Author: Publisher

  • UK Must Extradite or Prosecute Genocide Suspects

    UK Must Extradite or Prosecute Genocide Suspects

    {The United Kingdom should either extradite to Rwanda or prosecute the five men arrested in May last year accused of participating in the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi, Chief Justice Sam Rugege has said.}

    Four of the men had been arrested before but were freed after the British Crown Prosecution found it could not have them tried in the country, while a court premised on a 2009 ruling by the ICTR to reject their extradition to Rwanda for trial, on grounds that Rwandan judiciary could not Guarantee a fair trial.

    However the ICTR (International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda) was later to change its position after major reforms in the country’s judiciary, and has since transferred two suspects.

    In an exclusive interview with The New Times, last week, Prof. Rugege wondered why it has taken the British so long to make a decision on the fugitives.

    “I can’t see why they don’t try them if they don’t want to send them to Rwanda. We have confidence in their legal system, but they continue being reluctant to go ahead with the prosecutions,” he said.

    The five men who were arrested by the British police’s extradition unit include three former mayors; Emmanuel Ntezirayo, Charles Munyaneza and Celestine Ugirashebuja.

    The mayors and a former head of the national population office, Dr Vincent Bajinya, who has since changed his name to Brown, had been freed in 2009.

    The other suspect arrested in a coordinated operation that took place in different parts of the UK where the men reside is Celestine Mutabaruka, who worked for an NGO during the Genocide.

    {{Half-served justice}}

    According to the Chief Justice, extradition is critical for the Genocide survivors to see justice served.

    He said when trials are conducted in Rwanda in the proximity of those whose families were killed, “then justice will not only be done but also seen to be done.”

    “I think part of the criticism about international prosecution of these suspects is that it is done so remote from people who really have interest, which to me leaves justice half-served,” he said.

    He said that Rwanda’s judiciary has won the confidence of not only the ICTR but other jurisdictions, including Canada and Norway, which have extradited Genocide suspects.

    He also cited the European Court of Human and People’s Rights, which has also ruled that the judiciary in Rwanda can ably try a suspect of international stature.

    During the interview, the Chief Justice also appealed to African states to give clout the African Court of Human and People’s Rights, saying that it is capable of providing an alternative to the International Criminal Court.

    If the African nations can be serious about the African Court of Human Rights, there is no reason why African suspects should be sent to the ICC… the only thing we lack is the political will for our countries to give sufficient support and clout to the African court,” he said.

    African countries have persistently derided the Hague-based ICC, saying it was only targeting Africans, since all the suspects in its custody and all known investigations concern Africans, despite war crimes being committed in different parts of the world.

    The New Times

  • Iraq prepares ‘major attack’ to retake Fallujah

    Iraq prepares ‘major attack’ to retake Fallujah

    {Iraqi security forces are preparing a “major attack” to retake the city of Fallujah from al Qaeda-linked militants, a senior government official said on Sunday.}

    Special forces had already conducted operations in the city, the official said. The regular army had paused on the edge of the city to allow residents time to leave, awaiting orders to launch “the attack to crush the terrorists”.

    On Saturday, a senior security official in Anbar province said Fallujah was under the control of al Qaeda-linked group the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant.

    Washington said it would help Baghdad in its battle against al Qaeda-linked militants but that there would be no return of US troops.

    US Secretary of State John Kerry said on Sunday that Washington was ready to help Baghdad in its battle against the militants, but added that it was “their fight”.

    “We are not obviously contemplating returning, we are not contemplating putting boots on the ground,” Kerry told reporters in Jerusalem.

    ISIL is the latest incarnation of Al-Qaeda’s Iraq affiliate and has made a striking comeback this year, taking advantage of widespread discontent among Sunnis and its newfound bases in neighbouring Syria, where it has become a major player in the nearly three-year-old conflict.

    ISIL militants have also taken control of parts of Ramadi, the provincial capital, and on Sunday seized control of the nearby village of Bubali after heavy fighting, a witness said.

    Both Ramadi and Fallujah were insurgent strongholds in the insurgency against American troops and the Iraqi government after 2003. Fallujah was the target of two major assaults by US forces.

    Violence in Iraq last year reached a level not seen since 2008, when the country was just emerging from a brutal period of sectarian killings.

    “We are very, very concerned about the efforts of al-Qaeda and the Islamic State of Iraq in the Levant, which is affiliated with al Qaeda, who are trying to assert their authority not just in Iraq, but in Syria,” Kerry said.

    “These are the most dangerous players in that region. Their barbarism against the civilians in Ramadi and Fallujah and against Iraqi security forces is on display for everyone in the world to see.”

