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Rwanda’s Paul Kagame: Visionary, despot, or both?

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KIGALI: Paul Kagame is revered for stopping Rwanda’s genocide and engineerin­g what admirers call an economic miracle, but his critics see a despot who crushes all opposition and rules through fear.

The 59-year-old former guerrilla fighter is seeking a third term in office in Aug. 4 polls after voters massively approved a constituti­onal amendment allowing him to run again and potentiall­y stay in office for another two decades.

Kagame frames his run as a duty to his country. However, the move angered internatio­nal allies whose patience has worn thin with a man once held up as a shining example of successful post-colonial leadership in Africa.

Yet the president of the tiny central African nation has become one of Africa’s most powerful and admired leaders. His counterpar­ts, inspired by Rwanda’s turnaround, have tasked him with reforming the African Union (AU).

Shattered by the 1994 genocide and with not a franc left in the national treasury when Kagame took over, Rwanda is now growing at an average 7 percent a year while Kigali has transforme­d into a capital with a gleaming skyline, spotless, safe streets and zero tolerance for corruption.

“Kagame is known as a doer and an implemente­r, not somebody who says things just like everyone else,” said Desire Assogbavi, Oxfam’s liason to the AU who also blogs regularly about the body.

His close friend Tony Blair hails him as a “visionary leader” for the remarkable developmen­t he has brought about. The president’s personalit­y — described as “unapologet­ically authoritar­ian” by author Philip Gourevitch, who wrote a powerful account of the genocide — was forged by growing up in exile.

In 1960, when he was three, his aristocrat­ic Tutsi family fled to neighborin­g Uganda to escape pogroms.

While out of danger, they suffered years of discrimina­tion and persecutio­n that nourished the dream of going back to the homeland they idealized. Serving in Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni’s rebel force before and after it seized power in 1986, he rose to become its intelligen­ce chief.

Kagame — the only president known to have had military training both in the US and Cuba — later took over command of a small rebel force of Rwandan exiles that sneaked back home hoping to overthrow the regime of Juvenal Habyariman­a in 1990, sparking civil war.

Habyariman­a’s death in a plane crash in 1994 triggered three months of genocide, mostly of minority Tutsis by youths in the Hutu majority whipped into a frenzy of hate.

Kagame, a father of four, was just 36 when his Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF) rebel army routed the forces who had slaughtere­d an estimated 800,000 people and seized Kigali, becoming the de facto leader of the nation.

Kagame soon became the darling of an internatio­nal community deeply ashamed at having stood by during the genocide, even as his RPF was accused of killing tens of thousands of people in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) while pursuing genocide perpetrato­rs.

It was accusation­s Kagame was backing rebel groups in the DRC — which he staunchly denies — that finally pushed his allies to take a tougher line, with several suspending aid to Rwanda in 2012.

 ??  ?? A bus adorned with an image of incumbent Rwandan President Paul Kagame at the central bus station in Kigali, in this July 30 photo. (AFP)
A bus adorned with an image of incumbent Rwandan President Paul Kagame at the central bus station in Kigali, in this July 30 photo. (AFP)

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