Pages

Sunday, 6 October 2013

Death of Maj Gen Rwigyema

Death of Maj Gen Rwigyema

SHARE BOOKMARKPRINTRATING
The late Maj Gen. Fred Gisa Rwigyema
(Right)The coffin of the late Maj Gen. Fred Gisa Rwigyema at the home of his widow Janet Rwigyema in Kigali. Rwigyema who was killed on October 2, 1990, just one day after his army the Rwanda Patriotic Army (RPA) invaded Rwanda, was given a heroes burial at the heroes corner in Remera, a Kigali suburb, (Left) An illustration of the first chairman and commander-in-chief of the Rwanda Patraa. PHOTO BY LAURA MULENGA. 
By FAUSTIN MUGABE

Posted  Saturday, October 5  2013 at  01:00
IN SUMMARY
Leader. Maj Gen Fred Rwigyema, the man who led the Rwandan refugees on their journey back home on October 1, 1990 was, in many ways, like the Biblical Moses who led the Israelites from exile in Egypt. Both men fought for and defended their people while in exile and both never reached home alive. Both men stood at the hill, saw home and there they died. In this third part of our series on the Rwanda Invasion, we trace circumstances surrounding his death in the first days of the war.


Kampala
Mysterious and death seems synonymous with the generals. Is it accidental or coincidental? In Europe, the death of Napoleon the Great and Adolf Hitler have remained inexplicable to this day. John Garang and Samora Machel are African great generals whose deaths remains mystical to the world. Here at home, the deaths of Maj Gen David Oyite Ojok, Maj Gen James Kazini, etc remain a mystery.
So is the death of the first chairman and commander-in-chief of the Rwanda Patriotic Front/Army (RPF/A) Maj Gen Fred Rwigyema in the second day of the Rwanda invasion on October 2, 1990.
On that day, the RPA encountered heavy fire and Rwigyema was sending a radio message for reinforcement when a sniper shot him dead, was the RPF statement issued to the press in Kampala a month after his death. His death was kept a secret for a month for fear that the fighters would lose morale and desert the war.
There had been an earlier version – apparently extracted from RPF fighters captured by Rwanda army and broadcast on government radio in Kigali – that Rwigyema died when he stepped on a landmine. However, in mid-October, the Kigali radio disputed that version and insisted that Rwigyema was killed by the government forces. This was after the Forces Armee Rwandaise (FAR) the government forces had taken more RPA prisoners of war (POW), four of whose pictures were published in the media in Kigali and later Kampala.
The POWs claimed that they were picked from Kabale District of Uganda and had been abducted and forced into the RPF ranks when the war started. Thus it was the Kigali radio that broke news of Rwigyema's death before the press in Uganda on November 5, 1990. It is believed though that senior Uganda military and government officials got the sad news on October 5 after the first fighters deserted the war and returned to Kampala and reported the incident to a major general friend of late Rwigyema and others.
The other popular theory is that Rwigyema was assassinated by his deputy Maj Peter Baingana (a doctor) in the company of Maj Chris Bunyenyezi over the command of the RPF and shortly Rwigyema's aide de camp; Capt Kaitare commanded the execution of the two in vengeance.
However, this sounds like another conspiracy theory. Because, on October 8, Maj Baingana, Maj Sam Kanyemera Kaka, Lt Godfrey Byegyeka and Capt Kaitare met journalists at Kagitumba border. A freelance journalist, Cathy Watson, had an exclusive interview with Baingana for the BBC radio and her story was also published by the Weekly Topic newspaper in Uganda.
According to her story, when asked about Rwigyema's whereabouts, the four RPF fighters told her that he was somewhere on the front-line. Maj Baingana was last photographed on October 14 by the Weekly Topic, inspecting a captured Armoured-Vehicle at Gabiro 49km from Kigali and 65km from Kagitumba post.
In war, propaganda is as vital as the weaponry. After the killing of two Front for National Salvation (FRONASA) fighters Martin Mwesiga and Wunku Mpima in Mbale in January 1973 by the Uganda Army as their leader Museveni narrowly escaped, he was wrongly accused by his detractors of having killed his fighters. Museveni was, however, exonorated by the truth revealed in the 1980 committee and the 1988 Commission of Inquiry into the violation of human rights in Uganda since 1966.
So how did Baingana and Bunyenyezi die? The RPF/A said the two died on October 23, 1990 as they travelled to Nyagatare from Gabiro to reinforce the fighters at the frontline. In a war theatre, anything can happen. It can be accidental even deliberate. For instance, during the Luweero war tempers would flare and bubble.
On page 146, in 'Sowing The Mustard Seed', President Yoweri Museveni wrote of a bitter row amongst the NRA fighters: "Distrust had arisen out of contradictions and disagreements over operations, but the main problem had been caused by the execution of a boy called Shaban Kashanku for going to Kampala without permission. The trial had not followed the proper procedures involving all the people concerned, and had therefore caused a lot of fear and suspicion within rank and file. Some commanders were afraid to go out for operations for fear that they would be 'shot in the back'".
It is not clear how many were 'shot in the back' during the NRA bush war. So why could Baingana and Bunyenyezi die in an ambush on the same day, same spot only separated by hours? Were they 'shot in the back' or did they die from a booby trap? The two majors died shortly after Major Paul Kagame had been recalled to Rwanda from a military course in USA which he abandoned to take charge of the war.
On October 15, the RPF had accepted a ceasefire. Faced with the death of Rwigyema, superior enemy aerial fire and international pressure exerted on Uganda, RPF needed breathing space to reorganise, analysts say. From the front-line, on October 31, Kagame joined Pasteur Bizimungu on the delegation in the first RPF-Kigali government ceasefire meeting held in Mbarara Town in south western Uganda.
Zaire's [now Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC)] ambassador to Uganda, Nzapa Kengo represented President Mubutu Seseko who was the initiator of the peace talks. Earlier on October 26, 1990 President Museveni, Buyoya of Burundi, Mubutu of Zaire and Habyarimana of Rwanda had met in 
Gbadolite, Zaire to off-set the cease-fire talks between the RPF and the Kigali government.
When Ugandan journalist Ogen Kevin Aliro interviewed the RPF chairman Col Alex Kanyarengwe in presence of RPF High-Command chairman, Major Paul Kagame in late June 1991 inside Rwanda and asked him what mistakes RPF/A had made during the war, Kanyarengwe answered: "I cannot say we made any serious errors. Rather we met bad luck at the very beginning. We lost our charismatic chairman, Maj Gen Fred Rwigyema and his two deputies. That affected us."
Analysts contend that psychologically, if the two had indeed murdered their commander, they would have been seen as enemies of the RPF/A and as such, RPF/A would not mention their names as Kanyarengwe did in the interview with the Weekly Topic of July 5, 1991.
Rwigyema's death has created a web of intrigue yet to be resolved now 23 years ago. Was he killed by the FAR sniper or was he 'shot in the back?' After the war, Rwigyema was given a befitting burial as a hero at Remera Heroes cemetery in Kigali.
editorial@ug.nationmedia.com

