Almost professorial in manner, Kagame cuts an unusual figure for a former guerrilla leader. (Fred Dufour/AFP/Getty)In the run-up to the 2010 election in which Kagame was declared the winner, there was widespread violence, with several journalists and figures from the opposition attacked or killed, including a politician who was beheaded. Amnesty International condemned the violence and the “killings, arrests, and the closure of newspapers and broadcasters [which] reinforced a climate of fear.â€The case of Victoire Ingabire, a politician from the opposition, was instructive. When she returned to Rwanda that year, having lived 16 years in exile, to prepare a run for president, her first stop was at the official genocide memorial. “We are here honoring at this memorial the Tutsi victims of the genocide. There are also Hutu who were victims of crimes against humanity and war crimes, not remembered or honored here,†she said in a prepared statement. “Hutu are also suffering. They are wondering when their time will come to remember their people. In order for us to get to that desirable reconciliation, we must be fair and compassionate towards every Rwandan’s suffering.â€Ingabire was promptly arrested and accused of “genocide ideology.†During her trial, President Kagame publicly declared that she was guilty.Tiny Rwanda is called the land of a thousand hills because of its verdant, rolling countryside of strikingly fertile farmland. It is a land of beauty and unrelenting order. But unlike its much larger neighbor Congo, it is not endowed with any mineral wealth to speak of. Yet Rwanda’s economy depends on the exploitation of Congolese resources.Through mafialike networks reportedly run by the Rwandan Army and the RPF, huge quantities of Congo’s minerals are siphoned out of the country, experts say.As early as 2000, Rwanda was believed to be making $80 million to $100 million annually from Congolese coltan alone, roughly the equivalent of the entire defense budget, according to Reyntjens, the Belgian expert.Pillaging the Congo obscures Rwanda’s giant military budget from foreign donors who provide as much as 50 percent of the country’s budget every year. It also provides a rich source of income to the urban elites, especially returnees from Uganda, who form the regime’s core.
“After the first Congo war, money began coming in through military channels and never entered the coffers of the Rwandan state,†says Rudasingwa, Kagame’s former lieutenant. “It is RPF money, and Kagame is the only one who knows how much money it is—or how it is spent. In meetings it was often said, ‘For Rwanda to be strong, Congo must be weak, and the Congolese must be divided.’â€
Congo looms large in the story of Kagame in other ways as well. For years Rwandan government forces and their proxies have operated in Congo. Twice Rwanda has invaded the country outright, in September 1996, when with U.S. acquiescence it successfully waged war to overthrow Mobutu Sese Seko, and again beginning in August 1998, when it mounted a repeat operation to depose Laurent-Désiré Kabila. This second operation, to replace the very man Kagame installed to replace Mobutu, ended in failure but established a pattern of intervention and meddling aimed at undermining its much larger neighbor. The ensuing war, involving several African nations, is believed to have cost the lives of 5 million people.
As early as 1997, the U.N. estimated that Rwandan forces had caused the deaths of 200,000 Hutus in Congo; Prunier, the French expert, has since estimated that the toll is closer to 300,000. According to the U.N. report, these deaths could not be attributed to the hazards of war or to collateral damage. “The majority of the victims were children, women, elderly people and the sick, who were often undernourished and posed no threat to the attacking forces.†The report concluded that the systematic and widespread attacks, “if proven before a competent court, could be characterized as crimes of genocide.â€
Two years ago, Kagame delivered a lecture in London on “The Challenges of Nation-Building in Africa: The Case of Rwanda.†When confronted with a U.N. report that was then making headlines with the suggestion that his forces had committed genocide in Congo, he dismissed such allegations as “baseless†and “absurd.†Clearly he was keener to talk about economic indicators and repeat the oft-told success story of his country.
But even that is a truth with modification. Social inequality in Rwanda is high and rising, experts say. Despite an average annual growth rate of about 5 percent since 2005, poverty is soaring in the countryside, where few Western journalists report without official escort.
“The rural sector has suffered enormous extraction under the post-genocide government, far more than what had happened before,†said one longtime researcher who spoke on the condition of anonymity. “There is a real increase in misery. When you speak of Rwanda as a volcano, that’s what’s involved.â€
Will Rwanda explode again? The big, looming issue is whether Kagame will leave office in 2017, as the Constitution calls for. With so much to answer for, few expect a straightforward exit.
Source: The Daily Beast
u better write a book or else u summerise yo articles, they are so boring and on top of that, it’s all bullshit
IT IS MORE THAN TIRESUM.IT IS ATROUBLE CREATING IN THE INNERPERSON IT CAN ALSO CAUSE SOME ONE VOMITTING!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
You write nosense. do you think Rwandans we can take our time reading this? never.
That’s roten malice!
Inyenyeri you remove our comments unless you are paid to make man eators agents abuse the victims! It couldnt be done on Inyenyeri atleast! Who is Maliced or roten mugabo than the killer of his Nationals? What make you vomite Niwe is it the master of deception who denies what he does with live evidance unto his face? What makes you tired and creates truble in taking the world most femous killer to justice he shall face it wheather to day or 2mrw.
That is your wish list. I wish you will leave the world of dead before realizing your dreams
@Gahanga, you have compromised the little respect some of us had for you. It is true “a son of a snake is a snake”. That comment proves how hungry and thirsty you are for the blood of Rwandans. The only thing you forget is that you can only kill those whose day has come and not everyone you hate. You are so obsessed with seeing Rwandans die that your illusion for destroying the social fabric of our community and our people, blinkers all you sense of reason and logic to the extent that you assume to be God, that your wish will happen. You even forget that this, inyenyerinews.org, is a virtual world and as long one is playing by the rules no one can do anything to him/her, let alone threats. Bagandas have a saying that, “a bikolimo bye Nkoko te bita Kamunye”.
As for @coco and @NIWE, how can you two be so silly and foolish to claim the role of speaking for Rwandans? If you can’t read something, then leave it. If you don’t like the content, then ‘TOUGH’. This is beyond your control and you will continue to chase shadows. If you refute anything, then contest it in a honorable way. Otherwise, live with it as the victims and relatives of the victims, of your so called ‘HERO’s’ adventures in DRC, are living with it. We live in the 21st Century where the “IDEA RWANDA” extends beyond the physical borders. Technology makes the reach and stretch of that idea beyond any single person or groups control. So be ready to embrace it and own up.
The TRUTH will always prevail!!!