Human rights in Rwanda
Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Human rights in Rwanda have been rated as "mediocre" by the US government.[1]
As decolonization ideas spread across Africa, a Tutsi party and Hutu party were created. Both became militarized, and in 1959, Tutsi attempted to assassinate Grégoire Kayibanda, the leader of PARMEHUTU. This resulted in the wind of destruction known as the "Social Revolution" in Rwanda, violence which pitted Hutu against Tutsi, killing 20,000 to 100,000 Tutsi and forcing more into exile.
After the withdrawal of Belgium from Africa in 1962, Rwanda separated from Rwanda-Urundi by referendum, which also eliminated the Tutsi monarchy, the mwami. In 1963, the Hutu government killed 14 000 Tutsi, after Tutsi guerillas attacked Rwanda from Burundi. The government maintained mandatory ethnic identity cards, and capped Tutsi numbers in universities and the civil service.[citation needed]
During the Rwandan Genocide in 1994, 800,000 people were murdered.[2]
Contents
Post genocide human rights issues
Subsequent governments, including the current government led by President Paul Kagame, have been accused by Amnesty International of numerous human rights violations, notably extrajudicial killings. According to Amnesty International, between December 1997 and May 1998, thousands of Rwandans "disappeared" or were murdered by members of government security forces and of armed opposition groups. Amnesty International states that the Rwandan Patriotic Army and armed opposition forces both "deliberately target unarmed civilians", including children.[3]
According to Human Rights Watch, Rwandan troops involved in the Second Congo War were responsible for the deaths of thousands of Congolese civilians.[4] At the time, Pasteur Bizimungu was president of Rwanda, while Paul Kagame was vice-president and minister of defence. In 2010, the United Nations issued a report accusing Rwanda of having "committ[ed] war crimes against ethnic Hutus" in the Democratic Republic of Congo during the period. The report suggested that "Rwanda's army may have committed genocide" against Hutus - a suggestion "furiously" denied by Kagame's government.[5]
Regarding human rights under the government of President Paul Kagame, Human Rights Watch in 2007 accused Rwandan police of several instances of extrajudicial killings and deaths in custody.[6][7] In June 2006, the International Federation of Human Rights and Human Rights Watch described what they called "serious violations of international humanitarian law committed by the Rwanda Patriotic Army".[8]
According to The Economist in 2008, Kagame "allows less political space and press freedom at home than Robert Mugabe does in Zimbabwe", and "[a]nyone who poses the slightest political threat to the regime is dealt with ruthlessly".[9]
Kagame has been accused of using memories of the genocide to muzzle his opposition. In 2009, Human Rights Watch claimed that under the pretense of maintaining ethnic harmony, Kagame's government displays "a marked intolerance of the most basic forms of dissent." It also claimed that laws enacted in 2009 that ban "genocide ideology" are frequently used to legally gag the opposition.[10] In 2010, along similar lines, The Economist claimed that Kagame frequently accuses his opponents of "divisionism," or formenting racial hatred.[11] In 2011, Freedom House noted that the government justifies restrictions on civil liberties as a necessary measure to prevent ethnic violence. These restrictions are so severe that even mundane discussions of ethnicity can result in being arrested for divisionism.[12]
The United States government in 2006 described the human rights record of the Kagame government as "mediocre", citing the "disappearances" of political dissidents, as well as arbitrary arrests and acts of violence, torture, and murders committed by police. U. S. authorities listed human rights problems including the existence of political prisoners and limited freedom of the press, freedom of assembly and freedom of religion.[1]
Reporters Without Borders listed Rwanda in 147th place out of 169 for freedom of the press in 2007,[13] and reported that "Rwandan journalists suffer permanent hostility from their government and surveillance by the security services". It cited cases of journalists being threatened, harassed, and arrested for criticising the government. According to Reporters Without Borders, "President Paul Kagame and his government have never accepted that the press should be guaranteed genuine freedom".[14]
