Rwandan Chief of Protocol, Rose Kabuye, was arrested in Frankfurt, Germany for her alleged involvement in the downing of a plane in April 1994. The crash killed the then president of Rwanda and sparked a civil war inside the country.
Originally uploaded by Pan-African News Wire File Photos
17:36 Mecca time, 14:36 GMT
Rwanda 'expels German ambassador'
The arrest of Kabuye has sparked protests in Rwanda
Rwanda will expel the German ambassador to the country and recall its own from Berlin after a senior government officials was arrested, Al Jazeera understands.
Rose Kabuye, the director-general of state protocol in Rwanda, was detained at Frankfurt airport on Sunday, a move that Paul Kagame, the Rwandan president, has called a "violation of sovereignty".
"Certainly the arrest of Rose has some implications, foreseen or unforeseen, because in many ways it's a violation of the sovereignty of Rwanda," he said on Tuesday when asked about its effect on co-operation with the European Union.
"We will see how we can challenge such actions, which in my view are simply a question of being arrogant and people being a law unto themselves," he said after visiting Kabuye in prison.
Kabuye was arrested on an international warrant issued by France in 2006 for her and eight other associates of Kagame.
She is accused of involvement in the shooting down of an aeroplane carrying Juvenal Habyarimana, the Rwandan president, in 1994. His death was one of the sparks that ignited a campaign of genocide in the central African nation, German prosecutors have said.
Diplomatic immunity
Kabuye was in Frankfurt to prepare a visit by the Rwandan president, who is on a tour of European countries.
"Rose's visit to Germany was not private. It was official in that she was doing the work of the Rwandan president," Kagame said.
German prosecutors said she not protected by diplomatic immunity as she was not travelling with the president.
Kagame said he expected Germany to extradite her to France within days. Kabuye's lawyer has said she is willing to go before a French judge.
Ties between France and Rwanda have been badly strained since the warrants were issued.
On Monday, hundreds of people, including Kabuye's husband, protested outside the German embassy in Kigali, chanting "Free Rose, Free Rose".
The German government has said it was obliged to act on the arrest warrant.
Kagame was the leader of the Rwandan Patriotic Front when Habyarimana's aircraft was shot down in 1994. His movement eventually defeated the government's Hutu militias to end the mass killings of Tutsis and moderate Hutus.
Source: Al Jazeera and agencies
KIGALI 10 November 2008 Sapa-AFP
RWANDA SUMMONS GERMAN ENVOY OVER KAGAME AIDE ARREST
Rwanda summoned Germany's ambassador here to protest against the arrest of a top aide to President Paul Kagame on suspicion of taking part in an assassination that sparked the 1994 genocide, an official said Monday.
Kagame's chief of protocol Rose Kabuye was arrested Sunday on
arrival at Frankfurt airport on a 2006 international warrant issued by French anti-terrorism judge Jean-Louis Bruguiere.
"Our foreign affairs minister yesterday summoned the German
ambassador to protest. Kabuye was on an official mission and enjoys diplomatic immunity," Information Minister Louise Mushikiwabo said.
"She is an innocent woman who was arrested on a politically
motivated warrant, a warrant issued on the basis of manipulated investigations," Mushikiwabo told AFP. "This blackmail cannot continue anymore."
Kabuye is the first Rwandan to be arrested out of nine warrants issued by Bruguiere against close Kagame aides whom he suspected of being behind the death of former Rwandan president Juvenal Habyarimana.
The warrants sparked a deep diplomatic row between the two
countries, resulting in Rwanda suspending ties with France.
Kabuye's lawyer said she was willing to be transferred to France "as quickly as possible" to speak to French judges.
But Mushikiwabo told AFP: "We hope that with this arrest, the whole world will finally know that these arrest warrants have no legal basis. We want the warrants made public. It is time to tell the truth."
Mushikiwabo also criticised last week's suit by 10 senior French officers against Rwanda, which accuses them of involvement in the genocide.
The five generals and five colonels served in Operation Turquoise, a French military mission to Rwanda in 1994 which Kigali said assisted Hutu genocide perpetrators.
