Extraordinary rendition, Rwanda-style
Enforced disappearances, long detentions without charge,
parallel justice mechanisms, a network of secret prisons – these are all the
hallmarks of the US
program of ‘extraordinary rendition’. This time, however, we’re talking about Rwanda,
and a new Amnesty report which accused Kagame of orchestrating a very similar
program on a domestic level. The extraordinary is becoming distinctly ordinary.
By SIMON ALLISON.
When President Paul Kagame has a problem, he often looks
west for solutions. When his poverty-stricken country needed cash, he asked
Western countries for handouts, and continues to receive them. When he needed
to restructure Rwanda’s
economy, he modelled it – quite successfully – on the technology-centric
economies of Britain
and the USA.
When he wanted Rwanda
to integrate more closely with the international community, he made the country
learn English.
Eventually, he found himself looking west so much that he
asked Tony Blair for a handful of seasoned political advisors, stationed in the
Rwandan president’s office under the aegis of Blair’s African Governance
Initiative.
It should come as no surprise, therefore, that when Kagame
needed a way to deal with troublesome political opposition, he looked west –
and saw an admirably efficient model in America’s
“extraordinary rendition” program, which in its heyday combined a global
network of secret prisons, a parallel and completely unaccountable judicial
system, torture and detention without charge. This was how America
(Land of the Free and Home of the Brave) chose to deliver justice in the War on
Terror, and Kagame can hardly be blamed for implementing the same system in his
own country; especially when he’s receiving advice from Blair, one of the major
facilitators of extraordinary rendition while he was British prime minister.
The details of Kagame’s own parallel detention program were
outlined in an Amnesty report released Monday. “Scores of people are held in
detention in military camps and the safeguards which protect detainees in
police stations and other official places of detention are circumvented. Hidden
from view, detainees have been unlawfully detained as well as reportedly
tortured and otherwise ill-treated.”
The report goes on to detail a number of specific cases
where suspects were summarily detained without charge; tortured into making
false confessions; and where suspects’ families were not informed of their
detention. In total, Amnesty documented 45 cases of illegal detention and 18
allegations of torture or ill-treatment, although the rights group was at pains
to clarify that it suspected the numbers involved to be higher.
Somewhat ironically, even though Rwanda’s
network of secret military prisons and unlawful detention mirrors those
established by the United States
and supported by Britain,
the Amnesty report could force both those countries to scale back their
relationship with Rwanda.
“The report is the latest blow to the Rwandan President Paul
Kagame’s battered reputation following allegations of persecuting opponents,
gagging media and arming rebels in the neighbouring Democratic
Republic of the Congo. International donors
have partially suspended aid but Britain
in particular is under mounting pressure to go further,” wrote David Smith in
The Guardian.
Rwanda,
naturally, denies these allegations. “There is no torture in our country and we
can't investigate on a false allegation,” said Alphonse Hitiyaremye, Rwanda’s
deputy prosecutor general. Meanwhile on Twitter, Foreign Affairs Minister
Louise Mushikiwabo went on the attack: “Rwanda
will act on all credible claims of torture but won't engage in a shouting match
w/another NGO seeking headlines at Rwanda's
expense.”
Rwanda and international NGOs don’t get along at the best of
times; in a recent Time magazine cover story, Kagame lamented that his
country’s image was determined entirely by Human Rights Watch reports (an exaggeration,
but one perhaps indicative of his persecution complex).
If he really is that worried about Rwanda’s
image, however, a simple solution presents itself: stop abusing human rights.
Without Kagame and his government’s well-documented stifling of free press,
intimidation of opposition, illicit support for rebels in the DRC and now
establishment of a secret and illegal detention system, there would be very
little for human rights groups to write reports about, and Kagame might well
start getting more credit for the things he’s doing well, especially in terms
of the thriving economy.
That’s the advice Tony Blair should be giving to Kagame –
and should have given to George W Bush a decade ago. DM.
Read more:
“Rwanda:
Shrouded in secrecy: illegal detention and torture by military intelligence,”
report from Amnesty International
“Rwandan civilians tortured into making false confessions,
says Amnesty,” on The Guardian
Photo: Rwanda's
Paul Kagame (REUTERS)
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