Trial Of Elderly Rwanda Genocide Suspect Opens At UN Court
BY MIKE CORDER
EDS NOTE: GRAPHIC CONTENT - FILE - A bulldozer operated by a French soldier shovels bodies into a mass grave at the Kibumba camp near Goma, Democratic Republic of Congo, then known as Zaire, on July 31, 1994. A frail 87-year-old Rwandan, FĆ©licien Kabuga, accused of encouraging and bankrolling the 1994 genocide in his home country goes on trial Thursday, Sept. 29, 2022, at a United Nations tribunal, nearly three decades after the 100-day massacre that left 800,000 dead. (AP Photo/Michel Euler, File)FĆ©licien Kabuga is one of the last fugitives charged over the genocide to face justice. Even without him in court, the start of his trial marks a key day of reckoning for Rwandans who survived the killings or whose families were murdered.
Presiding Judge Iain Bonomy said the proceedings could start without Kabuga, who did not attend amid a dispute over his legal representation.
The courtās chief prosecutor, Serge Brammertz, said Kabugaās no-show was āa strategic decision.ā Brammertz said that throughout preparations for trial, āhe had a lawyer, very competent lawyer representing him. So as far as we are concerned, the proceedings are absolutely guaranteed.ā
The mass killing of Rwandaās Tutsi minority was triggered on April 6, 1994, when a plane carrying President JuvĆ©nal Habyarimana was shot down and crashed in the capital, Kigali, killing the leader who, like the majority of Rwandans, was an ethnic Hutu. Kabugaās daughter married Habyarimanaās son.
The Tutsi minority was blamed for downing the plane. Bands of Hutu extremists began slaughtering Tutsis and their perceived supporters, with help from the army, police, and militias.
Brammertz said the trial is significant after a long wait for justice. Some 50 witnesses will testify for the prosecution, including many in Rwanda and some serving prison sentences, he said.
āThis trial will also be an opportunity to remind the world again of the grave dangers of genocide ideology and hate speech,ā he said in a statement. āKabuga had a central role in provoking hatred of Tutsis, dehumanizing innocent civilians and paving the way for genocide.ā
In his opening statement, prosecution lawyer Rashid Rashid described Kabuga as an enthusiastic supporter of the slaughter who armed, trained and encouraged murderous Hutu militias known as Interahamwe.
Rashid said the trial was opening nearly three decades after the genocide because of Kabugaās determined efforts to evade capture.
In Rwanda, Naphtal Ahishakiye, the executive secretary of a genocide survivorsā group known as Ibuka, said ahead of Thursdayās hearing that itās never too late for justice to be delivered.
āEven with money and protection, one cannot escape a genocide crime,ā Ahishakiye said in Rwanda ahead of Thursdayās trial at the International Residual Mechanism for Criminal Tribunals in The Hague.
Rashid described Kabunga as a wealthy businessman with close links to the Hutu political elite, who incited genocide through the RTLM broadcaster he helped fund and establish. In some cases, it provided locations of Tutsis so they could be hunted down and killed, he said.
Kabuga is also accused of having paid for weapons, including machetes, used by militias to slaughter Tutsis and their perceived supporters.
Kabuga ādid not need to wield a rifle or a machete at a roadblock, rather he supplied weapons in bulk and facilitated training that prepared the Interahamwe to use them,ā Rashid said.
āHe did not need to pick up a microphone and call for extermination of Tutsi ... rather he founded, funded and served as president of Radio TĆ©lĆ©vision Libre des Mille Collines (RTLM), the radio station that broadcast genocidal propaganda across Rwanda.ā
Rashid called the broadcaster a āmouthpiece for anti-Tutsi propagandaā and said Kabugaās trial was about holding him accountable for his āsubstantial and intentional contribution to ... genocide.ā
Kabuga is charged with genocide, incitement to commit genocide, conspiracy to commit genocide as well as persecution, extermination and murder. He has pleaded not guilty. If convicted he faces a maximum sentence of life imprisonment.
After years of evading international efforts to track him down, Kabuga, who had a $5 million bounty on his head, was arrested near Paris in May 2020. He was transferred to The Hague to stand trial at the residual mechanism, a court that deals with remaining cases from the now-closed U.N. tribunals for Rwanda and the Balkan wars.
Kabugaās lawyers argued unsuccessfully that he was not fit to stand trial. However, on the advice of doctors who examined Kabuga, the process will run for just two hours per day. The first evidence in the case is expected to be heard next week and will take months to complete.
Yolande Mukakasana, a genocide survivor and writer who lost her entire family in the genocide, said the case has come too late for many survivors who have died since the slaughter.
āMen and women of Kabugaās age were found in bed and murdered. Shame (upon) his sympathizers who cite his old age as a reason not to (stand) trial,ā she said.
Ignatius Ssuuna in Kigali, Rwanda, contributed.
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