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UN urged to intervene in case of Hotel Rwanda dissident facing ‘serious torture’

It is believed Rwanda’s president is behind the unlawful capturing of Paul Rusesabagina 

Cara Anna
Tuesday 08 September 2020 06:20 EDT
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Rusesabagina appears in front of media at the headquarters of the Rwanda Bureau of investigations building in Kigali, Rwanda
Rusesabagina appears in front of media at the headquarters of the Rwanda Bureau of investigations building in Kigali, Rwanda (AP)

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The legal team for "Hotel Rwanda" hero Paul Rusesabagina has filed a complaint with the United Nations special rapporteur on torture asserting that Mr Rusesabagina faces an "immediate risk" of cruel treatment as he remains cut off from lawyers, consular officials and his family more than a week after he appeared in handcuffs in Rwanda.

The complaint filed on Monday with Nils Melzer asks for an immediate investigation to make sure Mr Rusesabagina, long an outspoken critic of Rwanda's government, "is still alive".

Rwanda’s president Paul Kagame on Sunday indicated that Mr Rusesabagina might have been tricked into boarding a plane to a country he hasn't lived in since 1996. "It was actually flawless!" Mr Kagame said in a national broadcast, suggesting that "he brought himself — even if he may not have intended it".

The president did not say how Mr Rusesabagina was taken from Dubai, where he last spoke with his family, to Rwanda. The family of 66-year-old Mr Rusesabagina, a Belgian citizen and US permanent resident, has said he would never knowingly board a plane for Rwanda and was "kidnapped".

Rwanda accuses Mr Rusesabagina of leading a terrorist group that has killed Rwandans. It points to a video posted online in late 2018 in which he expresses support for an armed wing of his opposition political platform and says: "The time has come for us to use any means possible to bring about change in Rwanda, as all political means have been tried and failed."

Mr Rusesabagina in the past has denied accusations that he financially supports Rwandan rebels, saying he is being targeted for criticising Mr Kagame's administration over human rights abuses.

Mr Rusesabagina became famous for protecting more than 1,000 people as a hotel manager during Rwanda's 1994 genocide in which some 800,000 Tutsis and moderate Hutus were killed. For his efforts he was awarded the US Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2005.

Mr Rusesabagina's detention has prompted concern among human rights activists that this was the latest example of the Rwandan government targeting critics beyond its borders.

His lack of contact with the outside world helped to prompt the legal complaint. On Tuesday, the International Committee of the Red Cross confirmed it doesn't have access to visit Mr Rusesabagira in detention.

Mr Kagame on Sunday said Mr Rusesabagina "will have to pay for these crimes". The complaint filed with the UN special rapporteur says that "elevates the risk of Mr Rusesabagina being tortured or subjected to cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment, as it provides police and prison authorities license to take justice into their own hands without the need for a legal process".

A Rwandan lawyer over the weekend asserted he was representing Mr Rusesabagina. The legal complaint rejects that, saying "it appears this lawyer was appointed without Mr Rusesabagina's consent — there is no way Mr Rusesabagina would interview and voluntarily hire a lawyer without consulting with his own family first".

It is not clear when Mr Rusesabagina will appear in court. Rwandan law says a suspect can be in provisional detention for 15 days, renewable for up to 90 days.

AP

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