    (FRANCE 24 with AFP, AP, REUTERS)

  • FERWAFA gets new boss

    FERWAFA gets new boss

    {Nzamwita Vincent Degaul becomes the new ferwafa boss after the conclusion of elections that took place this Sunday at the premises of the football federation in Remera.}

    He becomes the president and his turn is set to last for a period of-4-years.

    Degaule who was once the APR fc executive secretary managed to win elections with 19 votes ,Ntagungira celestin Abega with 19 votes,Munyandamutsa 3 votes and Gisanura Raoul with one vote.

  • Rwanda Tutsi Mass Killer “Simbikangwa” to face Justice

    Rwanda Tutsi Mass Killer “Simbikangwa” to face Justice

    {Prosecution in France has obtained, from the Paris intermediate court, an order to file a case against Pascal Simbikangwa in criminal courts. }

    Simbikangwa is accused of complicity in genocide and crimes against humanity.

    According to media reports, prosecution in France accused him of having armed Interahamwe militia and ordered them to kill Tutsis, especially in the former Gisenyi prefecture in the north west of the country.

    The investigation over the role Simbikangwa played during 1994 Genocide against Tutsi started in 2009, one year after he was arrested in Mayotte, a French island. Later on, he was transferred to a prison based in France Metropolitan.

    A former army captain and member of the intelligence in the genocidal regime, also believed to be one of the ‘Akazu extremist group’, Simbikangwa would be the first Rwandan tried by French courts.

    According to French laws, Simbikangwa has ten days to appeal over this decision.

    The move was welcomed by Genocide survivors.

    Naftali Ahishakiye, the executive secretary of Ibuka, an umbrella of associations advocating for the survivors of the Genocide against Tutsis said, “It’s a good movr as we approach the Genocide commemoration. Let them also arrest the other suspects whom they protected for long.”

    Similar commendation was made by Jean de Dieu Mucyo, the executive secretary of National Commission against the Genocide, who said it was good news but France should stop pretending.

    “France should really pursue Genocide suspects on their territory, all those we always call for arrest,” he said yesterday.

    France hosts several Genocide suspects who are believed to lead a tranquil life despite appeals to have them arrested and prosecuted.

    Prominent among them is Agathe Habyarimana, the wife of the late president Juvenal Habyarimana. She is believed to have been chairing the Akazu, a small group of extremists who, through economic and political influence, were the core advisors for the Genocide machinery.

    In December, last year, the French courts ruled that she would be given permanent residence in France.

    Others include Laurent Bukibaruta, former prefet of Gikongoro prefecture

  • IGP Gasana begins countrywide tour

    IGP Gasana begins countrywide tour

    {The Inspector General of Police, Emmanuel K. Gasana started a countrywide tour on Saturday to evaluate the performance of District Police Units (DPUs) in a wake to improve the quality of services offered.}

    The tour started in the districts of Nyarugenge, Kicukiro and Gasabo in the City of Kigali and Bugesera District.

    While meeting Police officers operating in the four districts, the IGP thanked them for their hard work, discipline and professionalism exhibited last year which led to the continued reduction in crimes.

    He appealed to the continue the course to ensure sustainable security and to accomplish the force’s mandate in general.

    He urged them to strengthen their cooperation with communities and local entities as an effective way to fight and prevent crimes.

    The Police chief said the force is in the process of facelifting DPUs in partnership with local entities.

    During the meeting, the President’s New Year message to the officers was read to them.

  • Rwanda’s economy has not been affected by the suspension of aid

    Rwanda’s economy has not been affected by the suspension of aid

    {The Rwandan Minister of Finance, Claver Gatete said that the country’s economy has not been affected by the suspension of aid that feeds the national budget to 40%}.

    “In reality, the economy has not been affected, because the banking system could take over from donors. Credit to the private sector increased by 34% and GDP grew 8% in 2012. It showed us that it was time to mobilize domestic resources, “the Minister said Claver Gatete in an interview with Jeune Afrique.

    “The Agaciro Development Fund can serve as a safety net. The budget for the 2013-2014 fiscal year to 62.2% will be covered by domestic resources, and we want this percentage increases to cover all our expenses. Most donors are revenue, “he said.

    For a Rwandan state, the suspension of part of the aid has helped to show that the economy is strong.”We now want to deal with financial institutions rather than political institutions, which can destabilize you at any time. We have made efforts to be a credible country. No state in the world uses its money as effectively as Rwanda. Proof: When we went on the financial markets to sell our bonds, they were oversubscribed 8.5 times, “he says.

    Traditionally Rwanda worked with the World Bank, the African Development Bank and bilateral partners. The country now seeks to diversify its partners. Thus it came close to Turkey, India and attempts to join the Islamic Development Bank. Rwanda also works with all Arab funds.

