Rwanda's Foreign Affairs
Minister Louise Mushikiwabo said Karake’s arrest is demeaning Africans and is
unacceptable
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The African Union has called for Britain to release Rwanda's
intelligence chief after his arrest on a warrant issued by Spain, which accuses
him of killings after the 1994 genocide, Rwanda's foreign minister said on
Friday.
British police arrested
Karenzi Karake, 54, at Heathrow airport on Saturday on a warrant issued in
Spain, a move the Rwandan government condemned as an "outrage".
Karake was released on bail
on Thursday and has said he would fight the extradition. A full extradition
hearing has been set for Oct. 29-30.
Reuters report continues:
After a meeting of the
African Union's Peace and Security Council, Rwandan Foreign Minister Louise
Mushikiwabo told reporters in Addis Ababa the continental body had asked for
Karake's release.
"The outcome of this
discussion has been the urgent call for the unconditional and immediate release
of General Karenzi and an awakening of the Peace and Security Council and
indeed the continent to the grave danger that faces Africa with the abuse of
international law..." she said.
Mushikiwabo said Rwanda
was in touch with the United Kingdom on the issue and that the arrest was a
mistake.
"We have
communicated back and we are in constant discussion, because to this hour we do
not see why the United Kingdom would arrest General Karenzi," she said.
Karake was part of the
Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF), the then-rebel force led by Paul Kagame, who is
now president of Rwanda. The RPF halted genocidal attacks being carried out in
Rwanda, mostly against minority Tutsis, making Karake a hero to his supporters.
The Spanish warrant stems
from a lengthy indictment issued by a judge in 2008 which accused 40 senior
Rwandans, including Karake, of war crimes in the aftermath of the genocide.
Karake is also accused of ordering the killing of three Spanish volunteers from
a medical charity in 1997.
The RPF government has long
accused Western nations of failing to act to prevent the genocide and many of
them have acknowledged the failing and since poured in aid.
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