Tuesday 4 June 2013

Re: [wanabidii] Rwanda’s reaction to Pres. Kikwete’s statement is shochking

Hi Bravo DaJude, For telling the truth that Rwadan Government woudn't
like to hear it is unfortunate for the current sitting government of
Rwanda to think that what it does militarily in DRC is top secret to
itself. Frankly speaking the whole world and International community,
in general is full aware of day and night looting of natural resources
of Democratic Republic of Congo done by Rwanda through military
manoevres initiated by rebel groups which openly backed by Rwadan
government. This is not a concoction,this is a reality.

Surely, even though Rwandan Foreign Minister had tried to play
politics in serious matter like this one she knows well, really
christal clear that what President Jakaya Kikwete has said recently in
Addis Ababa is what all peace loving people would like to see taking
place long time ago without any hesitation or unnecessary delay as
history has full eveidence, that military and use of excessive force
can never bring about any lasting solution to any political turmoil
evirornment in any country.

So, negositiation between or among warrying parts is the best option.
I am sure this is exactctly what President Kikwete was trying to
advise government of Rwanda.

My simple advice to Rwanda is, this is not an oportunity to condem
President'Kikwete for his wise remarks. But it is time to think the
way forward in building peace and trust between Rwanda and DRC and
Great lakes Region as a whole

Meanwhile, I would like to congratulate our PEACE KEEPERS Women and
Men in uniform from Tanzania Peoples' Defence Forces (TPDF) who
deployed recently in Eastern Congo for their readness to defend
defenceless Congolese citizens whose lives are always endangered by
rebel attacks.God Bless Tanzania! God Bless Africa!


On 6/1/13, Judy Miriga <jbatec@yahoo.com> wrote:
>
>
> Good People,
>
>
>
>
> Atleast someone was able to stand up to tell Kagame off. He had
> played a beast in sheeps skin, responsible for killing and rapping
> innocent Congo women and children and destroying Congo for
> his selfishness and greed.
>
>
>
>
> Kagame should be taken to ICC Hague to clear his name against
> Congo killings and destructions. He is the reason Bosco did what
> he did to terrorize Congo with illegal Rebel groups of his making
> putting stupid unreasonable demands to Congo.
>
>
>
>
> It is unacceptable and Kudos to Pres. Kikwete, he did Africa proud........
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Judy Miriga
> Diaspora Spokesperson
> Executive Director
> Confederation Council Foundation for Africa Inc.,
> USA
> http://socioeconomicforum50.blogspot.com
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> ICC Prosecutor Fatou Bensouda answers your questions on Bosco Ntaganda and
> Kenyan cases
> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X-f9KGsndlo
> Published on Mar 22, 2013
>
> International Criminal Court Prosecutor, Fatou Bensouda says it's a good day
> for victims in the Democratic Republic of Congo - after the transfer of
> rebel leader Bosco Ntaganda to the Hague and earlier this week we saw
> efforts by lawyers of Kenya's president-elect, Uhuru Kenyatta, to have his
> ICC case reviewed. And there've been questions over the witnesses in the
> cases relating to Kenya's post-election violence in early 2008. In an
> exclusive interview with the BBC's Anna Holligan - the ICC Prosecutor began
> by explaining the significance of Ntaganda's surrender - for the Congolese
> people.
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Rebel leader Bosco Ntaganda surrenders in Rwanda
> http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=jvED2b0AAlo
> Published on Mar 18, 2013
>
> One of Africa's most wanted warlords has surrendered. Rwandan-born Bosco
> Ntaganda led a faction of the M23 rebels in DR Congo, and has been on the
> run for a year.
>
> He walked into the US embassy in Rwanda's capital, Kigali, and asked to be
> taken to the International Criminal Court. The court accuses him of crimes
> against humanity.
>
> Al Jazeera's Nazanine Moshiri reports.