Saturday, 5 October 2013

Rwandan elections: Safe and sorry

Rwandan elections: Safe and sorry
 
MANY things were in doubt when Rwanda held parliamentary elections on September 16th, but not the outcome. Paul Kagame, the president, said before votes were counted that he had "no reason to believe" in anything but overwhelming victory. His Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF) won with 76%.
In theory the party, which has ruled the hilly nation since taking power in 1994, was vying with nine others. In reality Rwanda's nearly 6m voters had little or no choice. Four parties are in open coalition with the RPF. Most of the rest are led by loyal cabinet ministers. One opposition party, PS Imberakuri, has been infiltrated by supporters of the president; its leader, Bernard Ntaganda, was imprisoned for "divisionism". The party now has two factions, but only the pro-government one was allowed to contest the poll.
 
The RPF would be likely to win an overwhelming majority even if it allowed genuine opposition, but it is not minded to take chances. The party grew out of a guerrilla army, led by ethnic Tutsis, that toppled the previous Hutu-led regime. Its command structure still resembles a military force with a hierarchy that prizes discipline and unity above all else. Throughout the country's economic recovery from civil war and genocide, the RPF has maintained that it still faces a threat from former Hutu foes, some of whom linger across the border in Congo. Officials point to two recent grenade attacks in the capital.
 
Political opposition has been allowed only where it does not question the RPF's role as the country's saviour. Victoire Ingabire, the last important politician to challenge this view, sought to unseat Mr Kagame at the last election and ended up in prison, accused of links to a Hutu rebel group led by suspected mass killers.
Even the Green Party, which has no ambitions to revise the official history, was prevented from registering until shortly before the electoral deadline in August. Its leader, Frank Habineza, whose deputy was murdered before the presidential poll in 2010, then opted not to put up candidates. (The murder remains unsolved.)
For Mr Kagame, an appearance of democracy has been essential to reassure investors and Western donors who might otherwise be accused of bankrolling a dictator. This worked well enough until last year, when Rwanda's murky involvement in eastern Congo's continuing civil war finally earned it a rebuke from the UN. Mr Kagame has denied co-operating with Congolese rebels and called on the UN to pacify the region.
 
Rwanda's once-warm relations with Western donors have soured. Technocrats like the finance minister, Claver Gatete, say they felt betrayed when aid was suspended to punish Rwanda over its foreign entanglements, regardless of its progress in reducing poverty.
 
The RPF sought to exploit these tensions in the campaign, calling for more self-reliance. Tens of thousands of supporters were told the country must ween itself off Western aid. Foreign aid has decreased slightly, from about 40% of government spending to 38%. Loans from China have made up the shortfall; Mr Kagame likes the Chinese model. The new parliament is expected to change the constitution to allow the president to run for a third term. His party has few other potential leaders: most of Mr Kagame's rivals have died, been jailed or fled the country.
 
 

READ MORE RECENT NEWS AND OPINIONS

Popular Posts

“The hate of men will pass, and dictators die, and the power they took from the people will return to the people. And so long as men die, liberty will never perish.”

“I have loved justice and hated iniquity: therefore I die in exile.

“The price good men pay for indifference to public affairs is to be ruled by evil men.”

“When the white man came we had the land and they had the bibles; now they have the land and we have the bibles.”