Rwandan leaders reacted angrily at the arrest of a Rwandan military
general at London’s Heathrow Airport. Police said Tuesday Emmanuel Karenzi Karake was
arrested Saturday, had a brief hearing at Westminster Magistrates’ Court that
day and will be back in court on Thursday.
The Globe and Mail report
British Police said the warrant for Emmanuel Karenzi Karake, head of Rwanda’s
intelligence and security service, was made on behalf of authorities in Spain.
Karake, a close ally of
Rwandan President Paul Kagame, was one of 40 members of the Rwandan military
indicted in 2008 on charges of terrorism and genocide by Spanish national Court
Judge Fernando Andreu.
Spanish magistrates have
used the principle of universal jurisdiction several times to go after current
or former government leaders or terrorism suspects, even indicting Osama bin
Laden over the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. But extraditions and convictions have
been rare.
On Twitter, Rwandan
Foreign Minister Louise Mushikiwabo called the arrest “an outrage,” adding
“Western solidarity in demeaning Africans is unacceptable.”
Rwanda and Britain “are
talking to resolve the matter,” Rwandan Justice Minister Johnston Busingye
said, insisting that Spain’s indictment of Karake was illegitimate and
politically motivated.
A spokesman for Spain’s
National Court said it was now up to British authorities to decide whether or
not to extradite Karake. He spoke on condition of anonymity in keeping with
court policy.
Andreu began considering
the Rwanda case in 2005 after a complaint was filed by an African human rights
group. Others indicted include James Kabarebe, now the defence minister in
Rwanda.
In the 182-page
indictment, Andreu said he also had evidence implicating Kagame, who led the
rebel forces that stopped the genocide in 1994, but could not charge him
because as a sitting president Kagame has immunity.
In 1998, a Spanish judge
indicted former Chilean President Augusto Pinochet and managed to have him
arrested while Pinochet was visiting London, but the British government refused
to extradite him to Madrid, saying Pinochet was in poor health. Pinochet died
in Chile in 2007.
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