>
> Source, credit to Aljazeera- http://www.aljazeera.com/video
>
> FAIR USE NOTICE: This video has been posted to further advance our
> understanding of environmental, political, human rights, economic,
> Technological, democratic, scientific, and social justice issues which
> constitutes a "fair use" of any such copyrighted material as provided for in
> section 107 of the US Copyright Law. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C.
> Section 107 for research and educational purposes.
>
>
> Gary Rogers 1 month ago
>
> Any WARLORD watching this.... This is your fate for crimes against humanity
> since the ICC set up in 2005 !!!
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> --- On Sat, 6/1/13, Abdalah Hamis <hamisznz@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>
> From: Abdalah Hamis <hamisznz@gmail.com>
> Subject: [wanabidii] Rwanda's reaction to Pres. Kikwete's statement is
> shochking
> To: "Wanabidii" <wanabidii@googlegroups.com>
> Date: Saturday, June 1, 2013, 10:34 AM
>
>
>
>
>
>
> RWANDA'S REACTION TO PRESIDENT KIKWETE'S
>
>
> STATEMENT IS SHOCKING TO SAY THE LEAST!
>
>
>
> On 26 May 2013 in Addis Ababa the UN Secretary General, Mr. Ban Ki-moon and
> the Chairperson of the African Union Commission Dr. Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma,
> convened the first meeting of the Regional Oversight Mechanism of the Peace,
> Security and Cooperation Framework for the DRC and Region.
>
> It was at this important meeting where the President of the United Republic
> of Tanzania, H.E. Jakaya Mrisho Kikwete made what many level headed
> commentators have referred to as candid and commonsensical remarks about the
> protracted conflicts in the Great Lakes Region.
>
> President Kikwete - a seasoned and consummate diplomat who has helped broker
> many peace deals in Africa - remarked that it was high time Rwanda and
> Uganda gave serious attention to peace talks with FDLR and
> ADF rebels respectively.
>
> He said, and correctly so, that it was evident the barrel of the gun cannot
> bring about the ultimate answer as testified by the recurrence of fighting
> in our region. He never condoned the role that the FDLR rebels played in the
> 1994 genocide. He was being reasonable and pragmatic.
>
> Rwanda should know better than any other country that there is no way
> Tanzania would condone or sympathize with the perpetrators of genocide. To
> make such insinuations is, quite frankly, a demonstration of breathtaking
> ignorance about Tanzania's enviable and unparalleled history - the history
> of speaking out against any forms of crimes and injustices. Moreover, for
> Rwanda to make such insinuations is to show just what a short memory span
> this country has.
>
> Admittedly, genocide brought about painful and unforgettable misery to the
> people of Rwanda but its spillover effects were felt well beyond its
> borders. The effects of genocide were felt right inside Tanzania which had
> to shoulder the burden of providing for thousands of Rwandan refugees.
>
> By the way, Tanzania has a long history of taking good care of Rwandan
> refugees both before and after genocide. The sons and daughters of the
> Rwandan refugees benefitted from Tanzania's generous education system by
> studying, for free, at the country's Universities and many of them are now
> occupying high positions in the Government of their motherland.
>
> So given the foregoing, I have to say that I have been taken aback by our
> neighbors' over-reaction to what was a completely innocuous statement by
> President Kikwete. Indeed, what the President said could (and should) have
> been said by other leaders a long time ago. What he said is a no-brainer!
>
> It is commonsensical! Negotiations have a much better chance of resulting
> into durable peace than the use of force. Thus, I find the reactions from
> Rwanda not only disturbing but also objectionable and utterly impudent! What
> is even more shocking is the discourteous behavior shown by the Rwanda's
> Foreign Minister.
>
> She seems to be getting too much big for her boots as to suggest that
> President Kikwete's statement was absurd! She even has the audacity to ask
> that he should retract it. If anything, I think it is our Foreign Ministry
> which should summon the Ambassador of Rwanda in Dar es Salaam and ask him to
> clarify his Minister's inadvisable utterances.
