Rwandan opposition leader Victoire Ingabire arrested

by Ann Garrison

Victoire-Ingabire-closeup, Rwandan opposition leader Victoire Ingabire arrested, World News & Views Opposition leader Victoire Ingabire Umuhoza has been arrested in Rwanda, according to members of her FDU-Inkingi Coalition of Rwandan political parties, who also report that authorities have taken her to an undisclosed location.

In a press release sent at 5 a.m. Pacific Time, FDU-Inkingi Executive Secretary Sylvain Sibomana wrote: “After a week of siege without any explanation whatsoever, the police have just drifted in the house and arrested Ms. Victoire Ingabire Umuhoza, the chair of FDU-Inkingi. She was taken immediately to the headquarters of the Criminal Investigation Department (CID) for unknown reasons. This arrest comes amid a climate of heavy political tension marked by wanton attacks against the democratic opposition.”

Victoire-Ingabires-home-under-police-siege-101110-by-Victoire-IU-for-Pres, Rwandan opposition leader Victoire Ingabire arrested, World News & Views On Oct. 9, Ingabire spoke to KPFA Radio in Berkeley, Calif., by phone (listen to the clip at the end of this story) and confirmed reports that the Rwandan government security operatives surrounding her home in Rwanda’s capital, Kigali, had been replaced by police with firearms, and that six of them were visible from inside. Others reported that there were Rwandan troops in her neighborhood and that shops had been ordered to close.

Ingabire returned to Rwanda from European exile in January, intending to run for the presidency against Rwandan President Paul Kagame, but she was not allowed to register her party or contest the election. Instead she was arrested, the first time in March, for violating Rwanda’s “genocide ideology” statutes, which criminalize disagreement with the official history of the horrific violence of 1994 that became known as the Rwanda Genocide.

American law professor and international criminal defense attorney Peter Erlinder then traveled to Rwanda to defend her, only to be arrested on the same “genocide ideology” charges. Erlinder was eventually released on medical grounds, after which he returned to the United States and continued to speak out against the Rwandan government and against the Pentagon’s use of Rwanda – and Uganda and Burundi – as its military proxies in Africa. This week Rwandan prosecutors announced their intention to proceed with their case against Erlinder after removing any citations of his pleadings at the International Criminal Tribunal on Rwanda as evidence against him.

Ingabire and Erlinder have both been outspoken about the “U.N. Mapping Report on Human Rights Abuse in the Democratic Republic of Congo” that was leaked to Le Monde on Aug. 26, then officially released on Oct. 1, with responses by the Rwandan, Ugandan, Burundian and Angolan governments, all of whose armies were implicated. The report most shocked the world with its documentation of the Rwandan army’s genocidal massacres of civilian Hutu people, Rwandan Hutu refugees and Congolese Hutus from Congo’s eastern to western border during the 1990s.

Rwanda-map-by-Wikimedia2, Rwandan opposition leader Victoire Ingabire arrested, World News & Views Of the three opposition candidates who attempted to contest this year’s Rwandan presidential election against incumbent President Paul Kagame, two are now in prison. Bernard Ntaganda, leader and presidential candidate of the Parti Social Imberakuri, was arrested on June 24 and has not been released. He has reported being tortured and, on Monday, before her own arrest, Ingabire reported that he had been moved to an undisclosed location.

Frank Habineza, chair and presidential candidate of the Democratic Green Party of Rwanda, has taken refuge with his family in Sweden, since the body of the party’s vice president, Andre Rwisereka, was found beheaded and dumped in the wetlands of the Makurera River in southern Rwanda on July 14.

Peter-Erlinder-Victoire-Ingabire-at-his-bail-hearing-0614101, Rwandan opposition leader Victoire Ingabire arrested, World News & Views There were also assassinations and assassination attempts against prominent opponents of the Rwandan government in neighboring South Africa, D.R. Congo and Tanzania during the election year, which concluded on Aug. 9 with the thoroughly implausible report that Rwandan President Paul Kagame had been re-elected with 93 percent of the vote.

San Francisco writer Ann Garrison writes for the San Francisco Bay View, Digital Journal, Examiner.com, OpEdNews, Global Research, Colored Opinions and her blog, Plutocracy Now. She can be reached at anniegarrison@gmail.com. This story originally appeared on Digital Journal.

KPFA News broadcast Oct. 9


Listen to KPFA at 94.1 FM in Northern California or at www.kpfa.org.