• #Rwanda accused of stalking, harassing and threatening exiles in US

    African state that signed deal with UK to host asylum seekers perpetrates ‘transnational repression’, Freedom House report says

    Rwanda has been accused of being among the worst perpetrators of “transnational repression” in the US, stalking, harassing and threatening exiles there, according to a new report.

    The report by the Freedom House advocacy group in Washington names Rwanda as well as China, Russia, Iran and Egypt as the principal offenders in seeking to extend the reach of their repressive regimes into the US.

    Isabel Linzer, one of the report’s authors, said the findings raise further questions about the UK government’s agreement with Kigali to deport asylum seekers to Rwanda. The first deportation flight is due on 14 June.

    “People often focus on Saudi Arabia, Iran, China, Russia, but Rwanda is one of the most prolific perpetrators of transnational repression in the world,” Linzer said. “And it certainly has not received the same level of scrutiny as some of those other countries.

    “The asylum deal between the UK and Rwanda is quite shocking given how frequently the Rwandan government has gone after Rwandans in the UK and the British government is well aware of that,” she added.

    The Freedom House report, Unsafe in America: Transnational Repression in the United States, notes that attacks on exiles have taken place since the cold war, but adds “operations by foreign intelligence agents have significantly intensified in recent years”.

    “Autocrats cast a long shadow onto America’s soil,” it says. “The governments of Iran, China, Egypt, Russia, Rwanda, Saudi Arabia, and other states are increasingly and more aggressively disregarding US laws to threaten, harass, surveil, stalk, and even plot to physically harm people across the country.”

    One of those targeted was Paul Rusesabagina, the former Kigali hotel manager whose efforts to save people in the 1994 genocide is told the film Hotel Rwanda.

    Rusesabagina, a US permanent resident and prominent dissident, was abducted while travelling in the Middle East in August 2020 and tricked into boarding a private airplane that took him to Rwanda, where he was sentenced to 25 years in prison. Last month the US state department formally declared him to be “wrongfully detained”.

    Rusesabagina’s daughter, Carine, and other Rwandan dissidents have been found to have been the targets of surveillance using Pegasus spyware made by the Israel security firm NSO Group.

    The Rwandan government has denied using the spyware but did not respond to a request to comment on the Freedom House report.

    Rwandan opposition figures in the US speak of constant surveillance, harassment and threats.

    “You come to understand that it is part of your life,” said Theogene Rudasingwa, a former chief of staff to President Paul Kagame who was once Rwanda’s ambassador to the US, and is now a staunch critic of Kagame’s rule. “My wife is constantly in fear. My children are constantly in fear, especially for me. Every time I step out of the house, they are on edge. I have determined that I can’t be paralysed and live in fear 24/7, but the feeling of being a hunted person is around me 24/7,” Rudasingwa told the Guardian.

    Three months ago he said he came out of his local bank to be told by a passerby that they had seen someone go under his car. Rudasingwa called the police who carried out a three-hour search but found nothing, possibly because the intruder had been disturbed.

    Rudasingwa was the target of an assassination plot in Belgium in 2015, which failed when he put off a planned trip there. After the murder of his fellow opposition leader, former Rwandan intelligence chief Patrick Karegeya, in South Africa in 2013 – a killing widely believed to have been ordered in Kigali – the state department advised Rudasingwa to take extra precautions.

    “They told me that they had reached out to Kigali to warn them not to try to do that kind of thing here in the United States,” he told the Guardian.

    In March this year, the FBI launched a website on transnational repression giving advice on how to report incidents, part of a broad campaign by the administration to confront the growing threat.

    “Transnational repression is used not only to harm or threaten individual dissidents, journalists, activists, and diaspora members, but to silence entire communities,” a spokesperson for the National Security Council said.

    “Our intention is to use the full suite of tools and resources at our disposal to protect and build support for individuals and communities who are being targeted, and to hold perpetrators accountable for their actions.”

    However, Claude Gatebuke, another Rwandan activist who has received repeated anonymous threats, said many in the diaspora do not report harassment because of the close diplomatic ties between Washington and Kigali.

    “Part of the reason why people won’t speak up is because they know the government of Rwanda has a very tight relationship with the US government, and sharing information, they think they’re telling on themselves,” Gatebuke told the Freedom House authors.

