Dayton Daily News

Authoritie­s: Man hid role in genocide 30 years

- By Robert Wang and Amanda Garrett Canton Repository

The U.S. Department of Justice on Thursday arrested a Stark County man, accusing him of rape and genocide in Rwanda in 1994, an event that left about 800,000 dead.

Eric Tabaro Nshimiye, also known as Eric Tabaro Nshimiyima­na, faces various federal charges that include obstructio­n of justice and offering false testimony in the 2019 Boston trial of his former classmate and now-convicted Rwandan genocide perpetrato­r Jean Leonard Teganya.

Nshimiye, 52, of Lake Twp., was living a double life, insisting he was a victim during the genocide, according to federal prosecutor­s. They now say he was among the notorious perpetrato­rs of crimes during the Rwanda genocide.

“For nearly 30 years, Mr. Nshimiye allegedly hid the truth about crimes he committed during the Rwandan genocide in order to seek refuge in the United States, and reap the benefits of U.S. citizenshi­p,” acting U.S. Attorney Joshua S. Levy in Boston said in a statement. “The United States will not be a safe haven for suspected human rights violators and war criminals.”

At Nshimiye’s home on Billingham Avenue NW in

Lake Township, which he and his wife bought in 2003, a man and woman answered the door Thursday evening and declined to answer questions. A reporter left contact informatio­n with them and sought to confirm they were family members of Nshimiye.

“Just leave the informatio­n and don’t ask any more questions, please,” the man said.

Neighbors react

Neighbors who live on his street expressed shock Thursday evening about the federal allegation­s of genocide, brutal killings and rape 30 years ago.

They described a man who invited his neighbors to graduation parties for his sons. Their kids attended the North Canton City Schools with the Nshimye’s two sons and two daughters.

The family served the neighbors African food. The neighborho­od children played soccer in the Nshimiye’s yard. Nshimiye was known to mow the grass of his elderly next-door neighbors and help one of them in his wheelchair get onto the driveway from his porch.

“That is not the person I know,” said a woman who met Nshimiye when she and her family moved into the neighborho­od 12 years ago. “The person we know is a family man. He’s not a violent person. Our children (who are friends of his children) have spent the night at his house. That’s not the person I know.”

“He’d be the last person I would expect to be arrested for something.”

The woman, who declined to give her name, hopes the case is one of mistaken identity.

“I pray that’s what happened,” she said.

Tom Rice, 75, who lives next door to the Nshimiyes said Nshimiye mowed his grass and helped Rice in his wheelchair.

“He bent over backwards to help,” he said. “I wish all neighbors were like him . ... I trust him before I trust a lot of other people on the street.”

Another neighbor, who’s daughter was friends with Nshimiye’s daughters, said she went out for a run around 6 a.m. Thursday. She saw two dark unmarked SUVs parked across the street from Nishimiye’s home. A Uniontown Police car was parked just outside the allotment.

“They’re a good family,” said the woman, who also declined to give her name. “So I was surprised to see the cops there . ... I wouldn’t think they were involved in anything.”

What is Nshimiye accused of?

According to court documents, Nshimiye’s story unfolded like this:

He was a medical student at the University of Rwanda in Butare, Rwanda, in the early 1990s.

At that time, the country had significan­t ethnic division: About 85% of its population were Hutus, and about 14% were Tutsis.

Nshimiye and his classmate Teganya were “wellknown student members” of the ruling Hutu-dominated party that incited the genocide, the MRND political party, and the Interahamw­e, the notoriousl­y violent youth wing of that movement, court records said.

In the spring of 1994, after the Hutu president’s plane was shot down over Kigali, the country spiraled into one of the worst ethnic genocides in modern history. Members of the Hutu majority murdered about 800,000 Tutsis, including women and children during what court records described as “a 100day frenzy.”

“Tutsi students were killed at the University during the genocide in Butare,” according to an affidavit filed in the case. “Because many Tutsis sought refuge on the Hospital grounds, and also sought care for their injuries there, the Hospital itself became the site of many atrocities.

“Tutsi patients were removed from the Hospital and then beaten or hacked to death. Hospital nurses and other staff who were

Tutsi were also killed. Tutsi women were often raped before they were killed.”

Court documents accuse Nshimiye of being part of the genocide, killing Tutsi men, women and children by striking them on the head with a nail-studded club and then hacking them to death with a machete.

Nshimiye’s is specifical­ly accused of killing a 14-yearold boy and a man who sewed doctors’ coats at the university hospital. Witnesses in Rwanda recently identified the locations of the killings and drew pictures of Nshimiye’s weapons, court documents said.

“Nshimiye both participat­ed in and aided and abetted the rape of numerous Tutsi women during the genocide,” court documents said.

Nshimiye is accused in court documents of being “among the most vicious University students who were members of the Interahamw­e during the genocide.”

Nshimiye fled Rwanda and came to America

Nshimiye fled Rwanda in the summer of 1994, after an attacking Tutsi rebel group. Nshimiye made his way to Kenya where, in 1995, he is accused of lying to U.S. immigratio­n officials to gain admission to the United

States as a refugee, court documents said.

From there, Nshimiye landed in Ohio, where he has lived since 1995. According to his LinkedIn page, Nshimiye worked as an engineer at Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. in Akron for 23 years. The company couldn’t immediatel­y be reached for comment.

During this time, he provided false informatio­n about his involvemen­t in the Rwandan genocide to obtain lawful permanent residence and ultimately U.S. citizenshi­p, court documents said.

In 2017, U.S. federal officials charged Nshimiye’s former classmate Teganya with fraudulent­ly seeking asylum in the United States by concealing his membership in the MRND and his involvemen­t in the genocide.

During Teganya’s trial, Nshimiye testified that neither he nor Teganya participat­ed in the genocide. Teganya was later convicted of two counts of immigratio­n fraud and three counts of perjury in April 2019.

Federal officials later turned their focus to Nshimiye, who is accused of lying to federal agents about what he did before arriving in the U.S.

If convicted, Nshimiye could face up to 20 years in prison and $750,000 in fines. He will be tried in Boston, the DO J said in its release.

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