This is a good idea for Ethiopian human rights groups.
Kagame’s fury at Spanish warrants
Rwanda’s President Paul Kagame has said a Spanish judge who issued arrest warrants for 40 Rwandan army officers can “go to hell”.
Mr Kagame described judge Fernando Andreu as “arrogant”.
Judge Andreu accuses the officers of carrying out killings during Rwanda’s genocide in 1994.
Mr Kagame said Judge Andreu had not distinguished between genocide perpetrators, and those who stopped it, such as his own forces.
The judge issued the arrest warrants in February, accusing the officers of genocide, terrorism and crimes against humanity.
He investigated the matter after a human rights group filed a complaint.
Under Spanish law, a court can prosecute alleged human rights crimes, even if they take place abroad.
Leadership indicted
Judge Fernando Andreu also indicted the Rwandan officers for the murder of nine Spanish citizens, including six missionaries.
He said he had evidence implicating President Kagame, who has immunity from prosecution.
“Imagine the arrogance involved – how can a Spanish judge sit in some town or village in Spain and sees it is his duty to indict the whole leadership of a nation,” Mr Kagame said in Kigali.
In February the Rwandan foreign ministry called the warrants “bogus” and “ridiculous”, and said the case was based on falsehoods, racist language and genocide denial.
The ministry said the judge had never visited Rwanda or the Democratic Republic of Congo, where some of the killings are alleged to have taken place.
Judge Andreu began considering the case in response to a complaint from a human rights group in 2005.
Diplomatic row
During a 100-day period in 1994, an estimated 800,000 Rwandans were killed, mainly ethnic Tutsis at the hands of radical Hutus.
The genocide came to an end when Tutsi-led rebels under Mr Kagame took control.
But the judge said that, after taking power, the army under Mr Kagame carried out mass killings of Hutus in Rwanda and in refugee camps in neighbouring DR Congo, then Zaire.
In 2006, a French judge, Jean-Louis Bruguiere, issued indictments against nine close aides of Mr Kagame, sparking a huge diplomatic row.
3 thoughts on “Spanish judge issued arrest warrant for Rwanda’s president”
This is a good start for African other issues, like the killings in Ethiopia in the early ninties and before that in the fields of Tigray. Some Tigryans have already documenting the TPLF genocide in there.
I hope Ethiopians in Spain soon start a court case for human rights violations and genocide against the tribal Junta gang, Zenawi & Co. If Spain issues an arest warrant the gang may be scared to come to Europe, since there may be some kind of agreement to hand over criminals under EU laws. This seems to me a good opportunity to tighten the noose around the gang’s neck.
Atleast 193 ethiopians have been murdered by the Agazi Militia by order of Meles Zenawi.
why there is no any brave ethiopian lawyers who can file suit against Meles Zenawi’s regime? What are ethiopian civic associations doing? Are we too stupid and ignornats or hodams?