Rwanda Information Portal

Rwanda jails opposition leader for ‘denying genocide’

KIGALI � Rwandan opposition leader Victoire Ingabire was jailed for eight years Tuesday after a court found her guilty of terror charges and denying the genocide.

“She has been sentenced to eight years for all the crimes that she was found guilty of,” judge Alice Rulisa told the court, adding however that she was innocent of another charge of “calling for another genocide.”

Rulisa said the leader was found guilty of the “crime of conspiracy in harming authorities through terrorism and war” as well as denial of Rwanda’s 1994 genocide.

The genocide denial charges against Ingabire were triggered by remarks she made in January 2010 at the memorial to the estimated 800,000 people, the majority of them Tutsis, who were killed in the slaughter.

Ingabire, herself a Hutu and the leader of the Unified Democratic Forces (FDU), a political grouping that has not been allowed to register as a party, said it was time Hutu war victims were also commemorated.

She refused to attend the hearing on Tuesday, and chose to remain in jail where she has been held since October 2010.

During the trial, prosecutors showed what they said was evidence of Ingabire’s “terrorist” activities, including proof of financial transfers to the FDLR, a Hutu rebel movement based in neighbouring Democratic Republic of Congo.

Ingabire, who denied all the charges, was accused of “giving financial support to a terrorist group, planning to cause state insecurity and divisionism.”

Ingabire’s FDU have accused Kigali of fabricating evidence against its leader to prevent her from participating in the political life of the small central African country.

She boycotted her trial mid-way through proceedings after the court cut short a witness who accused the Rwandan authorities of rigging evidence against her.

The witness, a former spokesman of the Hutu rebel group the Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR), said Rwandan intelligence services had offered money to rebels to make false claims over Ingabire’s ties with the group.

Source: AFP.

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2 comments

1 kuku wa soko from Rwanda { 10.31.12 at 5:32 am }

OK. at least. the tribalism raging in Rwanda. your hearts…

2 Chuck Culpepper from Henderson, NV, United States { 10.31.12 at 12:39 pm }

Eight years for exposing the lies, eight years for telling the truth – is there a newer less severe form of “justice” evolving in Rwanda? Ever since the RPF came to power thousands have either “disappeared” or been killed for daring to challenge President Kagame’s blatantly false propaganda regarding his real purposees before, during and since the 1994 Rwandan genocide.

What’s been the true cost of Rwanda’s and Uganda’s subsequent and ongoing control of the very substantial mineral and other resources in neighboring DR Congo?

I pray that Ms. Ingabire’s courage will inspire others in Rwanda and around the world to stand up and challenge those who rule by fear and intimidation. Only when the liars are driven from power and Ms. Ingabire and other jailed opposition leaders trade places with those promoting the “false justice” demonstrated today will any “true justice” be accomplished.

Those of us who refuse to be intimidated shall eventually prevail.

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