Luxury life of 'despot' blamed for human rights abuses: How Rwanda's president won praise from Tony Blair and David Cameron despite a record of militia group links
By Tom Witherow
The Daily Mail
April 13, 2022
· The president of Rwanda
is facing questions about human rights in his country.
· Tony Blair and David
Cameron have previously praised the African leader.
· Paul Kagame, 64,
revitalized the economy of Rwanda after the 1994 genocide.
· But the economic growth
has hidden authoritarian tendencies, critics say.
· Paul Rusesabagina, the inspiration behind the Hollywood film Hotel Rwanda, was sentenced to 25 years in prison, in what his family called a show trial.
The president of Rwanda has won plaudits from former prime ministers despite being branded a ‘despot’ and blamed for human rights abuses.
Paul Kagame, 64, has sold
Rwanda as a success story in the developing world for over three decades.
He has courted foreign leaders
and royalty – including a 2020 meeting with at – to win praise as a dynamic and
progressive president.
His government has also spent
millions of pounds brushing up Rwanda’s image by sponsoring Premier League team
Arsenal.
But critics claim he is guilty
of murderous authoritarianism which has enabled him to remain in power for 28
years.
Rwandan President Paul Kagame |
Rwanda President Paul Kagame has been applauded by successive British prime ministers, but critics claim his regime is guilty of human rights abuses
He led the militia groups that
ended the 1994 genocide in Rwanda, which saw more than 500,000 people
massacred.
Then US President Bill Clinton
said Kagame was ‘one of the greatest leaders of our time’, Lord Blair called
him a ‘visionary’, and Mr. Cameron said his regime was a ‘role model for
development’.
But in recent years negative
stories have over-shadowed his country’s economic success.
Last December, Paul
Rusesabagina – the inspiration for the hero character in the Hollywood film
Hotel Rwanda – was sentenced to 25 years in prison for allegedly founding a
terrorist group. His family branded it a show trial.
The former hotel
boss-turned-opposition leader had been praised for shielding thousands of
potential genocide victims in 1994.
But he criticized Rwanda’s
human rights abuses after Kagame came to power.
Kagame’s intelligence services
have also been suspected of killing critics abroad, but none of the allegations
has been proven.
When arch-critic Colonel
Patrick Karegeya was murdered in a hotel in South Africa in 2014, Kagame said:
‘When you choose to live like a dog, you die like a dog.’
A recent book claimed the
Metropolitan Police provided protection for Rwandan opposition figures
threatened in London.
Kagame is known for his
luxurious lifestyle and travels in a £50million executive jet and an armor-plated
Range Rover worth an estimated £300,000.
His son Ivan sits on the board
of Rwanda’s investment agency and lives in a £5million Beverly Hills mansion.
Paul Kagame poses with Arsenal legend Tony Adams in 2014 |
Paul Kagame has been trying to brush up
on the country's international image by investing in the football club.
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