>
> For far too long now the international community has adopted a softly softly
> approach with respect to Rwanda and this has meant that this tiny country
> gets away with literally everything, even murder. Rwanda has become like a
> spoiled child - untouchable and overly sensitive to everything even the
> slightest suggestion of censure. Rwanda has a tendency of not taking kindly
> any form of criticism whether from within or without. And its leadership
> comes across as snobbish and delusional. May be the western countries'
> plaudits about its so called success story have finally got into the heads
> of Rwandan leaders so much that they think they know it all.
>
> For Rwanda to say that they cannot engage in talks with FDLR rebels because
> of their role in 1994 genocide is to allow themselves to be the captives of
> the past. History is replete with numerous instances of former sworn enemies
> burying their hatchets and extending an olive branch to one another for the
> sake of peaceful coexistence and future prosperity. This happened in South
> Africa where ANC and other progressive movements sat down with the
> perpetrators of one of the most brutal and inhumane policies in the history
> of mankind (apartheid) and agreed to work together in an inclusive and
> democratic society. Similarly, after many decades of committing some of the
> most heinous crimes against the people of Angola, UNITA is now part of the
> democratic government of that country. And in 2011, US and its allies
> initiated direct talks with some elements of the Taliban in Doha (Qatar), if
> my memory serves me well.
>
> Rwanda should wake up and smell the coffee! Being delusional has not worked
> and won't work. It is now close to 20 yrs since the 1994 genocide and during
> all that time Rwanda has not been able to achieve its objectives visa vis
> FDLR rebels through the use of force. Any sane person in Kigali should see
> the wisdom of changing the tactic/strategy which is, for all purposes and
> intents, what our President said in the Statement. Rwanda should understand
> that by calling for direct talks, Tanzania does not suggest, by any stretch
> of imagination, that the architects and executors of genocide should go scot
> free. Not at all! Talks can, and indeed should, offer the mechanism of
> dealing with known perpetrators of genocide by isolating them from
> non-perpetrators such as those born after 1994. This is just one example of
> approaching talks. I am sure there are many others.
>
> But talking of genocide, am I wrong in recalling that even President Kagame
> himself was once found to be complicit in this crime by a French Magistrate?
> I recall that Rwanda's reaction to this finding was, as we have come to
> expect, fast and furious to the extent of severing its diplomatic relations
> with France. Again, this goes to show that this "spoiled child" can't stand
> any sort of censure or straight talking. I also recall that as recent as
> last year a UN report revealed that Rwanda's Kagame had committed or
> assisted in committing genocide in DRC!
>
> Despite all this compelling evidence, neighbors of Rwanda are still ready to
> engage that country in talks. Why can't Rwanda show the same attitude? And
> lest he forgets, Kagame himself and his RPF henchmen come from a background
> of rebellion. They were rebels operating from Ugandan forests before taking
> over power in 1994. However, despite their "rebels" status they were invited
> and took part in the Arusha peace process of the early 1990s.
>
>
> Finally, I have a gut feeling that Rwanda doesn't want FDLR rebels to go
> away that's is why it is vehemently opposing the suggestion of talks which
> is one sure way of ending this conflict once and for all. This because, the
> perpetual presence of FDLR rebels in DRC gives Rwanda a convenient excuse to
> interfere in the DRC's affairs thereby making the country ungovernable for
> its own economic and geopolitical interests. I read somewhere that Rwanda's
> army – which is one of the biggest for a country of that economy and size -
> is mainly sustained by the exploitation of DRC's natural resources. So,
> Rwanda goes into the DRC on the pretext that it is in hot pursuit of the
> FDLR rebels but in actual fact what it does is to plunder the resources.
