Los Angeles Times

Hero of ‘Hotel Rwanda’ to stand trial

President says he leads a terrorist group and denies family’s claim that he was abducted.

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KIGALI, Rwanda — Rwanda’s president says the man portrayed as a hero in the film “Hotel Rwanda” will stand trial on suspicion of supporting rebel violence.

President Paul Kagame, appearing on national television Sunday, did not explain how Paul Rusesabagi­na was brought to Rwanda, where he has been held in custody for more than a week.

Rusesabagi­na is credited with saving 1,200 lives during Rwanda’s 1994 genocide by letting people shelter in the hotel he was managing during the mass killings. Now he is accused of supporting rebel violence in Rwanda.

His family and supporters complain that they have not been able to speak to him and that he has not had access to a lawyer.

“Rusesabagi­na heads a group of terrorists that have killed Rwandans. He will have to pay for these crimes,” Kagame said on a broadcast in which he was asked questions by some local and foreign journalist­s and viewers. “Rusesabagi­na has the blood of Rwandans on his hands.”

He said Rusesabagi­na’s trial would be held openly and conducted fairly.

“We are obligated to do this,” Kagame said. “We want to do things in a right way.”

Kagame did not explain how Rusesabagi­na, who had lived outside Rwanda since 1996 and is a citizen of Belgium and has a U.S. permanent residence permit, turned up in Rwanda last week but suggested that he came of his own accord.

“What if someone told you that he brought himself — even if he may not have intended it? You will be surprised how he got here. He was not kidnapped or hoodwinked. His coming to Rwanda has more to do with himself than anybody else,” the president said.

Kagame suggested that Rusesabagi­na was told a story that fit into his expectatio­ns and ended up in Rwanda.

“There was no kidnap in the process of bringing Rusesabagi­na here. It was actually f lawless!” he said. “When the time comes he will tell the story himself, but he led himself here.”

Kagame said others who were Rusesabagi­na’s accomplice­s in alleged violent activities had already been arrested and were facing trial in Kigali, Rwanda’s capital.

Rusesabagi­na’s family and supporters, however, said Rwandan authoritie­s had denied him access to a lawyer nearly a week after the outspoken government critic was paraded in handcuffs and accused of terrorism.

The Hotel Rwanda Rusesabagi­na Foundation said Rusesabagi­na had had no consular visits, and it rejected the Rwandan government’s claim that it had talked to his sons about a potential visit as “not true.”

“Paul’s wife has called the jail and has not been allowed to talk to him,” the foundation said on Saturday.

The family has said they believe he was kidnapped during a visit to Dubai and that he would never knowingly have boarded a plane for Rwanda’s capital, Kigali.

Rusesabagi­na was awarded the U.S. Presidenti­al Medal of Freedom in 2005 for helping to save lives during Rwanda’s genocide in which some 800,000 Tutsis and moderate Hutus were killed.

Rwandan authoritie­s have not publicly shared any internatio­nal arrest warrant. They have referred to “internatio­nal cooperatio­n” but have given no details.

Rwandan authoritie­s granted what they called an exclusive interview with Rusesabagi­na to a Kenyan newspaper, the East African, in which he said he had been treated with kindness while in custody in Rwanda but did not discuss the accusation­s against him or how he was apprehende­d.

It is not clear when Rusesabagi­na will appear in court. Rwandan law says a suspect can be in provisiona­l detention for 15 days, renewable for up to 90 days.

The Rwandan government has said it issued an arrest warrant for Rusesabagi­na to answer charges of serious crimes, including terrorism, arson, kidnap, and murder perpetrate­d against unarmed civilians. Police called him the suspected “founder, leader, sponsor and member of violent, armed, extremist terror outfits, including the Rwanda Movement for Democratic Change.”

Rwanda points to a video posted online in 2018 in which Rusesabagi­na says “it is imperative that in 2019 we speed up the liberation struggle of the Rwandan people . ... The time has come for us to use any means possible to bring about change in Rwanda, as all political means have been tried and failed.”

The MRCD has an armed wing, the National Liberation Front, that has been accused of attacks inside Rwanda in 2018 and 2019. Rwanda arrested NLF spokesman Callixte Nsabimana last year.

Rusesabagi­na in the past has denied charges that he financiall­y supports Rwandan rebels, saying he is being targeted for criticizin­g the Kagame government over human rights abuses.

Rusesabagi­na’s detention has prompted concern among human rights activists that this is the latest example of the Rwandan government targeting critics beyond its borders.

The U.S. government has said it expects the Rwandan government to provide “humane treatment, adhere to the rule of law and provide a fair and transparen­t legal process” for Rusesabagi­na.

 ?? Associated Press ?? PAUL RUSESABAGI­NA is accused of supporting rebel violence. Rwanda’s president has not explained how Rusesabagi­na, one of his top critics, was apprehende­d.
Associated Press PAUL RUSESABAGI­NA is accused of supporting rebel violence. Rwanda’s president has not explained how Rusesabagi­na, one of his top critics, was apprehende­d.

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