
Former Col.
Patrick Karegeya, a wartime ally from Kagame's days as a rebel leader,
was found dead last week in a bed in Johannesburg's prestigious
Michelangelo Towers hotel. Police said he was possibly strangled.
Karegeya's
friends and fellow dissidents accused Kagame of ordering the
assassination, pointing to a pattern of alleged killings of his
opponents at home and abroad. Karegeya fled to South Africa in 2007.
Officials
in Kigali, the Rwandan capital, have not responded to requests for
comment. But the Rwandan high commissioner in South Africa, Vincent
Karega, told local broadcaster eNCA that talk of assassination is an
"emotional reaction and opportunistic way of playing politics."
South African police say they are investigating the case but no arrests have been made.
The
killing comes five months after Karegeya claimed to have incriminating
evidence that would prove Kagame, who is lauded by Western leaders for
ending Rwanda's genocide, actually provided the catalyst for the mass
killings.
In a July interview
with Radio France International, Karegeya charged that Kagame ordered
the downing of a jet that killed the Hutu presidents of Rwanda and
neighboring Burundi, the event that triggered the genocide in which some
800,000 Tutsis and some moderate Hutus were killed over three months.
Karegeya
said on RFI that he was willing to hand his evidence to a court in
France that is investigating because the plane's pilots were French.
A long-suppressed U.N.
report published in 2010 noted that Kagame in 1994 refused to have peace
talks as thousands of mainly Tutsi Rwandans were being killed, buying
the time that allowed his forces to reach Kigali and take control.
It
accused Kagame's Rwandan Patriotic Front of then going on to massacre
Hutus in Rwanda, including at Kibeho refugee camp in April 1995 before
the eyes of Australian and Zambian U.N. peacekeepers, an attack
allegedly led by Karegeya.
The
same report, which carried a lengthy denial from Kagame's government,
accused the Rwandan-led forces of "a possible genocide" of Rwandan and
Congolese Hutus in eastern Congo in the mid-1990s.
Rwandan experts
have said the U.N. failure to publish an earlier 1994 report on RPF
massacres gave Kagame a blank check to continue the killings.Defense lawyers at the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda, the court for perpetrators of the genocide based in Tanzania, long have contended that the court has provided "victor's justice" by ignoring massacres by Kagame's forces.
Kagame is
feted by current and former U.S. and British leaders who point to how he
has transformed an impoverished and war-ravaged nation into an
efficient technology hub with some of the highest rates for literacy and
health in Africa. That has come at the cost of a dictatorship that
ruthlessly suppresses opposition and routinely jails, disappears and
kills opponents, according to critics.
Analysts
say the West panders to Kagame because of its great guilt over not
ending the Rwandan genocide. And Kagame, who blames French troops that
allowed perpetrators of the genocide to escape into Congo, played to
British and American interests in diluting French influence in Central
Africa when he changed Rwanda's official language from French to
English. That put Tutsi exiles who grew up in English-speaking Tanzania
and Uganda at a great advantage over French-speaking Hutus. Rwanda's
other official language is Kinyarwanda.
Initial
opposition to Kagame came, predictably, from members of the Hutu tribe,
but in recent years it has come increasingly from former Tutsi allies
like Karegeya and others who fear the brutal suppression of Rwanda's
majority people, the Hutu, might lead to another genocide.
About
85 percent of Rwandans are Hutu who were held in serfdom by Tutsi
royalty in the 18th century. After World War I Rwanda fell to Belgian
colonizers who entrenched divisions by ruling through the Tutsi monarch
and educating only Tutsi males. Hutus who revolted had limbs amputated
by Tutsis, on the order of the Belgians.
When
independence and free elections came in 1961, they were won by Hutus.
The first Tutsi attempt to regain power came a year later, with an
invasion from Burundi. The Hutu government responded with brutal
reprisals against Tutsi civilians.
Under
Kagame, Hutu politicians have been killed or jailed in Rwanda.
Journalists and judges also have been killed and imprisoned with the
most fatal year being 2010, when Kagame was re-elected in polls that
human rights activists called greatly flawed.
Kagame,
who says many of his enemies deny the genocide, recently has taken to
demanding that the children of Hutus apologize for the genocide that
occurred before they were born.
"Kagame
is actually blowing the country in the path of another genocide," said
former Lt. Gen. Kayumba Nyamwasa. He was Kagame's army chief of staff
until 2010 and has survived two assassination attempts that are the
subject of a South African court case and that left him with a bullet
lodged in the base of his spine.
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