>
> And Rwanda is particularly angry with Tanzania because by being part of
> MONUSCO in DRC, its misdeeds will be exposed and curtailed by our
> non-nonsense troops. So the over-reaction to our President's innocuous
> statement should not be seen in isolation. It is part of the frustration
> born out of the uneasy situation which Rwanda finds itself in as a result of
> our troops being part of the UN/SADC intervention force in DRC.
>
>
> I submit.
>
>
> Concerned Citizen
>
>
> Open Letter of support to president
> Kikwete's wise statement on
> Rwanda's FDLR
>
> Posted on May 30, 2013 | Leave a comment
>
>
>
> Tanzania is the main contributors to the 3,069 peacekeepers of the UN
> international brigade of intervention aimed at targeting rebel groups
> operating in Eastern Congo including M23.
>
>
>
> UN Secretary General
> Ban Ki-moon
> United Nations
> New York, NY 10017 USA
> 212-963-5012 fax: 212-963-7055
>
>
> Email: ecu@un.org
>
>
> May 29, 2013
>
>
> RE: OPEN LETTER OF SUPPORT TO PRESIDENT KIKWETE'S WISE STATEMENT ON RWANDA'S
> FDLR AT 50TH ANNIVERSARY OF AFRICAN UNITY, ADDIS ABABA
>
>
>
> On May 26, at the AU summit in Addis Ababa, Tanzania's President
> JakayaKikwete made a statement that will go down in history as the wisest
> ever. Speaking during the meeting for the parties concerned by the regional
> Peace Security and Cooperation Framework for the Democratic Republic of
> Congo, President Kikwete urged local Governments to address issues they have
> with armed opponents, including the Rwanda's FDLR based in Congo.
>
>
> We, The Rwandan Dream Youth Worldwide, wish to ask the UN to support Hon.
> Kikwete's statement and call for negotiations between the Rwandan Government
> and the FDLR in order to put an end to the sufferance caused by two decades
> conflict.
> Since it came to power in the wake of the 1994 genocide, Paul Kagame's
> Government focused on wiping out the Hutu rebels who desperately took up
> arms after the massacre of hundreds of thousands of refugees by the Rwandan
> army in the forests of Congo. We have to make it clear that the settlement
> of the FDLR issue is an absolute prerequisite to secure stability in the
> East of Congo.
>
>
> In order to achieve and sustain peaceful cohabitation between DRC and
> Rwanda, it is crucial to address once for all the issue of the Rwandan
> refugees who are still on Congo's soil. The troubling fact is that the
> Rwandan Government is enthusiast to the cause of Kinyarwanda speaking Tutsi
> Congolese claiming to be excluded in their own country while the same
> government keeps ignoring the issue of Rwandan refugees who have spent
> decades in wretched conditions in DRC.
>
>
> Thousands of Rwandan refugees are reluctant to return due to political
> intolerance prevailing in the country. Opposition politicians, human rights
> activists and journalists are permanently in danger of being murdered, put
> in jail or forced to exile.
>
>
> In our opinion, it is not possible to address Congo's M23 issue and ignore
> Rwanda's FDLR issue. We are convinced that Hon. Kikwete's statement could be
> a stepping-stone to a stronger commitment from all the stakeholders.
> Tanzania has always been part of all processes meant to bring peace, justice
> and democracy to Rwanda, that is why we urge the UN to consider talks
> between Rwandans hosted by Tanzania.
>
>
> Faithfully.
>
>
> The Rwandan Dream Youth
>
>
> Cc
>
> Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR)
> EAC Heads of States
> The President of the United States of America
> The African Union
> East African Legislative Assembly (EALA)
> All Embassies Accredited to Rwanda
> The National Assembly of Tanzania
> The Rwanda Civil Society Platform
> Ibuka
> In response to the Tanzanian president Kikwete's statement on Sunday May
> 26th 2013 on the right way forward for sustainable peace in the Great Lakes
> region, Kigali's regime of president Paul Kagame has become hysterical. Two
> examples of such subsequent attitudes are 1) the fact that it is resorting
> to lies as usual to avoid addressing the root causes of the regional and
> persistent instability; 2) it is diverting attention by naming and shaming
> anyone supportive of that new rational approach to the pending question
> which is hindering overall development of the region. Understandably, having
> built its policies on lies for almost the last twenty years in power, if the
> foundations of Kagame's regime had to change in that new logical direction,
> it would be its end. That is what explains the hysteria about possible talks
> between Kigali and FDLR.
