The Mail on Sunday

Truss urged to block diplomat over kidnap of Hotel Rwanda hero

- By Ian Birrell ANNA MIKHAILOVA IS AWAY

FOREIGN Secretary Liz Truss is being urged to block the appointmen­t of Rwanda’s top diplomat in London over his central role in the kidnap and detention of the country’s most famous human rights activist.

Senior MPs from both main parties are calling on Ms Truss to impose urgent sanctions on Johnston Busingye, Rwanda’s former justice secretary, to prevent his instalment as the central African regime’s next high commission­er.

Mr Busingye was demoted by Rwandan President Paul Kagame after admitting that their government chartered a flight that led to the seizure of Paul Rusesabagi­na, the real-life hero of the film Hotel Rwanda who saved more than 1,200 lives in the 1994 genocide.

Mr Rusesabagi­na – a critic of the dictatorsh­ip – was duped into flying to Rwanda after boarding a private jet in

Dubai he thought was flying to a neighbouri­ng country. The 67-year-old was jailed for ‘terrorism’ in September.

Last week, Mr Busingye was named in Parliament by former Tory leader Sir Iain Duncan Smith alongside Chinese Communist bosses involved in crimes against humanity, Iranian torturers and Sudanese militia leaders in a debate on sanctions.

Mr Duncan Smith queried why Mr Kagame was proposing to send ‘that abusive individual’ to represent his nation. ‘Do they think the UK is a soft touch?’ he asked.

‘This man should be sanctioned, not sent as their bloody ambassador,’ he told The Mail on Sunday. ‘It is a disgrace that the Government has not yet made it clear we will reject his credential­s. We must make a very strong statement.’

Labour’s Chris Bryant said it was ‘inconceiva­ble’ that Ministers might accept the appointmen­t. ‘Instead of sending a coach to take him to Buckingham Palace to meet the Queen, they should bar him from entering the country.’

The MPs are co-chairmen of the All-Party Group on Magnitsky Sanctions, which aims to target those responsibl­e for corruption or human rights violations.

Bill Browder, the financier who pushed for such laws around the world after his lawyer Sergei Magnitsky was murdered in Russia, said Rusesabagi­na was a hero, adding: ‘His only real crime was to be critical of Kagame.’

Mr Rusesabagi­na was manager of Hotel des Mille Collines in Kigali when he saved the lives of 1,268 people who sought sanctuary there amid the horrors of the genocide.

Fearing for his safety, he later fled to the US where he received the Presidenti­al Medal of Freedom. A fierce critic of Mr Kagame, he co-founded the Rwandan Movement for Democratic Change, a coalition of opposition groups.

The Rwandan regime, which has a history of smearing its enemies, accused him of being ‘the founder, leader, sponsor and member of violent, armed, extremist terror outfits’. He denied all charges.

Human rights groups condemned his unlawful seizure and criticised the trial as a charade. Rusesabagi­na was sentenced in September to 25 years in prison.

Mr Busingye’s admission of his government’s role came after a video was inadverten­tly sent to al Jazeera. It showed him being coached for an interview with the broadcaste­r by Chelgate, a London specialist in ‘reputation management’. In the footage, he admitted prison authoritie­s intercepte­d confidenti­al correspond­ence between Mr Rusesabagi­na and his lawyers, which he denied in the interview.

In a second interview, he confirmed the regime paid for the plane that took Mr Rusesabagi­na to Kigali and for the individual who tricked him on to the plane.

‘This man oversaw the kidnapping and torture of my father,’ said his daughter Carine Kanimba. ‘He should be disqualifi­ed from a role that requires the holder to be a person of integrity.’

The Foreign Office, which can veto ambassador­s and high commission­ers, declined to comment, and the Rwandan government did not respond to a request for comment last night.

‘This man oversaw the torture of my father’

 ?? ?? FILM PREMIERE: Paul Rusesabagi­na meets actress Angelina Jolie in LA
FILM PREMIERE: Paul Rusesabagi­na meets actress Angelina Jolie in LA

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