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Rwanda's President Paul
Kagame has warned the United States not to interfere in his country's
politics, amid a row over whether he should stay on in power. In a message on his
twitter feed, Mr Kagame said it was up to Rwandans to decide their political
future.
On
Tuesday, the American ambassador to the UN, Samantha Power, said Mr Kagame
should step down at the end of his term in 2017, to allow the next generation
of leaders to come forward.
BBC News report continues:
Mr
Kagame has been in power since the end of the Rwandan genocide in 1994.
Last month the country's
parliament passed a constitutional amendment allowing him to run for a third
term in 2017.
Rwanda's Kagame Should Step Down When
Term Ends In 2017 — U.S
The United States expects
Rwandan President Paul Kagame to set an example for the region and step down at
the end of his second term in office next year, U.S. Ambassador to the United
Nations Samantha Power said on Tuesday.
"President Kagame has an opportunity to set
an example for a region in which leaders seem too tempted to view themselves as
indispensable to their own countries' trajectories," Power told reporters.
"We
really do expect President Kagame to follow through on the commitments that he
has made many times in the past to allow the next generation of leaders to come
forward," she said. "We expect President Kagame to step down at the end
of his term in 2017."
Last
month the African nation's Senate approved a draft constitution to allow
President Kagame, in power since 2000, to seek a third term in office, clearing
the path for a nationwide referendum that is not expected to face much opposition.
Power
said the United States was aware of the "parliamentary maneuverings"
but noted that Kagame himself has not said what his intentions were regarding a
possible third term in office.
She
was addressing a news conference on her plans as president of the United
Nations Security Council for the month of December. She said the 15-nation
council was discussing a possible visit to Rwanda's neighbor Burundi this
month, where there has been months of bloodshed.
Hundreds
of people have been killed and tens of thousands have fled Burundi during
months of violence that began when President Pierre Nkurunziza decided in April
to run for a third term. He won a disputed election in July.
Kagame
has won widespread praise for rebuilding the landlocked Central African country
since a 1994 genocide killed about 800,000 people, most of them ethnic Tutsis
and moderate Hutus.
While
praising Rwanda's economic and social development since then, rights groups
have said the government severely restricts freedom of expression and does not
tolerate dissent. The government has denied these charges.
Kagame, 58, is the latest
long-serving ruler in Africa to attempt to extend his hold on power. Similar
moves have sparked violence and instability in Burkina Faso and Congo Republic.
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