>
>
> The lies in one of such examples, which is a letter written by Alice
> Umutoni, Vice Coordinator of the organizing committee of the 19th
> Commemoration of the Genocide against Tutsi in Rwanda in the U.S.A., are
> many but a selection was here made to make a point.
>
>
> Probably the author who addresses the letter to Barack Obama demanding the
> American president to review his state visit to Tanzania following Kikwete's
> statement thinks that people have very short memory.
>
>
> The UN Mapping Report published in October 2010 explains that instead of the
> millions of Congolese she alleges FDLR might have killed, the latter has
> been protecting Hutu refugees in DRC who have been victims of RPF soldiers
> who overall with other allied forces from Burundi and Uganda committed war
> crimes, crimes against humanity and crimes of genocide nature if brought in
> front of a court.
>
>
> The open letter to the American president brings us as well an argumentation
> based on a judiciary case related to the killing of innocent Americans Rob
> Haubner and Susan Miller killed in Bwindi Forest in 1999, again counting on
> people's ignorance of facts on the Rwandan recent history.
>
>
> The two Americans were killed in a staged crime by Kagame's RPF at the
> height of the war with Hutu rebels at the time with the aim of tarnishing
> their image in the eyes of the US government.
>
>
> Unfortunately for Kigali, the culprits that it produces as perpetrators of
> the odious crime, once heard by the American judiciary, it was found out
> that they had been tortured in Kami camp in Rwanda to accept the commission
> of the crimes.
>
> http://therisingcontinent.wordpress.com/2013/05/30/open-letter-of-support-to-president-kikwetes-wise-statement-on-rwandas-fdlr/
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Rwanda's incongruous response to Tanzanian
>
> President Jakaya Kikwete proposal for a political
>
> solution to the Congo crisis.
>
>
> Parution: Saturday 1 June 2013, 02:43
> Par:Professor Charles Kambanda
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> The Addis Ababa Peace Security and Cooperation Framework for the Democratic
> Republic of Congo signed in February of this year highlighted that the UN
> intervention brigade meant to take on all armed groups in DRC must be backed
> by a politically sustainable strategy. At the occasion of the 50th
> anniversary of the Organization of African Unity, celebrated in Addis Ababa,
> the Tanzanian President Jakaya Kikwete underscored the necessity of talks
> between the governments of Rwanda, Uganda and DR Congo with the armed groups
> fighting these governments from Congolese territory. In particular, the
> Tanzanian president suggested that President Paul Kagame of Rwanda ought to
> hold direct talks with the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Rwanda
> [FDLR], the Rwandan armed rebel movement operating from the Congolese
> provinces of North Kivus. President Kagame has adamantly rejected President
> Kikwete's proposal.
>
>
> The comical response from the Government of Rwanda (GoR)
>
> Rwanda's foreign minister and the GoR spokesperson's response was that her
> government does not envisage talks with FDLR, a group her government refers
> to as genocidaire (a group responsible for genocide). The survivors of the
> Tutsi genocide associations, which are sponsored by Kagame's government,
> have condemned the Tanzanian president's proposal citing the same reason.
> Some of the Tutsi genocide survivors' organizations have termed President
> Kikwete a 'genocide denier'. It should be recalled that the traditional
> unresolved ethnic conflict (between the Hutu and Tutsi) in Rwanda is the
> direct cause of the 1994 crimes of international concern including genocide
> against the Tutsi and the 1996/99 crimes of international concern including
> genocide against the Hutu in Congo as documented by the UN Mapping Rapport.