    The suspension of international aid was enacted in the wake of accusations of interference in neighboring DRC problem, a charge that Rwanda has always rejected.

  • Why 95%of vision 2020 is possible before 2016

    Why 95%of vision 2020 is possible before 2016

    {{Industrial Promotion}}

    The industrial sector comprises 16% of national GDP, with construction accounting for more than half of this. Aggregated turnover grew by 11% in 2012 in the sampled industrial firms (RIS 2012), with average capacity utilization of 65%.

    Capacity under utilization was considered particularly problematic for firms in manufactured consumer goods, construction materials and construction services.

    Average labor productivity for the sampled firms rose 6.7% in 2012.

    MINICOM targeted 6 outputs in 2012/13 related to industrial development, and 10 of the 11 related targets were fully achieved (91%). MINICOM provided technical support to 55 industries and SMEs to expand production, and continued developing the Kigali Special Economic Zone (KSEZ).

    {{Small and Medium Enterprises Development}}

    SME turnover growth averaged 12.9% in 2012 based on a sample of 748 firms (SME Impact Assessment), with employment growing by 3.7%. SMEs identified capacity utilisation as a concern, with less than a third of firms considering themselves to be operating at an acceptable capacity level due to limited demand, access to credit and access to markets.

    MINICOM set 4 priority outputs in 2012/13 for SME development. Under these, 15 of 16 targets were fully achieved (94%). The second phase launch of Hanga Umurimo drew in 13,363 business ideas, with banks ultimately receiving 1,219 proposal submissions worth RwF 11 billion, creating 11,483 off-farm jobs.

    Strategies for 8 SME clusters are under development, and 3 Community Processing Centres are in the process of being equipped (dairy, leather and Irish potato).

    There are now 5,610 registered cooperatives in Rwanda, with 1,877 having been inspected for good governance practices. RCA trained 1,003 Savings and Credit Cooperatives (SACCOs) in 2012/13 and inspected 670.

    Thanks to continued mobilization, SACCOS continued to register strong performance. Membership increased by 19.3% compared to 2012-2013 reaching 1.9 Million members.

    The number of account holders in SACCOs in 2012/13 was over 1.5 million, up by 30.5% from the previous fiscal year. Savings and deposits increased by 27.1%, up to RwF 36.9 billion in 2012/13, disbursed loans have risen sharply, with RwF 27.6 billion disbursed in fiscal year 2012/13 compared to RwF 3.6 billion in fiscal year 2011/12 while cumulated loans were RwF 46 billion, increasing by 153% from the previous year.

  • Children targeted in CAR violence

    Children targeted in CAR violence

    {Children in the Central African Republic have become deliberate targets of armed gangs, aid workers have said.}

    An official with the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) confirmed to Al Jazeera on Saturday that “more children are being targeted and killed” as concerns over civilian casualties escalate in violence that has not ceased since a coup in March 2013.

    The latest remarks follow a UNICEF statement on December 30 that described attacks against children as having “sunk to a new low”, including cases of beheading and mutilation.

    “Attacks against children have sunk to a vicious new low, with at least two children beheaded, and one of them mutilated, in the violence that has gripped the capital…,” the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) said in their December 30 statement.

    Ombretta Pasotti, who coordinates work by the Italian NGO Emergency at the paediatric hospital in Bangui, confirmed to the AFP news agency on Saturday: “Before now, children were collateral victims, but today some of them are targeted directly.”

    “Some children are victims of stray bullets and shell fragments… Some were wounded ‘by chance’, but here we also have children who were shot because they are Muslims,” Pasotti said.

    UNICEF said it had verified 16 killings of children since December 5, while 60 more youths were wounded in clashes that broke out between Muslim former rebels and fighters from the Christian majority.

    UNICEF appealed to sectarian fighters to “halt grave violations against children”, to release those in their ranks and to avoid attacks on health and education workers.

    In just three weeks, some 370,000 people have been displaced to dozens of makeshift camps in an upheaval affecting almost half of Bangui’s population, relief workers said.

    About 100,000 residents have fled to a tent city at the airport, where African and French troops are based.

    The landlocked nation of 4.6 million people has endured a succession of coups, rebellions and mutinies since independence from France in 1960, but the latest strife is the first to take on a dangerous religious dimension, after
    rebels of the mainly Muslim Seleka coalition seized power in March last year.

    Source:
    Al Jazeera and agencies

  • Zimbabwe’s Tsvangirai and wife separated

    Zimbabwe’s Tsvangirai and wife separated

    {Former Zimbabwe Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai has been ditched by his wife for undisclosed personal reasons.}

    This comes just over a year after he married her under controversial circumstances.

