Cape Times

‘War crimes’ arrest outrage

RWANDAN INTELLIGEN­CE CHIEF HELD

- Clement Uwiringiyi­mana

KIGALI: Rwanda said it was an “outrage” for Britain to arrest its intelligen­ce chief at the request of Spain, which wants him on war crimes charges, and suggested Western states were swayed by those behind the 1994 genocide.

Karenzi Karake, 54, director-general of Rwanda’s National Intelligen­ce and Security Services, was arrested at London’s Heathrow Airport. He was remanded to appear in court tomorrow.

“Western solidarity in demeaning Africans is unacceptab­le!! It is an outrage to arrest Rwandan official based on pro-genocidair­es lunacy!” Foreign Minister Louise Mushikiwab­o wrote on her Twitter account.

The case will likely further strain ties between Rwanda and aid donor Britain after Kigali suspended a local BBC radio service last year after a documentar­y by the British broadcaste­r questioned official accounts of the genocide.

Rwanda has long accused the West and others of doing too little to halt the genocide, and then failing to do more to crush groups such as the FDLR “genocidair­es”, a Hutu militia implicated in Rwanda’s genocide.

About 800 000 people were butchered in three months of ethnic killings in 1994. The massacre was halted by the Rwandan Patriotic Front, the then rebel force led by Paul Kagame, who is now president. Western states and the UN have said they did not do enough to stop the bloodshed and have since poured in aid.

Britain’s embassy in Kigali said the arrest “was a legal obligation, following the issue of a valid European arrest warrant”. The Rwandan foreign minister accused Spanish NGOs, which she said were behind the arrest warrant, of backing the FDLR.

“The UN in 2009 amply documented support of Spanish NGOs behind the prepostero­us ‘valid European arrest warrant’ to genocidal militia FDLR!” she wrote in another Twitter note.

Justice Minister Johnston Busingye said Rwanda was working with the British government on the case.

“We will contest in the courts. We have sought explanatio­n from the UK on this matter,” he said.

Rwanda’s ambassador in London, William Nkurunziza, told the BBC the charges against Karake were “politicall­y motivated”.

In 2008, a Spanish High Court judge, Fernando Andreu, accused 40 Rwandan military and political leaders, including Karake, of engaging in reprisal killings after the genocide.

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