Karenzi Karake |
General Karenzi Karake, who was arrested by a UK
police extradition unit at Heathrow on Saturday, is said to have been planning
to meet with British intelligence agents.
The Times
reports a scheduled meeting between Karake and UK officials was canceled at the
last minute when it became known that authorities planned to detain the African
nation’s head of military intelligence on the basis of a Spanish indictment for
war crimes.
RT.com reports:
Conservative
MP Andrew Mitchell criticized the arrest, telling the newspaper: “This is
embarrassing for the government and for all of us. This man was here for
helpful meetings in an official capacity.
“The close
relations between Rwanda and Britain in this area contributes to security in both
countries.”
Mitchell
also slammed the “junior” judge who had made the 2008 ruling upon which UK
police acted.
“This is
an abuse of process using the European arrest warrant for political rather than
judicial reasons.”
The 2008
Spanish indictment concerns Karake’s alleged involvement in a number of
massacres in the years after Rwanda’s vicious civil war, a conflict in which up
to a million people were killed.
Nine
Spanish NGO workers were also killed, allegedly on Karake’s orders.
As well as
being the country’s head of intelligence and a member of the ruling Rwandan
Patriotic Front (RPF), Karake is a former member of a paramilitary group that
operated during the war.
He is
considered one of Rwandan President Paul Kagame’s closest aides.
In
January, Tony Blair’s relationship with the Rwandan regime and Kagame came
under scrutiny after the Foreign Office rejected a Freedom of Information
request.
The UK
government refused to release information about Blair’s involvement with Rwanda
and his Africa Governance Initiative charity when probed by Times journalists.
After a
five-month delay – much longer than the usual 20 day waiting period – officials
refused to disclose any details of the relationship.
“Factors
in favour of disclosure include the strong public interest in transparency and
accountability, as well as interest in wider international relations and Tony
Blair’s work in Rwanda,” officials told the Times.
The Foreign Office,
however, decided to withhold the disclosure of communications and sensitive
commercial information to avoid an impact on Britain’s international relations.
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