Five key suspects of the
1994 Genocide against the Tutsi currently on British soil have been placed
under fresh investigations, UK Metropolitan Police has told The New Times.
Eleven years ago, Rwanda
issued indictments detailing the crimes the five men - all of whom held key
leadership positions under the genocidal regime - allegedly committed during
the Genocide but following several rounds of arrests and hearings the UK
judiciary released the suspects, arguing they may not get fair trial if
extradited to Rwanda.
The suspects are Dr Vincent
Bajinya, Célestin Ugirashebuja, Charles Munyaneza, Emmanuel Nteziryayo and
Célestin Mutabaruka.
Kigali protested their
release saying it perpetuated impunity and denied justice to victims. The
Rwandan government urged the UK to try the fugitives on its soil if it was
uncomfortable with extraditing them to face trial in a country where they
allegedly committed the crimes.
But in a new twist, the UK
Metropolitan Police says they were now assessing the indictments against the
five men under their War Crimes Unit.
In an email to The New
Times, a Metropolitan Police spokesman said: "We can confirm that the
Met's War Crimes Unit, within the Counter Terrorism Command, received a request
from Rwandan authorities in January 2018 to investigate five individuals in the
UK in relation to alleged genocide offences in Rwanda dating from around
1994."
"Documentation
relevant to this request has been passed to the War Crimes Unit, and the unit
is currently assessing this material," the email reads in part.
The development comes hot
on the heels of a meeting between the new UK envoy to Rwanda, Joanne Lomas, and
Rwanda's Justice minister and Attorney General Johnston Busingye.
Shortly after the meeting
last week, Lomas told the media that fresh investigations into the case were
underway, adding that her country took the issue "very seriously".
Observers have questioned
the indifference of UK authorities on the indictments against the five men,
with fresh criticism gathering momentum in the early days of the ongoing 24th
commemoration of the Genocide against the Tutsi.
More than a million people
were killed during the Genocide.
During a commemoration
event in London last week, Rwanda's High Commissioner to the United Kingdom,
Yamina Karitanyi, said Rwanda "will not tire" in using the law, and
diplomacy, to fight genocide ideology and bringing (Genocide) suspects who are
still at large to face trial."
Rwanda has over the years
received fugitives from different parts of the world, including from Europe and
the Americas, as well as referrals from the International Criminal Tribunal for
Rwanda.
This, Rwandan officials,
say disqualifies claims that that the fugitives in the UK would not get fair
trial once extradited to Rwanda.
But the officials in Kigali
have also said that any country that was not willing to hand such suspects to
Rwanda should go ahead and hold them accountable for their crimes as provided
for under the international law.
Who are these suspects?
The five fugitives residing
in the UK include Bajinya, a medical doctor who at the time of the Genocide
headed the then National Population Office (ONAPO). He is said to have been a
coordinator of a militia in the capital Kigali, with several witness accounts
alleging that he organised regular meetings in his home in the days preceding
the Genocide where plans to kill the Tutsi were hatched.
The other one is Celestin
Mutabaruka, presently a Pentecostal preacher in the UK.
Mutabaruka, who at the time
of the Genocide was running Crête Zaïre-Nil (CZN), a forest management
organisation in Musebeya, southern Rwanda, is accused of having led a gang of
killers that murdered many people on Muyira Hill in Bisesero in mid May 1994,
among other atrocities.
The other three - Charles
Munyaneza, Emmanual Nteziryayo and Celestin Ugirashebuja- were bourgmestres
(mayors) for the communes (districts) of Kinyamakara, Mudasomwa and Kigoma,
respectively, all in southern Rwanda.
Munyaneza and Nteziryayo,
whose communes fell under what was then Gikongoro prefecture, are accused of
giving orders to exterminate over 50,000 Tutsi who had sought refugee at
Murambi technical school during the Genocide.
Ugirashebuja is accused of
commanding Interahamwe militia to kill thousands of Tutsi in his commune,
according to witness accounts.
Eleven-year battle
Rwanda first notified the
UK government of the presence of these suspects on its soil back in 2007 when
they issued indictments.
An extradition battle
ensued with Rwanda winning the first case in 2008 before the suspects appealed
on the ground that they would not get fair hearing in Rwanda, with an appeals
court ruling in their favour in 2009.
Rwanda made a fresh
extradition bid at Westminster Magistrates Court in 2013 following judicial
reforms but again it lost on the basis that the cases were politically
motivated and not genuine pursuit of justice for genocide crimes.
These claims are
"unfounded", Minister Busingye told journalists after his meeting
with British High Commissioner Joanne Lomas in Kigali last week.
"The reasons upon
which the British judicial system has based on to say that these people will
not receive fair trial are unfounded.
"The British judicial
system should interrogate this issue further because many countries across the
world have extradited Genocide suspects to Rwanda and we have not had the fears
expressed by the British justice system justified in any of those cases,"
Busingye said.
Some of the countries that
have extradited or deported fugitives to Rwanda include Canada, Germany,
Norway, Denmark, the Netherlands and the United States.
New push
In January 2018, Prosecutor
General Jean Bosco Mutangana and Jean Bosco Siboyintore, the Head of Genocide
Suspects Tracking Unit at the National Public Prosecution Authority, travelled
to London where they delivered a fresh request for the UK to prosecute the five
Genocide suspects.
"UK has two
obligations; if you can't extradite them, prosecute them, in any case let them
face justice because there is proof for their crimes," Siboyintore told
The New Times yesterday.
Asked if the UK authorities
were doing enough to bring these suspects to justice, the Metropolitan Police
spokesperson said "we have nothing more to add at this stage but can only
confirm fresh investigations into these files".
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