'He wouldn't say a word' - Rwanda genocide fugitive lived incognito in Paris
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5-6 minutesRwandan
genocide fugitive Felicien Kabuga, whose arrest on Saturday ended 26
years on the run, was a frail, elderly man who said little to
neighbours and who would take a stroll most days outside of his
apartment in a well-off suburb of Paris.
FILE
PHOTO: A view shows the apartment building where Rwanda genocide
suspect Felicien Kabuga was arrested in Asnieres-sur-Seine near Paris,
France May 16, 2020. REUTERS/Gonzalo Fuentes/File Photo
Kabuga,
84, Rwanda’s most wanted man with a $5 million bounty on his head, had
been living under a false name in a five-storey apartment block in
Asnieres-sur-Seine with the help of his children, according to France’s
justice ministry.
Police detained him early on Saturday.
“I
would see this man going out, maybe once a day, alone or with someone,”
said Jean-Yves Breneol, 72, a resident in the same block where Kabuga
lived. “He wouldn’t say a word, nothing.”
Breneol said he thought Kabuga might have lived in the building for four or five years.
“We didn’t know his name, nothing,” he continued.
It is not known how or when Kabuga entered France.
But
neighbours said they were stunned to learn that a man wanted by a
United Nations tribunal on seven criminal charges including genocide and
incitement to commit genocide, all in relation to the 1994 Rwandan
genocide, had been living among them.
“What’s happened is
shocking,” said a second resident in the building who identified himself
only as Jean-Guillaume, who added that Kabuga appeared weak.
“He was an old man, very old. He was sick.”
Reuters
could not find any public comment made by Kabuga over the years about
the charges. It was not immediately known if he has a lawyer in France.
Kabuga is now being held in La Sante prison in central Paris.
At
the foot of an imposing outer wall made of stone and bristling with
security cameras, a coat of arms in the tricolor of the French national
flag hangs beside a reception kiosk.
CASH, MACHETES
Kabuga’s arrest marked the end of a more than two-decade long hunt that spanned Africa and Europe.
A
Hutu businessman, he is accused of creating and making contributions to
a fund that raised finances to pay the youth militias that would
slaughter some 800,000 Tutsis and moderate Hutus, as well as importing
huge numbers of machetes, according to the UN tribunal’s indictment.
Slideshow (3 Images)
Kabuga
had been an associate of president Juvenal Habyarimana, whose death in a
plane shot down over the Rwandan capital Kigali in 1994 ignited the
deep-rooted ethnic tensions between the Hutus and Tutsis. Two of his
daughters married into Habyarimana’s family, according to an amended
indictment dated 2004.
One of Rwanda’s richest men before the
genocide, Kabuga controlled many of the central African nation’s coffee
and tea plantations and factories. He also co-owned Radio Television
Milles Collines, whose radio station broadcast anti-Tutsi messages that
fanned the ethnic hatred.
The scars of the genocide remain deeply etched in the Rwandan psyche.
“This
is really good news that someone who planned and financed the genocide
and has been hiding for a long time and now arrested. It is good news
for everyone especially survivors,” said Valerie Mukabayire, leader of
AVEGA, a group of women survivors of the genocide.
Mukabayire, 64, said she lost family members including her husband. Her survivors’ group has slightly over 19,000 members.
“We
were worried that his (Kabuga’s) elderly age would impede justice but
now we are happy that he is arrested,” she told Reuters by phone.
Kabuga’s
arrest paves the way for him to come before the Paris Appeal Court and
later be transferred to the custody of the international court, which is
based in the Hague, Netherlands and Arusha, Tanzania.
The
International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR) was established by the
U.N. Security Council and closed in 2015. The International Residual
Mechanism for Criminal Tribunals is now mandated to perform some
functions carried out by the ICTR and the International Criminal
Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia.
The ICTR was at the centre of
efforts to set new standards in international justice, though Rwandan
President Paul Kagame said it was too slow and too inefficient. Some
critics said it was too focused on prosecuting Hutus.
“For
international justice, Kabuga’s arrest demonstrates that we can succeed
when we have the international community’s support,” Mechanism Chief
Prosecutor Serge Brammertz said in a statement.
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