    Senior members of Congress have also voiced unease at Washington’s embrace of Kagame. After the head of US Africa Command, Gen Stephen Townsend, posted pictures of him posing with the Rwandan president, the top Republican on the Senate foreign relations committee, James Risch, warned that the bilateral relationship “faces serious complications”.

    “Portraying the opposite is counterproductive and undermines [state department] messages on other top diplomatic concerns,” Risch wrote on Twitter.

    “I’m always sensitive to the fact that there is that level of interaction at the intelligence level, at the level of the FBI, of senior officials always going to Kigali like it’s their Mecca,” Rudasingwa said. “How could I possibly say I’m safe, sharing sensitive information with them? So sometimes you just keep it to yourself.

    “Nobody ever calls Kagame out. Nobody seeks accountability from him,” he added. “They give these occasional slaps on the wrist, but then you see the United Kingdom is sending refugees there. So where would you get the guts to call him out when he is doing you a favour?”

    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/jun/02/rwanda-exiles-stalking-harassing-threatening-us-freedom-house-report-ed

    #réfugiés_rwandais #répression #répression_internationale #asile #migrations #réfugiés

  • Rwandan ‘#peace_camps’, persecution and the struggle to be believed

    S is a Hutu-Tutsi girl who, like many young Rwandans was called to go to the #Ingando camps. Described by the Rwandan government as “programmes for peace education” for Rwandan youth and as aiming to be a form of “education for good governance”, the idea of the Ingando camps seems in line with the stance that Rwanda has taken on grassroots, community led transitional justice. However, despite this description, there is strong evidence that Ingando camps are highly militarized. S, being of mixed descent was ascribed Tutsi identity by her community, yet still found herself in a position of inbetweenness. Upon arrival at the Ingando camp she was subject to high levels of #violence, #discrimination, and repeated abuse, experiencing sexual harassment and multiple episodes of rape. She found herself pregnant twice by the same aggressor and was forced to abort the first of her children. Rejected by her family, unheard by her school principal and afraid to denounce the facts to the police, she fled to Cameroon in 2006, where she later married a Rwandan refugee of Hutu origin – causing her further marginalisation and rejection by her family.

    When the weighted words, “peace education” are used to describe a programme of transitional justice, assumptions are formed in the mind. Hailed by local and international media as a progressive and locally based method of dealing with the atrocities, grief and suffering left behind by genocide, the Ingando programme fits into a story of long awaited good following a gruelling period of tragedy. Despite the lifetime of persecution faced by S, when she applied for asylum in Europe the authorities were not immediately convinced of her need for protection.

    After the initial rejection, S’s legal representative came to Asylos requesting information on the reality of the Ingando camps and for information to substantiate her claim. Using a variety of research techniques for data collection, such as academic sources and (social) media analysis, Asylos’ researchers were able to uncover and highlight the highly politicised nature of the Ingando programme as well as the sometimes violent and abusive behavior of the authorities involved in the camp. The research meant the context of S’s story, with all its nuances and the power dynamics involved could be more clearly seen, thus adding a layer of credibility to a complicated story. After a long and difficult struggle, S was granted asylum in France. It is because of the hard work and dedication of Asylos’ volunteers and the legal representative, that stories such as S’s, are given a chance at equal access to justice based on proof and not upon prejudice.

    https://www.asylos.eu/blog/asylum-stories-rwandan-peace-camps?omhide=true

    #Rwanda #viols #harcèlement #harcèlement_sexuel #paix #rééducation #FPR #Front_patriotique_rwandais
    #COI #asile #réfugiés #réfugiés_rwandais

  • Rwandan refugees in Uganda may be thrown out – Minister Onek

    The government of Uganda is considering cancelling the refugee status of thousands of Rwandans living in Uganda.

    The announcement was made by the Minister for Relief, Disaster Preparedness and Refugees Hillary Onek while meeting lawmakers of the East African Legislative Assembly (EALA) in Kampala.

    He explained that government is considering cancelling their refugee status and instead issuing them with temporary permits.
    “We are going to turn them over to the immigration department so that their long stay in Uganda will be subjected to immigration laws because immigration laws in Uganda say that you are given a #visa to stay for three months. Thereafter you have to justify your further stay in a country,” Mr Onek said.

    The minister said that the process of convincing Rwandans to return home has not been easy as many are not willing to do so.

    Hundreds of thousands of Rwandans fled to Uganda following the 1994 genocide.

