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Ugandan Police block demonstration over �spies� held in Rwanda

Kabale (Uganda) -Police in Kabale yesterday blocked a planned demonstration of about 800 friends and relatives of the two Ugandans detained in Rwanda, and threatened to arrest anyone who is seen on the streets.

According to a petition to the police, also copied to the office of the Resident District Commissioner, the demonstrators wanted to protest over the arrest and detention without trial of the duo by a foreign country.

Today marks 17 days since Mr Simpson Mpirirwe, a local businessman and Mr Didas Ndamira, an accountant at Radio Kigezi FM, were arrested at the border town of Cyanika near Kisoro District by the Rwandan military. Rwanda has since claimed the duo was involved in subversive activities.

The Kabale police chief, Mr Deo Obongo, said the demonstrators had given a very short notice. �Their reasons are even shallow,� he said. �The two countries are already handling the matter diplomatically and there is nothing we can do.�

On Sunday, Mr Elikanah Turyazooka, an uncle of Mr Mpiririwe, chaired a meeting that resolved to seek the President�s intervention. �Our government should intervene and begin negotiations to save the lives of our sons detained in Rwanda,� Mr Turyazooka said. Sources also indicate that the immediate families of the two have been receiving calls from Rwanda asking for information.

Living in fear

Mr Ndamira�s family says they have communicated to him, but are not willing to divulge details. �We have discussed family matters,� his wife Catherine told Daily Monitor yesterday but refuses to offer details.

Mr Ndamira�s brother, John Bosco Turyasingura, said the family was living in fear and had been warned that they were being monitored. With the demonstration blocked, residents have now threatened to block the Katuna border post�a gateway to Rwanda�unless the President�s office responds to their petition. �If the government does not respond we shall stage a demonstration and stop all the Rwandan vehicles from entering our country. The rights of our people shouldn�t be violated like that,� said Ms Hellena Mugisha, one of the protestors.

Yesterday, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesperson, Mr Guma Muganda, said the Ugandan ambassador to Rwanda, Mr Richard Kabonero, was yet to visit the detainees.

[Daily Monitor]

October 5, 2010   No Comments

UN report on Rwanda-led genocide of Hutus in D.R. Congo

As a new UN report into the most appalling atrocities committed in the Democratic Republic of Congo is released, Lindsey Hilsum looks into the details of “the worst war in the world”.

- Download the FINAL UN mapping report in English

- Download the DRAFT UN mapping report in English

- T�l�chargez le rapport FINAL de l�ONU en Fran�ais

- T�l�chargez le rapport INITIAL de l�ONU en Fran�ais

- Download the Rwanda Government comments in English.

The United Nations report on the Congo looks at more than 600 of the worst human rights abuses which happened in the country between 1993 and 2003, when tens of thousands of people were killed and many others raped and mutilated by both armed Congolese groups and foreign forces.

Over the period, the region was torn apart by political crises, wars and conflicts.

The Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights’ report examines the actions of a number of foreign countries, including Uganda, Burundi and Angola, in the region, but singles out Rwanda as having committed alleged potential “acts of genocide” in the Congo.

The Rwandese Patriotic Front (RPF) took power in Rwanda by bringing an end to the genocide of the Tutsi people in 1994. However the new report suggests the RPF then committed appalling atrocities in the neighbouring Congo as they pursued Hutus who had committed the Tutsi genocide.

The report suggests these acts, in the forests of the Congo, may have constituted a second genocide.

All of the countries involved have reacted angrily to the report and condemned its contents. Rwanda described the report as “flawed” and said it could threaten regional stability.

In a statement, the High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay said the evidence points to potential crimes against humanity, war crimes and acts of genocide. However, he stressed that these definitions could only be addressed by a court.


October 5, 2010   4 Comments