The Citizen (Gauteng)

Rwanda blossoms in blood

- Brian Sokutu

Soldiers are known for discipline and carrying out military operations with precision, with instructio­ns from commanders seldom challenged. Some parts of Africa are ruled by former army generals who have risen to the highest ranks of political power – becoming presidents.

Rwandan strongman President Paul Kagame is one of them.

His tough upbringing tells you why Kagame has become one of Africa’s toughest presidents.

Born in southern Rwanda, his family fled to Uganda when he was two years old, following the Rwandan revolution, which ended centuries of Tutsi political dominance.

Trained by another African authoritar­ian, Ugandan president Yoweri Museveni in the ’80s, Kagame fought in Museveni’s rebel army – becoming a senior Ugandan army officer.

He contribute­d to Museveni’s military victories that propelled him to the presidency.

Kagame also commanded the Rwandan Patriotic Front, a Uganda-based rebel force, which invaded Rwanda in 1990 and was one of the parties in the conflict during the Rwandan civil war and the Rwandan genocide.

He was considered Rwanda’s de facto leader when he served as vice-president and minister of defence under president Pasteur Bizimungu from 1994 to 2000, later becoming that country’s president.

Credited for having built one of Africa’s fastest-growing economies, Kagame’s policies have reduced the number of people living under extreme poverty by 22%, bridged the gender gap by giving women opportunit­ies in government and waging a war against corruption, with Kigali regarded as the continent’s cleanest city.

Growth averaged 7.5% over the decade to 2018, while per capita growth domestic product grew at 5% annually.

While Rwanda has become a model economy, with foreign investment pouring in, it is Kagame’s authoritar­ian leadership style which has become a matter of great concern.

The recent killing in Cape Town of Rwandan National Congress spokespers­on Seif Bamporiki, who was shot dead at Nyanga township, has raised eyebrows.

Counterter­rorism expert Jasmine Opperman has described the Rwandan government as “becoming more obsessive, more conspirato­rial and adopting a hard-line stance on anyone that is becoming critical of the president”.

According to Amnesty Internatio­nal’s director for East and Southern Africa Deprose Muchena, Rwanda has, over years, seen the harassment, intimidati­on, arrests, disappeara­nces and killings of critics of the government.

The deafening silence of the African Union and the United Nations on human rights abuses in Rwanda and cross-border raids that have led to the arrests and deaths of political opponents should certainly be a cause for concern.

Only freedom of speech, associatio­n, media, political activity and regular elections, resemble a true democracy.

Constituti­onal democracy does not provide for any grey area.

It is time that Kagame stopped nervously looking over his shoulder by allowing for an atmosphere of differing views – something that augurs well for democratic stability.

While Kagame’s strong leadership, turning around Rwanda’s economy, is to be applauded, authoritar­ianism does not bode well for the future stability for the East African nation.

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