    Rwanda has generally been peaceful for over 20 years and many Rwandese who had fled have since returned to their home country.
    But government says there are still over 14000 Rwandans still living in Uganda as refugees.

    https://www.monitor.co.ug/News/National/Rwandan-refugees-Uganda-may-be-thrown-out-Minister-Onek/688334-4853062-ra0ok9/index.html
    #réfugiés_rwandais #ouganda #asile #migrations #réfugiés #modèle_ougandais (?) #statut_de_réfugié #renvois #expulsions

    • Abuses against Rwandan refugees in Uganda: Has Time Come for Accountability?

      For many years, Rwandan refugees in Uganda have faced abuses, including arbitrary detention, forced return to Rwanda and attacks on their physical security, without any form of accountability. However, last Friday, 24 August, former Inspector-General of the Ugandan police, General Kale Kayihura, has been charged with aiding and abetting the kidnapping and repatriation of Rwandan refugees, amongst other charges. In October last year, other security officers had already been arrested and indicted under similar charges. Is it finally time for justice?

      The case of Joel Mutabazi

      Kayihura is accused of aiding and abetting the kidnapping of Rwandan refugees Joel Mutabazi, Jackson Karemera and Innocent Kalisa by Ugandan police officers. Six Ugandan police officers, one Rwandan security officer and one Congolese individual are on trial for their involvement in the abduction and forced return of Mutabazi. A senior police who had been arrested earlier in connection to this case has since been released.

      Joel Mutabazi, a former bodyguard of Rwandan President, Paul Kagame, had been arrested in April 2010 in Rwanda and detained and tortured in military custody for his suspected links with opposition groups. After he was released in October 2011, Mutabazi fled to Uganda, where he was granted refugee status. In 2013, he was abducted from a UNHCR safe house near Uganda’s capital Kampala, and taken back to Rwanda. Mutabazi’s whereabouts were unknown for several days, until the Rwandan police stated that he was in their custody. UNHCR, which failed to protect Mutabazi, expressed its concern over the breach of the principle of non-refoulement and called for accountability.

      In 2014, a Rwandan military court sentenced Mutabazi to life in prison, including for forming an armed group and for terrorism. His younger brother, Jackson Karemera, and another co-accused, Innocent Kalisa, also lived in Uganda before the trial and were themselves abducted back to Rwanda. They were sentenced respectively to four months and 25 years in prison. Karemera was rearrested after his release, his family hasn’t heard from him since. All three said during the trial they had been tortured in detention in Rwanda, but the court did not order an investigation into those allegations.

      Abuses against Rwandan refugees

      The illegal transfer of Mutabazi and his co-accused to Rwanda was not an isolated case. Over the years, including more recently, International Refugee Rights Initiative (IRRI) has received several reports about threats, illegal arrests, attacks and forced returns of Rwandan refugees in Uganda. Many of such cases remain unreported, given the secrecy surrounding such abuses and the fear of reprisals, and are difficult to confirm. A few examples include:

      In July 2010, Rwandan refugees were forcibly removed en masse from refugee settlements in south-western Uganda to Rwanda. Ugandan police officers used live rounds, wounding several in the process, to force refugees onto buses which dropped them in Rwanda.
      In November 2011, Charles Ingabire, a Rwandan journalist, was murdered when he left a bar in Kampala. He was a fierce government critic who had obtained refugee status in Uganda. An investigation was opened, but to date, nobody has been charged for involvement in this crime.
      In 2017, according to judicial documents, a Rwandan refugee was illegally detained for almost two months in Kireka police station in Kampala, and threatened with return to Rwanda, on the basis of his alleged involvement in the Rwandan genocide in 1994. Rwanda and Uganda do not have an extradition treaty. He was never charged and was eventually released.
      Multiple sources confirmed to IRRI that on 20 December 2017, five Rwandan nationals were arrested in Mbarara, and one in Kampala. They were detained incommunicado for several days and allegedly tortured. Five of them were driven to the border with Rwanda nine days later and deported. According to Uganda’s army spokesperson, one was not deported because of her refugee status, and remained in incommunicado detention.

      In addition to abuses against refugees, there have been several allegations, in the past year, of abuses against Rwandan nationals residing in Uganda. According to several sources, two Rwandan citizens were arrested in Uganda, respectively on 9 November 2017 and 3 January 2018, and detained incommunicado before being sent back to Rwanda. The first says he was tortured, which was confirmed to IRRI by a source knowledgeable about the case on 24 January 2018: “He was beaten up and tortured… and dumped at the border with Rwanda. He couldn’t walk and barely could talk.” The other man also reported to the media that he was tortured before being taken to the border with Rwanda.