In 2010, Rwanda fell to 169th place, out of 178, entering the ranks of the ten lowest-ranked countries in the world for press freedom. Reporters Without Borders stated that "Rwanda, Yemen and Syria have joined Burma and North Korea as the most repressive countries in the world against journalists",[15] adding that in Rwanda, "the third lowest-ranked African country", "this drop was caused by the suspending of the main independent press media, the climate of terror surrounding the presidential election, and the murdering, in Kigali, of the deputy editor of Umuvugizi, Jean-Léonard Rugambage. In proportions almost similar to those of Somalia, Rwanda is emptying itself of its journalists, who are fleeing the country due to their fear of repression".[16]
In December 2008, a draft report commissioned by the United Nations, to be presented to the Sanctions Committee of the United Nations Security Council, alleged that Kagame's Rwanda was supplying child soldiers to Tutsi rebels in Nord-Kivu, Democratic Republic of the Congo, in the context of the conflict in Nord-Kivu in 2008. The report also alleged that Rwanda was supplying General Laurent Nkunda with "military equipment, the use of Rwandan banks, and allow[ing] the rebels to launch attacks from Rwandan territory on the Congolese army".[17]
In July 2009, the Commonwealth Human Rights Initiative issued a report critical of the human rights situation in Rwanda.[18] It highlighted "a lack of political freedom and harassment of journalists".[19] It urged the Rwandan government to enact legislation enabling freedom of information and to "authorise the presence of an opposition in the next election".[20] It also emphasised abuses carried out by Rwandan troops in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and described Rwanda's overall human rights situation as "very poor":[21]
The report details a country in which democracy, freedom of speech, the press and human rights are undermined or violently abused, in which courts fail to meet international standards, and a country which has invaded its neighbour, the Democratic Republic of Congo, four times since 1994. ... Censorship is prevalent, according to the report, and the government has a record of shutting down independent media and harassing journalists. It concludes that Rwanda's constitution is used as a "façade" to hide "the repressive nature of the regime" and backs claims that Rwanda is essentially "an army with a state".[22]
2010s
In the lead-up to the 2010 presidential election, the United Nations "demanded a full investigation into allegations of politically motivated killings of opposition figures". André Kagwa Rwisereka, the vice-president of the Democratic Green Party of Rwanda, was found beheaded. "[A] lawyer who had participated in genocide trials at a UN tribunal was shot dead". There was a murder attempt on Kayumba Nyamwasa, "a former senior Rwandan general who had fallen out with Kagame". And Jean-Léonard Rugambage, a journalist investigating that attempted murder, was himself murdered.[23][24]
In 2011, Amnesty International criticized the continued detention of former transportation minister and Bizimungu ally Charles Ntakirutinka, who was seven years into a ten-year sentence at Kigali central prison.[25] Amnesty International called him a prisoner of conscience and named him a 2011 "priority case".[25]
In October 2012, the body of Théogène Turatsinze, a Rwandan businessman living in Mozambique, who was thought to have "had access to politically sensitive financial information related to certain Rwandan government insiders", was found tied up and floating in the sea. Police in Mozambique "initially indicated Rwandan government involvement in the killing before contacting the government and changing its characterization to a common crime. Rwandan government officials publicly condemned the killing and denied involvement." [26] Foreign media connected the murder to those of several prominent critics of the Rwandan government over the previous two years.[27][28]
To improve the perception of its human rights record, the Rwandan government in 2009 engaged a U. S. public relations firm, Racepoint group, who had improved the image of Libya's Gaddafi, Tunisia, Angola, Equatorial Guinea, Ethiopia, and Senegal. An internet site was set up by BTP advisers, a British firm, to attack critics. Racepoint's agreement with the government stated that it would "flood" the Internet and the media with positive stories about Rwanda.[29]
Critics of the Rwandan government dead or missing
- 1995: Journalist Manasse Mugabo disappears in Kigali; not seen again[30]
- 1996: First post-genocide Interior Minister Seth Sendashonga and businessman Augustin Bugirimfura shot dead in Nairobi[30]
