San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Student tried to challenge Rwanda official about father

- By Sig Christenso­n STAFF WRITER

Trésor Rusesabagi­na came to a panel discussion featuring Rwanda’s ambassador to the United States hoping to confront her about the kidnapping and imprisonme­nt of his father, the “Hotel Rwanda” hero Paul Rusesabagi­na.

“I’m going right into the lion’s den,” he said, hours before the panel assembled Friday evening as part of the annual DreamWeek series of events pegged to the city’s observance of Martin Luther King Jr. Day.

“I’m going to the event representi­ng my father. There’s a way of telling them that we’re not intimidate­d,” Rusesabagi­na said. “What they’re doing is coming to the scene of the crime. My dad was lured out of San Antonio, his home.”

The showdown didn’t happen. After a three-hour discussion about Rwanda by the ambassador, academics and other specialist­s in the country, the moderator said there was no time for questions. She later took a few, but Rusesabagi­na was still in line when it ended.

The panelists uniformly praised

Rwanda’s president, Paul Kagame, without mentioning his human rights record.

The elder Rusesabagi­na became famous for sheltering hundreds of people at the hotel he managed in 1994, when Rwanda was wracked by an intertriba­l genocide that killed as many as a million victims. He later fell out with Kagame, whose efforts to reunite the country have been accompanie­d by an intoleranc­e for political opposition.

Rusesabagi­na lived in exile in Belgium and San Antonio. He was abducted to Rwanda in 2020 on a chartered flight, fooled into thinking he was on his way to a speaking engagement in Burundi, then tried for his leadership of an opposition group the government said was responsibl­e for terrorist violence.

He was sentenced to 25 years in prison last September on offenses ranging from financing terrorism to recruiting child soldiers.

Kagame has run the Central African country since 2000 and is credited with leading it into a period of stability and prosperity, but his government has been accused

by Human Rights Watch of practicing arbitrary detention, ill treatment, torture and possibly murder of dissenters. The group also has criticized Paul Rusesabagi­na’s abduction, solitary confinemen­t and trial.

Rusesabagi­na’s reputation in Rwanda has waned, though his heroism for saving 1,268 people during the genocide became known around the world after being dramatized in the 2004 Hollywood film “Hotel Rwanda.”

During questions, neither the moderator, documentar­y filmmaker Carol Pineau, nor others on the panel responded to a person in the audience who asked for the humanitari­an release of Rusesabagi­na.

The ambassador, Mathilde Mukantaban­a, dismissed the notion that her embassy played a role in an incident last spring in which two people were accused of snooping on a videoconfe­rence class at St. Mary’s University attended by Trésor Rusesabagi­na, his mother, Tatiana, and a sister, Anaise Kanimba.

“Why would we want to spy in a classroom?” Mukantaban­a asked, drawing laughter from some in the crowd of around 50 people.

At the time, St. Mary’s President Tom Mengler, in a university news release, had said the Rwandan government used a spy based in its Washington embassy “to listen in” on the April 6 videoconfe­rence class involving students, staff and guests.

Trésor Rusesabagi­na, 29, said he didn’t oppose Friday’s panel discussion because it gave critics a chance to point out the government’s problems.

It was titled “Rwanda Then & Now: Milestones in Rebirth & Growth” and was organized by Rwandan Community Abroad of San Antonio at the Tobin Center for the Performing Arts.

Bill Israel, a retired St. Mary’s associate professor of communicat­ion studies, lambasted the forum, calling it “bizarre” that DreamWeek organizers would host it when Rusesabagi­na was one of their keynote speakers months before he was abducted.

“Two years after you invite him

as the featured speaker, how are you going to invite people who are after him and trying to kill him?” Israel asked.

The DreamWeek website states that “anyone can host an event as

long as the invitation is public and participan­ts are allowed to engage in an open forum and civil environmen­t.”

One person who appeared via video, Margee Ensign, president of American University of Nigeria, touted a “performanc­e-based” Rwandan government with top leadership “focused on unity, not division.” Another panelist, a St. Mary’s University professor of internatio­nal relations, R. Célina Jacquemin, also sketched a flattering portrait of the Kagame government.

A DreamWeek project manager, Lilly Guindy, described the panel as “a community-curated event” hosted by Rwandans in San Antonio.

“Definitely, some people have different views, but that’s the

beauty of America and that’s the beauty of the Martin Luther King legacy,” said Moses Rudasunikw­a, president of Rwandan Community Abroad of San Antonio.

U.S. Rep. Joaquin Castro, D-San Antonio, plans to introduce a resolution in Congress demanding Paul Rusesabagi­na’s release on humanitari­an grounds.

Trésor Rusesabagi­na described his 67-year-old father, a cancer survivor, as frail. He said his dad has lost a lot of weight, hasn’t seen a doctor, remains in solitary confinemen­t and isn’t allowed contact with other inmates, even in church.

“They’re trying to break him,” Trésor Rusesabagi­na said. “He’s not broken.”

 ?? Robin Jerstad / Contributo­r ?? Trésor Rusesabagi­na, whose father sheltered hundreds of people in Rwanda in 1994 but is now imprisoned there, attends St. Mary’s University.
Robin Jerstad / Contributo­r Trésor Rusesabagi­na, whose father sheltered hundreds of people in Rwanda in 1994 but is now imprisoned there, attends St. Mary’s University.
 ?? Photos by Robin Jerstad / Contributo­r ?? Trésor Rusesabagi­na, whose father is in a Rwanda prison, listens to panelists Friday at the Tobin Center as they praise the regime of Paul Kagame without mentioning its human rights record.
Photos by Robin Jerstad / Contributo­r Trésor Rusesabagi­na, whose father is in a Rwanda prison, listens to panelists Friday at the Tobin Center as they praise the regime of Paul Kagame without mentioning its human rights record.
 ?? ?? Mathilde Mukantaban­a, the Rwandan ambassador to the United States, speaks during a panel discussion Friday at the Tobin Center. Panelists uniformly praised Kagame’s government.
Mathilde Mukantaban­a, the Rwandan ambassador to the United States, speaks during a panel discussion Friday at the Tobin Center. Panelists uniformly praised Kagame’s government.

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