>
>
>
> Counter "genocide" accusation between the Hutu and Tutsi
>
> The Rwanda Patriotic Front/Army (RPF/A) is a predominately Tutsi political
> and military group. The Democratic Front for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR)
> is a predominately Hutu political and military group. In 1990, RPF/A
> attacked the then Hutu-led government of Rwanda. The civil war between the
> predominately Tutsi rebels and predominately Hutu government was
> characterized by horrific crimes of international concern including
> genocide. Both sides used international crimes, including genocide, as a
> military and political tool; to weaken, demoralize and humiliate the 'enemy'
> as well as demonizing the 'enemy' for political triumph and international
> sympathy for 'our' group. Whichever side would win the war, it was clear
> during the Rwandan ethnic civil war that the victor would demonize the
> vanquished 'enemy'. The Tutsi victors, led by Kagame, did exactly that.
>
>
> The Tutsi won the civil war
>
>
> RPF wasted no time; they sought and received a UN resolution condemning the
> "Rwandan genocide". The UN set up an international tribunal, the ICTR in
> Arusha Tanzania, to hold perpetrators of Rwandan genocide accountable. For
> political reasons, the ICTR did not try any Tutsi perpetrator. RPF then set
> to 'market' their narrative of the "Rwandan genocide". The Hutu, the
> vanquished, were labeled evil, perpetrators of the Tutsi genocide. The Tutsi
> were innocent victims. RPF/A made it a taboo and illegal to mention the
> international crimes, including genocide, RPF/A had committed against the
> Hutu in Rwanda and Congo. The vanquished Hutu did not give up either. They
> created their force, FDLR. In essence, until 2005 when Kagame divide FDLR
> and "repatriated" some FDLR top commanders, FDLR was to the Hutu what RPF/A
> was to the Tutsi. Either ethnic group needed an armed group to protect their
> group against extermination.
>
>
>
> Each ethnic group (Tutsi and Hutu) has perpetrators and victims of
> international crimes, including genocide
>
> No country in contemporary history has politicized and legitimized horrific
> crimes, including genocide, like Rwanda. Both Tutsi and Hutu have extremists
> who are ordinarily considered heroes for perpetrating horrendous crimes
> against the 'enemy' ethnic group on behalf of 'our' ethnic group. The insane
> ethnic 'common consciousness' among ordinary Hutu and Tutsi legitimizes
> horrible crimes, including genocide, against 'our' enemy. Each ethnic group
> has its "ethnic crusaders". The Rwandan "ethnic crusaders", Tutsi or Hutu,
> can do or say anything to sustain and market their ethnic narrative no
> matter how ridiculous and false their narrative might be. Rwanda's political
> culture operates on the axis that the victor takes it all and their
> narrative becomes the oppressive law and biased story/history. Today it is
> the Tutsi in power and their narrative prevails. For over thirty years prior
> to 1994, it was the Hutu in power, their
> narrative prevailed.
>
> Propaganda aside, each side has stinking criminals (devils) and innocent
> people (good guys). If Kagame cannot negotiate with the Hutu rebels because
> the Hutu rebels are accused of genocide … because the ICC indicted the
> leader of the Hutu rebels (FDLR) … then Kagame puts his own alleged crimes
> in issue.
>
> First, Kagame and his RPF/A top commanders have been indicted by both
> Spanish and French courts, for crimes of international concern including
> terrorism and genocide against the Hutu. Second, the former International
> Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR) prosecutor concluded investigations into
> a significant number of the Tutsi RPF/A top commanders' international
> crimes. Kagame himself was investigated for international crimes. The ICTR
> prosecutor was prepared to prosecute Kagame and some of his RPF/A top
> commanders for international crimes and 'possibly genocide' against the
> Hutu. President Bush, then Kagame's buddy, ordered the ICC not to prosecute
> Kagame because that would create a diplomatic crisis between USA and Rwanda
> (Kagame), a "strategic" US ally in the region. Third, the United Nations
> Mapping Report has detailed international crimes, including, possible
> genocide, against the Hutu that Kagame and his troops allegedly committed
> in
> Congo against Rwandan Hutu refugees. Kagame himself is a suspect of the
> same international crimes. Apparently, Kagame has no moral authority to
> condemn the same crimes he allegedly committed and are well documented.
