Genocide Trial Of Former Rwandan Minister
Genocide Trial Of Former Rwandan Education Minister Goes Forward – UN Tribunal
New York, Jun 9 2005
The United Nations war crimes tribunal for Rwanda today began the trial of a former Rwandan education minister on charges that included directing a massacre against people who had taken refuge in hospitals – despite his refusal to attend the proceedings.
The UN International Criminal Tribunal
for Rwanda ( The
prosecution
Mr. Rwamakuba, who maintains his
innocence, refused to attend the proceedings but the
presiding judge ordered the trial to continue despite his
absence. In addition to his conspiracy role, the
prosecution charged that Mr. Rwamakuba, who is a physician,
allegedly selected Tutsi patients for removal from National
University Hospital in Butare and led massacres on the
hospital premises. According to the indictment, he also
struck wounded patients with clubs and allowed militiamen to
kill women, disembowelling those who were pregnant.
Mr.
Rwamakuba was arrested on 21 October 1998 in Windhoek,
Namibia and transferred to the UN Detention Facility in
Arusha two days later. In a court appearance on 21 March
2005, he pleaded guilty to all charges. He is represented
by David Hopper of the United Kingdom. The genocide
against some 800,000 Tutsis and moderate Hutus in Rwanda
took place between April and June 1994, at a time when the
Tutsis were a group protected by the 1948 Convention on the
Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide.
ENDS