South Africa Prosecution: Rwandan’s ‘business’ was assassination
By Angus Shaw
Wednesday, March 21, 2012
JOHANNESBURG
— A
South African policedetective testified that a Rwandan businessman offered police a $1 million bribe to free him after his arrest on suspicion of bankrolling an assassination attempt against an exiled dissident Rwandan general.
He said the Rwandan offered the money while handcuffed in the back of a police car. His seized baggage contained two passports and photographs of two of five other suspects on trial for the attempted killing.
All six men have pleaded innocent.
The trial resumed Monday for two weeks of testimony after a lengthy series of hearings.
In the unmarked police car,
Mr. Kanyandekwe was arrested and read his rights.
Mr. Kanye, a 17-year veteran of the police service, said
Mr. Kanyandekwe became edgy and “said we mustn’t arrest him. He would give us $1 million” if he was taken instead to the Johannesburg district of Kyalami.
Prosecutor Shaun Abrahams said the contents of the Rwandan’s luggage included a key “almost identical” to one recovered from another arrested Rwandan suspect, Amani Uriwani, an out-of-work truck driver allegedly recruited for his contacts with other Rwandans and African immigrants in
South Africa.
Mr. Kayandekwe, 30, says he was setting up businesses in
South Africa.
But
Mr. Kanye said his two passports, one identifying him as a national of Belgium,
Rwanda’s former colonial ruler, and the other as a Rwandan, showed he came to
South Africa for the first time just before the attempted killing.
He entered
South Africa twice after the shooting and again flew from
Rwanda to Johannesburg on the day of his arrest.
Photographs of his alleged accomplices in his luggage showed they were printed by a digital photo store in Burundi’s capital of Bujumbura.
The Rwandan government has denied involvement in the assassination attempt outside the Johannesburg home of
Gen. Nyamwasa, a former Rwandan military chief who has become a sharp critic of Rwandan President
Paul Kagame since coming to
South Africa in 2010.
But Rwandans in exile have accused
Mr. Kagame of using his agents to hunt down his external foes.
Gen. Nyamwasa and dissident leaders accuse
Mr. Kagame of crushing opponents and trampling on democracy after helping to end the genocide that left 500,000 people dead in 1994.
Last year,
Gen. Nyamwasa was among four former
Kagame aides in exile in
South Africa and the United States who were convicted in their absence by a Rwandan military court for disturbing public order, sectarianism, criminal conspiracy and threatening state security.
South African prosecutors have said key witnesses in the politically and diplomatically sensitive trial have sought police protection in South Africa because they fear Rwanda’s government.
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