> Kagame is praised for having stopped the Tutsi genocide. However, he
> allegedly perpetrated genocide against the Hutu.
>
>
>
> Demonizing the "other" ethnic group for political survival
>
>
> An ordinary Hutu or Tutsi does not recognize the 'other' ethnic group (Hutu
> or Tutsi) as legitimate and equal holder of rights and freedoms. The ethnic
> group leaders in power always use State apparatus to oppress and exclude the
> "other' ethnic group. Kagame's ruling ethnic clique feels insecure about the
> "other" ethnic group. Demonizing the oppressed ethnic group is a
> psychological catalyst to justify elimination and exclusion of the "wrong"
> ethnic group's access to the country's limited resources, as equal
> stakeholders. Kagame has successfully demonized the Hutu, the vanquished,
> with the "genocide" brand name. Proposing direct talks with FDLR is like
> "robbing" Kagame of his political survival tool. Kagame would stop at
> nothing to resist any call for him to talk peace with his political and
> ethnic foes; Hutu, Tutsi and/or Twa.
>
> The argument that FDLR is a group of people that committed genocide is
> probably false
>
> All FDLR founders and first top commanders, until around 2005, "renounced"
> the Hutu rebellion. They all serve in Kagame's government now. These
> commanders were never prosecuted or given amnesty. Kagame insists the FDLR
> founders who accepted to join his government are innocent. It follows,
> therefore, that Kagame's concern with FDLR is not genocide. Kagame is scared
> of the military capacity of FDLR which remains one of the few serious threat
> to his dictatorship. If the founders of FDLR and its top commanders are not
> guilty of genocide, how does Kagame explain that FDLR is a group of
> 'genocidaires'? There is no known criminal law theory to justify the" FDLR
> genocidaire" theory as Kagame claims. In Kagame's social-political paradigm,
> FDLR signifies a Hutu armed rebellion which threatens his monopoly of power
> and authority. The ICC has indicted the top FDLR commander, Gen. Mudacumura.
> However, Gen. Mudacumura was not indicted for genocide.
> If FDLR has committed genocide, as Kagame insists, why didn't the Rwandan
> government hand over evidence for genocide to the ICC for Mudacumura to be
> indicted for genocide?
>
> It is evident that Kagame's "hypersensitivity" to the Tanzanian leader's
> proposal is a defense mechanism, motivated by his fear for what would happen
> to his Tutsi clique if he is forced to share power with his political and
> ethnic foes.
>
>
>
>
>
> Conclusion
>
> President Kikwete's proposal is the only meticulous way to go for
> sustainable peace in Congo. Kagame ought to accept direct talks with all his
> political opponents including the Hutu rebels (FDLR). The government of
> Rwanda's hilarious response to president Kikwete's proposal is regrettable
> but not surprising. Kagame's political survival is pegged on demonizing,
> assassinating and imprisoning his political opponents. Genocide, an
> unfortunate crime Rwandans have been subjected to, has been Kagame's major
> tool for oppressing and terrorizing Rwandans in general and political
> opponents in particular. Although some people in FDLR could have committed
> genocide against the Tutsi, there is no clear evidence to prove that FDLR as
> a group committed genocide.
>
>
> In any case, Gen. Kagame is not a court of law. Kagame himself, and a
> significant number of people in his Tutsi clique-controlled government, are
> accused of horrible crimes, including genocide, against the Hutu refugees in
> Congo. The Tanzanian government should use its political and economic
> capacities to pressure Gen. Kagame into a dialogue with his political
> opponents including FDLR
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> --
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