NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Rwanda calls out Zim on genocide

- BY PROBLEM MASAU

RWANDAN authoritie­s have expressed dismay on how the Zimbabwean government is portraying the 1994 genocide against Tutsis.

In an official statement released by Foreign Affairs minister Frederick Shava over the weekend, the government distanced itself from accusation­s that it had been harbouring one of the world’s most wanted Rwandan fugitives, Protais Mpiranya.

The carefully worded statement has, however, attracted a backlash from the Rwandese government.

“The embassy wishes to advise the correction of the 1994 genocide against the Tutsis in Rwanda as opposed to the way it is mentioned in the statement,” the Rwandan embassy tweeted yesterday.

Zimbabwe has been in the eye of a storm following revelation­s by the United Nations that the authoritie­s in Harare harboured Mpiranya who was responsibl­e for the killing of 800 000 Tutsis.

In a report, the UN Internatio­nal Residual Mechanism for Criminal Tribunals said Zimbabwean officials facilitate­d the entry of Mpiranya to the country at the height of their search during the late former President Robert Mugabe’s rule.

“Zimbabwean officials facilitate­d his entry to Zimbabwe and Mpiranya facilitate­d safe passage of his closest associates to Zimbabwe as well. His wife and daughters left Cameroon for Kinshasa, after which he facilitate­d their move to Zimbabwe, from where they were later able to leave for the United Kingdom,” the UN report read.

The report accuses the Zimbabwean authoritie­s of continuing to conceal Mpiranya’s remains years after he died. He died in 2006.

In a statement on Sunday, Shava denied all the allegation­s, noting that the Zimbabwe government in fact was part of Mpiranya’s search.

“Zimbabwe fully co-operated with the UN Residual Mechanisms in its investigat­ions of the Rwandese fugitive who was indicted in 2000 by the Internatio­nal Criminal Tribunal for his role in the 1994 Rwandan genocide,” Shava said.

Informatio­n ministry secretary Ndabaningi Mangwana also said: “Government of Zimbabwe met its entire obligation under internatio­nal law. Government investigat­ed all leads on fugitive Mpiranya and followed up on new leads.”

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