- 1998: Journalist Emmanuel Munyemanzi disappears from Kigali; body spotted in city but not returned to family[30]
- 1998: RPF MP and government intelligence chief before the genocide Theoneste Lizinde assassinated in Nairobi[30]
- 2000: First post-genocide President Pasteur Bizimungu's adviser, Asiel Kabera, shot dead in Kigali[30]
- 2003: EX-RPF officer and top judge Augustin Cyiza and magistrate Eliezar Runyaruka disappear from Kigali; not seen again[30]
- 2003: Opposition MP Leonard Hitimana disappears from Kigali; not seen again[30]
- 2010: Ex-RPF officer Faustin Kayumba Nyamwasa shot and wounded in Johannesburg[30]
- 2010: Journalist Jean-Leonard Rugambage gunned down in Kigali[30]
- 2010: Reporter Dominique Makeli survives abduction in Kampala[30]
- 2010: André Kagwa Rwisereka, deputy leader of the Democratic Green Party, found beheaded[23]
- 2011: Charles Ingabire, a journalist and "outspoken critic of the Rwandan government", gunned down in Kampala[31]
- 2014 : Patrick Karegeya, former head of the foreign Intelligence services and supporter of the opposition, found strangled in a hotel in Johannesburg.[32]
Historical situation
The following chart shows Rwanda's ratings since 1972 in the Freedom in the World reports, published annually by Freedom House. A rating of 1 is "free"; 7, "not free".[33]1
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International treaties
Rwanda's stances on international human rights treaties are as follows:
See also
- Human trafficking in Rwanda
- Internet censorship and surveillance in Rwanda
- LGBT rights in Rwanda
- Politics of Rwanda
Notes
- 1.^ Note that the "Year" signifies the "Year covered". Therefore the information for the year marked 2008 is from the report published in 2009, and so on.
- 2.^ As of January 1.
- 3.^ The 1982 report covers the year 1981 and the first half of 1982, and the following 1984 report covers the second half of 1982 and the whole of 1983. In the interest of simplicity, these two aberrant "year and a half" reports have been split into three year-long reports through interpolation.
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 "Human Rights Reports: Rwanda", embassy of the United States in Rwanda
- ↑ "Mandats d'arrêt contre des proches de Kagame", Nouvel Observateur
- ↑ "RWANDA: À l'abri des regards, les "disparitions" et les homicides continuent", Amnesty International, 23 June 1998
- ↑ "Congo, Rwanda Responsables de Graves Abus", Human Rights Watch
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- ↑ "Rwanda: Police Killings Tarnish Rule of Law", Human Rights Watch, 24 July 2007
- ↑ "'There Will Be No Trial': Police Killings of Detainees and the Imposition of Collective Punishments", Human Rights Watch, July 2007
- ↑ "ICTR Should Address Serious Violations of International Humanitarian Law Committed by the RPA", Human Rights Watch, 2 June 2006
- ↑ "A flawed hero", The Economist, 21 August 2008
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- ↑ "Eritrea ranked last for first time while G8 members, except Russia, recover lost ground", Reporters Without Borders
- ↑ "Rwanda - Annual Report 2007", Reporters Without Borders
- ↑ "Classement mondial 2010", Reporters Without Borders
- ↑ (French) "Classement mondial 2010: Zoom sur l'Afrique", Reporters Without Borders
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Commonwealth Human Rights Initiative report on human rights in Rwanda, July 2009
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ "Le Rwanda, 54e État membre", Radio Canada, 29 November 2009
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- ↑ 23.0 23.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ "Violence rises in Rwanda as election nears", Associated Press, 28 June 2010
- ↑ 25.0 25.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ "2012 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices - Rwanda", United States Department of State
- ↑ "Rwanda timeline: Descent into tyranny", Channel 4 News, 25 November 2012
- ↑ "Murder of Rwandan banker: Police admit no progress", The Zimbabwean, 19 October 2012
- ↑ "How a U.S. agency cleaned up Rwanda’s genocide-stained image", The Globe and Mail, 31 January 2012
- ↑ 30.0 30.1 30.2 30.3 30.4 30.5 30.6 30.7 30.8 30.9 "Profile: Rwanda's President Paul Kagame", BBC, 10 December 2010
- ↑ "RWANDAN EXILE JOURNALIST GUNNED DOWN IN KAMPALA", Reporters Without Borders, 2 December 2011
- ↑ « Rwanda: l’ex-chef du renseignement assassiné en Afrique du Sud », Agence France-Presse, 2 January 2014
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