      For none of these cases has there been any apparent effort to provide meaningful accountability. Other reports have been difficult to verify, but as a consequence of such events, Rwandan refugees in Uganda continue to fear for their safety. Rwanda and Uganda have had close but turbulent bilateral relations in recent years, and many connections remain between individuals within the countries security services. There have, however, been reports that relations between the two countries have deteriorated.

      Many interpreted the decision by Uganda, in early 2018, not to invoke a cessation clause against the more than 15,000 Rwandan refugees still currently living in Uganda as an illustration of this dynamic. This cessation clause, if invoked, would have forced refugees who fled Rwanda before 31 December 1998 to return to Rwanda, reapply for refugee protection or acquire citizenship in their country of exile. Seven countries have already begun implementing the cessation clause.

      Concerns about right to a fair trial

      While the arrested officers have themselves been accused of involvement in human rights violations, their own right to a fair trial and lawful detention seemed to have also been in jeopardy since their arrest. The arrest of General Kale Kayihura seems to have violated legal provisions on judicial review and detention terms. According to judicial documents and interviews with several people knowledgeable of the case, at least one of the accused in the trial against senior police officials has been detained incommunicado and tortured, in an attempt to extract testimony against other senior figures. Court documents show that the court told a bail applicant to edit out details of torture, but on 31 January 2018 a judge ordered an investigation into torture allegations. There have also been concerns about the prosecution of civilian suspects in a military court, a common practice in Uganda, and about settling scores within the security apparatus.

      These trials against former senior Ugandan security officials could send a welcome signal to Rwandan refugees that abuses against them will be no longer tolerated. But justice can only be done if arrests and trials are conducted in accordance with standards in Ugandan and international law. More efforts must be done to end ongoing abuses against Rwandan refugees, and bring all perpetrators to account.

      http://refugee-rights.org/abuses-against-rwandan-refugees-in-uganda-has-time-come-for-accounta
      #abus

  • Congo-B : une situation difficile pour les anciens réfugiés mineurs venus du Rwanda

    Depuis la cessation de leur statut, des anciens réfugiés rwandais au #Congo-Brazzaville sont aujourd’hui plus de 8 000 #sans-papiers à avoir refusé de rentrer en invoquant des raisons de sécurité. Le gouvernement congolais renouvelle ses appels à suivre la procédure administrative prévue pour ceux qui souhaitent rester dans le pays. A savoir retirer un passeport rwandais à l’ambassade du Rwanda à Brazzaville, avant de pouvoir demander de régulariser leur situation au Congo. Le HCR de son côté estime que la protection internationale a été maintenue pour ceux qui avaient des raisons fondées de craindre pour leur vie s’ils rentraient au Rwanda.

    http://www.rfi.fr/afrique/20180202-congo-b-une-situation-difficile-anciens-refugies-mineurs-venus-rwanda
    #réfugiés_rwandais #asile #migrations #réfugiés

  • Canal alpha | Série d’été : Révérien Rurangwa à la Maison d’Ailleurs
    http://asile.ch/2016/07/20/canal-alpha-serie-dete-reverien-rurangwa-a-maison-dailleurs

    Révérien Rurangwa a vécu l’enfer il y a 22 ans. Il fait partie des rares survivants du génocide des Tutsis au Rwanda. Aujourd’hui, il est établi à La Chaux-de-Fonds, et s’efforce de vivre, pour lui, mais aussi pour les membres de sa famille, tous assassinés. Pour cette série d’été, il a choisi de prendre du […]

  • Ukwimi, un camp de réfugiés mozambicains en Zambie

    La photothèque témoigne d’un terrain de recherche revisité. Les clichés correspondent à six missions effectuées de 1992 à 2007. Le camp d’Ukwimi, en Zambie, ouvert en 1987, a été fermé en 1995 aux réfugiés mozanbicains, puis réouvert en 2000 aux réfugiés angolais et rwandais. Aujourd’hui, c’est un périmètre agricole, étatique, pour les nationaux.

    http://migrinter.hypotheses.org/1014

    #migration #réfugiés #Zambie #réfugiés_mozambiquais #camp #photos #réfugiés_rwandais #réfugiés_angolais #abandon #mémoire #image