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Amnesty International urges Rwanda to reveal fate or whereabouts of disappeared businessman Ndengeye Urayeneza

AI Index: AFR 47/001/2011

Document – Rwanda: Reveal whereabouts of disappeared businessman

The Rwandan government should immediately reveal the whereabouts of Robert Ndengeye Urayeneza, not seen since his enforced disappearance in Kigali, Rwanda�s capital, on 26 March 2010, Amnesty International said today. Amnesty International believes that Robert Ndengeye Urayeneza is detained in military custody in Rwanda. The organization is calling on the Rwandan authorities to promptly charge or release him.

Robert Ndengeye Urayeneza, a dual citizen of Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), was living in Gisenyi and working as a businessman and on the Ecumenical Programme for Peace, Conflict Transformation and Reconciliation (PAREC) demobilisation programme in the DRC at the time of his enforced disappearance. He was the leader of an armed opposition group, the Front patriotique congolais, in eastern DRC in the late 1990�s. The group disbanded and later reformed before being integrated into the Armed Forces of the Democratic Republic of Congo (FARDC).

Robert Ndengeye Urayeneza was last seen on 26 March 2010 around 6am when he dropped a family member at Nyabugogo Bus Station in Kigali. On that morning, he was driving a silver grey Toyota Vista registration number RAA 060Y. He never reached his brother�s home in Kigali, as planned. Family members tried to contact him by telephone later that morning. At first, he did not answer and by mid-morning, his phone was switched-off.

Robert Ndengeye Urayeneza�s family reported him missing to the Rwandan National Security Service (NSS) on 27 March 2010, but have not received further news from the NSS about his whereabouts. On 7 May 2010, Robert Ndengeye Urayeneza made a phone call saying that he was detained at an unknown location in Rwanda. No-one has heard from him since.

In October 2010, Amnesty International received credible information suggesting that Robert Ndengeye Urayeneza was detained in Rwandan military custody.

The Rwandan Ministry of Defence did not respond to a letter from Amnesty International requesting information on Robert Ndengeye Urayeneza�s whereabouts in November 2010. In October 2010, two months after a written request for information, the Rwandan police confirmed that Robert Ndengeye Urayeneza was not in police custody. They suggested that Amnesty International instead direct enquiries to the Ministry of Defence.

Amnesty International calls on the Rwandan authorities to:

  • Immediately reveal the fate or whereabouts of Robert Ndengeye Urayeneza.
  • Promptly charge Robert Ndengeye Urayeneza with a recognizable criminal offence and transfer him from military to civilian custody or release him.
  • If charged, grant Robert Ndengeye Urayeneza with all the legal safeguards available under Rwandan law, including the right of regular access to a lawyer and a prompt and fair trial which meets international standards.
  • Immediately release or else reveal the whereabouts and charge any other individuals subjected to incommunicado detention or enforced disappearance.
  • Bring any individuals subjected to incommunicado detention promptly before a court to review the legality of their detention.
  • Bring to justice all those responsible for ordering or carrying out enforced disappearances, regardless of rank, in proceedings which meet international fair trial standards.

Background

Enforced disappearances, abductions and incommunicado detention, rare in Rwanda in recent years, increased in 2010, as the Rwandan authorities investigated a spate of grenade attacks before the presidential elections.

Amnesty International received information of three other persons who disappeared in March and May 2010 in Rwanda. All were former supporters of Laurent Nkunda, the former head of the armed opposition group, the National Council for the Defence of the People (CNDP), operating in North Kivu, eastern DRC. For example, Sheikh Iddy Abbasi, a former supporter of Nkunda, has not been seen since his disappearance outside his home in Gisenyi in March 2010.

Lieutenant-Colonel Rugigana Ngabo, the brother of the former Rwandan army chief, Kayumba Nyamwasa, was held in incommunicado detention without access to a lawyer, family or independent medical care from August 2010 to January 2011. The Rwandan authorities are investigating allegations that Ngabo may have threatened state security. Following a habeas corpus request by Ngabo�s family addressed to the East African Court of Justice in November 2010, the Rwandan authorities are believed to have produced Ngabo in the past week before a military court in Kigali.

[Amnesty International]

3 comments

1 kazitunga { 02.01.11 at 12:17 am }

this article shows well how many people do not wish peace to our small beautiful nation, wrong allegations to charge our government is all what they spend time doing,this Ndeye they say is in DRC doing his businesses as he reported himself to rwandan online newspaper igihe but these so called NGOs for human rights they don’t even think when they receive such bad allegations to spread them allover the world.whatever u do wish or not our national will keep prosper despite yr bad attempts.

2 john { 02.03.11 at 2:50 am }

Mr Kizitunga, advocating for human right is not wishing harm for the nation. The RPF government have to abide by the rule of law under the constitution that they enacted themselves. People are disappearing and that is a fact. Prosperity under a dictatorship usually bust. You have the right to support PK, but you should accept the fact that there is no human right, no democracy only a Saddam kind of democracy and justice that you and your foes enjoy. By the way don’t assume I am a hutu or interahamwe as you and the rest of Kagamist assume if some one gives a different opinion contrary to yours. God bless my country.

3 Umutesi Lorreta { 02.03.11 at 6:13 am }

Kazitunga, Am a sister to Robert Ulayeneza and people like you need to gather your facts well before you post your Ignorant mails.
I hope and pray that you may one day have to face the emotional trauma of the disappearance of a loved member of your family. Then maybe it will be easier for you to relate to our family circumstance.
You are a pathetic selfish soul who doesn’t even have his country at heart, because if you did you would take your time to gather your facts well Not only for Ndegye but the country as a whole.
Secondly, “The function of leadership is to produce more leaders, not more followers.”
“Leadership is not so much about technique and methods as it is about opening the heart. Leadership is about inspiration�of oneself and of others. Great leadership is about human experiences, not processes. Leadership is not a formula or a program, it is a human activity that comes from the heart and considers the hearts of others. It is an attitude, not a routine.”

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