"For us, this also one of the acts of intimidation. The involvement of France (in the genocide) is a truth. France politically and militarily helped a government that committed genocide," Mushikiwabo said.
"This suit does not worry us. Truth speaks for itself. Their actions are widely documented by third parties, by non-Rwandans. Their (acts) are in several reports," she added.
Rwanda stages street protest against Germany arrest
Tuesday, November 11
KIGALI (AFP) - - Thousands of Rwandans protested Monday outside the German embassy here against the arrest in Frankfurt of a top official suspected of involvement in the incident that triggered the 1994 genocide.
Demonstrators waved banners that read: "Germany: arrest genocide perpetrators, not innocents," as they demanded the release of Rose Kabuye, chief of protocol to President Paul Kagame.
Kabuye is one of a number of Kagame's inner circle suspected by a French judge of involvement in the killing of former president Juvenal Habyarimana.
Rwanda summoned Germany's ambassador on Sunday after her arrest at France's request sparked anger in Kigali, which accuses France and other European countries of seeking to prosecute the victims rather than the perpetrators of the genocide.
Police spokesman Willy Marcel Higiro told AFP that the demonstrators numbered around 7,500.
The protestors marched from the heavily-protected German embassy to the offices of Germany's international broadcaster Deutsche Welle, on the ouskirts of Kigali.
At around lunchtime, cars drove across the capital blaring out messages announcing that all offices were closed for the afternoon and urging civil servants and members of the public to join the demonstrations.
"These protests are designed to protest against the arrest of Mrs Rose Kabuye," said the message.
Information Minister Louise Mushikiwabo told AFP that other demonstrations were planned for Tuesday and Wednesday.
Currently in custody in a women's prison in Frankfurt, Kabuye could be extradited to France within 10 to 14 days, German prosecutors told AFP on Monday.
Rwanda's foreign ministry expressed its "shock and dismay" over Kabuye's arrest and denied claims she was on a private visit, in a letter of protest to the German embassy in Kigali seen by AFP.
It said that Kabuye enjoys diplomatic immunity, was on a "working visit" to Germany and "should be treated with courtesy and dignity by the German authorities as it is required by diplomatic decorum."
Kabuye had already travelled to Germany in April and embarked on another trip despite warnings she could face arrest on the basis of a 2006 international warrant issued by French anti-terrorism judge Jean-Louis Bruguiere.
"She is an innocent woman who was arrested on a politically motivated warrant, a warrant issued on the basis of manipulated investigations," Mushikiwabo said. "This blackmail cannot continue anymore."
Kabuye is the first Rwandan to be arrested after Bruguiere issued nine warrants against close Kagame aides whom the judge suspects of being behind the death of the former Rwandan president.
Habyarimana's assassination in April 1994 when his aircraft was shot down triggered ethnic tensions that led to the genocide, in which 800,000 people -- mainly from Kagame's Tutsi minority -- were massacred by extremists from the Hutu majority.
The arrest warrants sparked a bilateral diplomatic row resulting in Rwanda suspending ties with France.
Kabuye's lawyer said she was willing to be transferred to France "as quickly as possible" to speak to French judges.
According to judicial sources, if Kabuye is indicted, she and the Rwandan regime will for the first time have full access to the evidence in the case.
Mushikiwabo told AFP: "We hope that with this arrest, the whole world will finally know that these arrest warrants have no legal basis. We want the warrants made public. It is time to tell the truth."
Mushikiwabo also criticised last week's legal suit by 10 senior French military officers against Rwanda, which accuses them of involvement in the genocide.
The five generals and five colonels served in Operation Turquoise, a French military mission to Rwanda in 1994 following Habyarimana's assassination which Kigali said assisted Hutu genocide perpetrators.
"For us, this is also one of the acts of intimidation. The involvement of France (in the genocide) is a truth. France politically and militarily helped a government that committed genocide," Mushikiwabo said.
In August, the Rwandan government issued a 500-page report naming 13 French politicians and 20 military officials for their role in the massacres, including then-president Francois Mitterrand.
The report alleged France was aware of preparations for the genocide, contributed to planning the massacres and that its troops actively took part in the killings.
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