    Mr Tsvangirai, who lost another presidential election against President Robert Mugabe last July married Elizabeth Macheka in September 2012.

    The couple was forced to do a traditional marriage ceremony after the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) leader was sued by one of his lovers, Lorcadia Karimatsenga, who proved that they were customarily married.

    Ms Macheka on Saturday disclosed that they were now separated because of a number of problems besetting their marriage.

    She revealed that a visit to controversial Nigerian televangelist TB Joshua by her husband last October was one of the things that triggered the breakdown of the marriage as she was against the prophet’s teachings as a Catholic.

    The separation also followed publication of alleged communication between Ms Macheka and a former boyfriend last year by government owned media that purportedly showed that she was cheating on her husband.

    However, Ms Macheka in an interview with a government controlled newspaper vehemently denied claims that she was to blame for the collapse of the marriage.

    “Let it be known that it is every woman’s dream to be happily married in poverty and even in the midst of plenty,” she said.

    VISITS TO TB JOSHUA

    “He (Mr Tsvangirai) knows the genesis of the problem, what steps he has been trying in vain to address the situation, including visits to TB Joshua and others.

    “The paralysis between us has nothing to do with the outcome of the July 31 elections, MDC, any other political entity, foreign hand or material worth.

    “The matter is both personal and circumstantial and only him and not even relatives, friends or party comrades can solve.”

    Ms Macheka is a daughter of a leading Zanu PF member and there were claims that she was a spy for President Mugabe’s party.

    But she insisted that the problems emanated from an undisclosed problem that Mr Tsvangirai was failing to deal with.

    “A lot has been said and written about how I am to blame in the current situation between myself and Mr Tsvangirai,” Ms Macheka said.

    “It is not my intention to discuss private family issues in public or awaken sleeping dogs.”

    She also took a dig at her husband saying he must not cry victim but work to solve their differences.

    “Crying the victim or casting aspersions on anyone, including myself, is not only a self-serving sympathy seeking gimmick but intellectually, factually and morally dishonest stance to take as close friends from both sides of the families and relatives know,” she said.

    “I shall not be driven into a public discussion of my marital life since it is a private matter and private matters are best solved privately.”

    Earlier in the week, Mr Tsvangirai had told the same paper that he was trying to reconcile with his wife.

    He said the two would “sit down and discuss the matter as adults.”

    Mr Tsvangirai’s love life has been in the spotlight for the past four years after he lost his first wife Susan in a car accident.

    He was linked to several women and had to apologise at his traditional wedding to Ms Macheka saying he did not mean to hurt anyone as he was searching for genuine love.

    Daily Nation

  • Revenue slumps at Uganda-S. Sudan border

    Revenue slumps at Uganda-S. Sudan border

    {The daily average revenue collection of about sh3.6m that Uganda used to realize through the Elegu border in Amuru district is now cut to about sh1.5m due to the ongoing conflict in South Sudan.}

    Before the fighting across the border, between 200 and 500 trucks plied the Gulu-Elegu-Nimule-Juba road, but ever since the conflict was sparked off, that flow has reduced to less than 20 trucks daily.

    Over 1,000 people have been reported killed in the fighting.

    The fighting started when President Salva Kiir accused his former deputy Riek Machar of attempting a coup in the world’s newest nation.

    Despite Kiir earlier saying he would not agree to any power-sharing agreement with Machar, the two warring parties are set for direct ceasefire talks in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.

    Many countries, including Uganda, Kenya and the US have pulled their nationals out of the oil-rich nation.

    Hundreds of South Sudanese nationals have fled their country and have sought refuge in neighbouring Uganda, Sudan and other countries.

    The head of customs at Elegu border, Paul Walukyesi explains that the before the security situation worsened in Juba, Uganda earned revenue from the trucks’ movements through roll tolls and other local exports.

    “Elegu is our major exit immigration station to South Sudan. It handles majorly transit goods from Uganda and abroad. It also handles local exports, where at least over 200 trucks pass through the station on a daily basis,” he says.

    Ugandan traders export foodstuffs and agricultural products like maize flour, sweet potatoes, cabbages and onions, and many more everyday through the Elegu border point.

    The customs official said before the conflict erupted, about 50 vehicles or trucks were commuting daily to export fresh farm products in Juba.

    But now the fighting has significantly affected that movement.

    “A few Ugandan traders used to benefit from Supermatch cigarettes. The only unfortunate thing is that the cigarettes are smuggled into Uganda because they are in a small-scale,” said Walukyesi.

    Meanwhile, the current situation at Elegu has made the border market very expensive to both the locals and travelers.

    New Vision