Saskatoon StarPhoenix

TRUDEAU SHOULD `SPEAK UP'

Will the prime minister help a political prisoner or continue his bromance with a dictator?

- TERRY GLAVIN

If Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is serious about what he calls Canada's “strong friendship” with Rwanda, and if he's as genuinely devoted to the multilater­al rules-based internatio­nal order as he claims to be, now would be a good time to act like it. In the bizarre case of Paul Rusesabagi­na, the prominent Rwandan opposition figure who vanished in Dubai on Aug. 28 and showed up a few hours later in a jail cell in Kigali, Rwanda's capital, Trudeau may even be uniquely positioned to step up.

That's the view of Philippe Larochelle, a Montreal human rights lawyer who's on the legal team that Rusesabagi­na's family has retained on his behalf. Human Rights Watch and Amnesty Internatio­nal have described Rusesabagi­na's case as both a forced disappeara­nce and an extraordin­ary rendition, in violation of internatio­nal law. Larochelle told the National Post that he believes Trudeau should make an effort to intercede on Rusesabagi­na's behalf against Rwandan strongman Paul Kagame.

“Trudeau's very close to the guy. He's been cosying up to Kagame for a while. They are friends,” Larochelle said. “The weight of Canada on the internatio­nal scene, really, it's not much, but Trudeau could at least speak up. I think it's important to try to maintain some normal legal world order and not allow internatio­nal abductions like this.”

The 66-year-old Rusesabagi­na was made famous for sheltering more than 1,000 people in the Hotel des Millies Collines in Kigali during the 1994 Rwandan genocide, when UN peacekeepe­rs were under orders to stand back as 800,000 Rwandans, mostly Tutsis, were slaughtere­d in a genocide incited by the Hutu-dominated Rwandan government. Rusesabagi­na's heroism was the subject of the celebrated 2004 Hollywood film Hotel Rwanda.

In recent years, Rusesabagi­na, a Belgian citizen since 1996 and a legal resident of the United States, has emerged as perhaps the most influentia­l figure in the Mouvement Rwandais pour le Changement Démocratiq­ue, an opposition coalition that operates mostly in exile. One of the coalition's constituen­ts, the National Liberation Front, has engaged in an armed struggle that has included violence against civilians, actions Rusesabagi­na has opposed.

The Rwandan government made no attempt to legally seek Rusesabagi­na's return to face charges, and how he ended up in Kigali remains a mystery. He caught a flight from Chicago to Dubai on Aug. 26, with a Sept. 2 return ticket. But five hours after he arrived in Dubai, he was bound for Kigali aboard a Bombardier Challenger jet owned by a small private airline company that Kagame and his senior officials routinely use. He had contacted his family two hours earlier to let them know he'd arrived safely in Dubai, and that was the last they heard from him.

Formerly a senior Ugandan army officer, Kagame has kept an iron grip on Rwanda

for the past 20 years by manipulati­ng elections, locking up candidates running against him in presidenti­al elections and harassing, kidnapping and assassinat­ing dissidents, defectors and opposition leaders. It was the UN'S scandalous uselessnes­s in the 1994 genocide that allowed his Rwandan Patriotic Front to invade from neighbouri­ng Uganda and take over the country. But Kagame cuts a dashing world figure, trading on his ill-deserved reputation as the man who ended the genocide.

And he ticks all of Trudeau's boxes. Kagame makes all the right noises about climate change, he's a strong proponent of internatio­nal trade and he's a devoted Trudeau-style “feminist.” Kagame's regime requires 30 per cent of the legislatur­e to be occupied by women, and his government has gone further: 60 per cent of Rwanda's parliament is made up of women, but it's perhaps not quite the achievemen­t it seems. Owing to the genocide, 70 per cent of Rwanda's 12 million people are women. And women don't fare especially well if they challenge Kagame politicall­y.

After Victoire Ingabire declared her candidacy in 2010, she was charged with a series of trumped up terrorism offences, barred from running for office and eventually sentenced to a 15-year jail term that Kagame suspended only after Ingabire spent eight years in a prison cell. Kagame reportedly won the 2010 election with 93 per cent of the vote.

During the 2017 presidenti­al election, popular presidenti­al candidate Diane Rwigara, her mother and several family members were abruptly arrested on charges of terrorism, incitement to insurrecti­on, forgery and tax evasion. The regime seized the Rwigaras' family business and sold its assets, which were worth roughly $2 million.

While Rwigara was languishin­g in prison, Trudeau welcomed Kagame to

Canada and thanked him for “a very good discussion on fighting plastic pollution and a variety of issues affecting our two countries.” Although the Rwigaras were eventually acquitted and released, Kagame “won” the 2017 election with a reported 99 per cent of the vote. Canada's High Commission in Kigali had this to say: “Canada congratula­tes Paul Kagame on his inaugurati­on today as president of Rwanda.”

Trudeau has since had at least a half-dozen friendly meetings with Kagame, both in person and virtually, following COVID-19. In perhaps the most sordid event in what former Kagame confidante David Himbara has described as the strange “romance” between Trudeau and Kagame, Rwanda's defence minister, Gen. James Kabarebe, was hosted in Ottawa in 2017 by Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan. Kabarebe has been identified in a UN Security Council investigat­ion as the de facto leader of a Zairean terror group that's responsibl­e for mass atrocities, mass rapes and “systematic, methodical and premeditat­ed” attacks on Hutu refugees in the jungles of the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Just one small thing Trudeau could do is offer Canada's backing in the appeal that several human rights organizati­ons and Rusesabagi­na's legal team has put before the UN'S special rapporteur on torture at the Office of the High Commission­er for Human Rights in Geneva.

The hope is that the commission­er's office will launch an investigat­ion into Rusesabagi­na's kidnapping and ensure his right to independen­t counsel.

“Without that,” Larochelle said, “his chances of a fair trial are nil.”

National Post

I think it's important to try to maintain some normal legal world order and not allow internatio­nal abductions.

PHILIPPE LAROCHELLE, human rights lawyer

 ?? AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? “Hotel Rwanda” hero Paul Rusesabagi­na, centre, speaks with his lawyers at court in Kigali, Rwanda, on Sept. 17, weeks after his arrest under mysterious circumstan­ces. There's a call for Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to intercede in the case.
AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES “Hotel Rwanda” hero Paul Rusesabagi­na, centre, speaks with his lawyers at court in Kigali, Rwanda, on Sept. 17, weeks after his arrest under mysterious circumstan­ces. There's a call for Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to intercede in the case.
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