Ladislas Ntaganzwa is among
the nine most-wanted fugitives in the 1994 Rwanda genocide which killed more
than 800,000 ethnic Tutsis and moderate Hutus, Siboyintore said.
The Interpol agents
arrested a Rwandan with a $5m bounty on his head who is among the most wanted
for the 1994 genocide, officials said on Thursday.
Ladislas Ntaganzwa was
arrested in the eastern Congo city of Goma late on Monday, according to John
Bosco Siboyintore, head of the genocide tracking unit at Rwanda’s Public
Prosecution Authority, and Richard Muhumuza, Rwanda’s prosecutor general.
The UN’s international
criminal tribunal for Rwanda sought Ntaganzwa to answer charges related to
participation in genocide and incitement to commit genocide.
Ntaganzwa allegedly carried
out these acts as mayor of Nyakizu. The ICTR closed its proceedings last week
after nearly 20 years of pursuing and prosecuting genocide suspects and
transferred Ntaganzwa’s case to Rwanda.
Muhumuza said the country
has started extradition proceedings for Ntaganzwa to stand trial in Rwanda.
According to ICTR’s
indictment between about 14 and 18 April 1994 Ntaganzwa is accused of
substantially participating in the planning, preparation and execution of the
massacre of over 20,000 Tutsis at Cyahinda parish.
On 15 April, 1994
Ntaganzwa, armed with a gun, transported gendarmes in a vehicle, while Hutu
civilians and Burundian refugees he had incited earlier arrived on foot and
surrounded Cyahinda parish to prevent the Tutsis from escaping, the indictment
says.
At the parish he addressed
the Tutsi, using a megaphone and told them to lay down their weapons, the
indictment said.
He then gave the order for
the massacre to begin, “whereupon the gendarmes and communal police shot at the
crowd of Tutsis killing and harming many, while the Hutu civilians and
Burundian refugees armed with machete and knobkerries also attacked, killed and
harmed Tutsis including those who tried to escape from the parish,” the
indictment said.
“[He] directed the attack
by giving instructions through the megaphone including directions as to who
should be killed; and personally shot into the crowd of Tutsis and killed five
Tutsis.”
Ntaganzwa returned to the
parish on 16 and 17 April to encourage the militia to kill the Tutsi but on the
18th he came with men from the military who opened fire with automatic weapons
at the Tutsi for the final assault.
Guardian
he can run but cannot hide
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