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Wednesday, 15 February 2012

Kagame's Agent Expelled from Sweden After Gasasira Disappears

Kagame's Agent Expelled from Sweden After Gasasira Disappears

 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s8Nc-gG7vIY&feature=channel_video_title    2012 Prepare for the Alien Invasion? First Contact?  Von Braun reveals all. Von Braun explains(he wanted to stop the weaponization of space), a series of lies to justify the weaponization of space. Beginning...the evil Russians, rogue nations, terrorist threats, asteroids, the final card...the threat of alien invasion...supported by media propaganda. They are not a threat, but they want to use them as an excuse. The Old Guard doesn't want change." 1977


From: Nzinink <nzinink@yahoo.com>
To: Nzinink <nzinink@yahoo.com>
Sent: Friday, February 10, 2012 9:38 PM
Subject: *DHR* Kagameâs Agent Expelled from Sweden After Gasasira Disappears
 
http://www.africandictator.org/?p=7271

Kagameâs Agent Expelled from Sweden After Gasasira Disappears

19 hours ago  by RockD 3

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While Kagame is fooling the world that he is rid Rwanda of poverty, and achieving over 90% of development goals, the serial killer is still hunting for victims to silence. Winning elections by over 90%, achieving development by over 90% and killing people by over 90% precision â the new name for Kagame should be Mr 90%.
In any event, John Bosco Gasasira, the editor of exiled online newspaper Umugugizi is the latest victim of Mr 90%. We trust Gasasira is safe and sound.
What we know so far is that Kagame agent, so-called senior official of the Rwandan Embassy in Sweden has been expelled in connection with subversive activities.
One Evode Mudaheranwa, the so-called Second Counsellor to the Embassy, and intelligence officer aka Kagame killer has been ordered to leave the Swedish territory within 48 hours.
The Swedish Ministry of Foreign Affairs would not comment on that decision.
The expulsion takes place, almost a month after the disappearance of Gasasira, a brave Rwandan journalist that has consistently exposed Kagame thieving and criminal activities.
Gasasira has not been seen in public since 23 January 2012, a date on which he published the last article on his online newspaper Umuvugizi.
Butcher Kagame is determined to eliminate Gasasira at all cost as the trail of evidence show:
  • Gasasira was beaten senseless and maimed by Kagame security agents several years back.
  • Gasasira went into exile in Uganda and narrowly escaped assassination in 2009.
  • Gasasiraâs Umuvugizi was shut down by the Kagame regime before the rigged elections in 2010.
  • Gasasiraâs deputy was assassinated in 2010 for publishing a story on the attempted killing of General Kayumba Nyamwasa.
  • Gasasira thought he had distanced himself from Kagame killing machine by leaving the nearby Uganda and re-locating to Sweden.
What a pity that Gasasira has been a victim of what he relentlessly sought to expose â he has denounced over and over the presence of Kagame criminal agents sent to Europe to hunt down Rwandans.
Gasasira was among the first to break the story in 2011 on how Britain warned the Kigali regime that London would not allow Rwandan exiles in the UK to become victims  of criminals operating under the orders of Kagame.
More broadly, Umuvugizi is synonymous with exposing Kagame excesses from the butcherâs $100,000,000.00 Bombardier planes to $20,000.00 a night hotel rooms, and 43-acre farm.
We can see how Kagame will never give up silencing the journalists. We just lost in 2011 Inyenyeri editor Charles Ingabire. We pray that Gasasira is unharmed and that Umuvugizi keeps playing its brave role of exposing the Rwandan butcherâs thieving and looting.
Lastly â thumbs up to Sweden for not tolerating Kagame agents in terrorising Rwandans on Swedish soil.
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Saturday, 31 December 2011

Rwanda Now: Country's bright future tainted by tragic past

Rwanda Now: Country's bright future tainted by tragic past
 
 
http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/news/regions/africa/111218/rwanda-now-countrys-bright-future-tainted-tragic-past 

One of Africa's most dynamic countries is also its most haunted. Rwanda is working to overcome the 1994 genocide. Its economy is fast-growing and it has very little corruption. But President Paul Kagame's government is persistently accused of repression. An on-the-ground look at the contrasting facets of this compelling country.

Rwanda gallery006 2011 12 05
Musicians and dancers perform traditional numbers for Kwita Izina, the annual gorilla naming ceremony. Mountain gorillas are at the center of the Rwandan tourism industry. (Steve Terrill/GlobalPost)

Rwanda Now: Country's bright future tainted by tragic past

President Paul Kagame's impressive achievements marred by repression.

Andrew MeldrumDecember 30, 2011 06:05
KIGALI, Rwanda — Construction cranes bristle across this city's hills, showing where high-rise towers are being built at a pace to match Rwanda's rapid economic growth.
Cars, buses and motorcycle-taxis speed on smooth, divided highways while vendors sell bags of carrots, cabbages and beans. Kigali looks every inch an increasingly prosperous African capital city.
Then a young man walks by with a wedge-shaped gape in his skull. A woman's warm smile cannot hide the searing scar across her face.
This is Rwanda today. Bustling progress, haunted by the country's 1994 genocide in which some 800,000 Tutsis were butchered. About 10 percent of the country's people were killed during the 100 days of massacres. Most were killed by being hacked with machetes and most were of the Tutsi minority.
Rwanda's sparkling advances in economic growth, health and education are impressive. Women have gained in economic and political power, with one of the world's highest rates of representation in legislature, at more than 50 percent. Yet Rwanda's impressive achivements also tainted by its legacy of horror.
President Paul Kagame personifies Rwanda's duality.
Intelligent, diligent and committed, Kagame has led Rwanda from chaos to order and set the country on a path toward security and affluence. Yet Kagame is also autocratic, intolerant of criticism and his government is combative toward the press. A number of government critics have been assassinated, some ot them in exile. Others have been jailed in Rwanda, such as opposition leader Victoire Ingabire who is on trial for allegedly being a genocide revisionist.
Kagame's government denies any involvement in the killings of its critics. And of those jailed, the government says the law is merely following its course.
Kagame's government discourages open discussion of the genocide and of Rwanda's abiding ethnic tensions between the Tutsis, who make up about 15 percent of the population, and the Hutus, who account for 85 percent.
Kagame's government is dominated by Tutsis, a situation that seems to guarantee continued resentment by Hutus. Open discussion of this and any differences between Hutus and Tutsis is discouraged; those who speak about it publicly risk arrest for genocide revisionism.
"When you try to discuss relations between Tutsis and Hutus, 17 years after the genocide, you hear the same answer over and over again: 'We are all Rwandans now,'" said a longtime Kigali resident. "It's the only answer people feel safe with. It's amazing how many people stick to the Kagame line. It creates this eerie feeling that we're in a 'Stepford Rwanda' where people only say what is approved — but you know there is plenty lurking beneath."
"Rwanda is a country of dueling narratives. It is a glittering hope or a repressive country run by a dictator," said a diplomat in Kigali. "These opposing views are more stark than in most African countries. … The Kagame government sees economic growth as the key way of protecting its security. But now we are starting to see some political developments. There are nine opposition parties, but will they go anywhere? The big question is whether Kagame will run for a third term in 2017. Or will he retire and let someone else take the helm?"
Kagame was re-elected in August 2010 by a barely believable 93 percent. Many human-rights and democratic groups charged that the election was marred by violence and repression. Two opposition figures were killed and one attacked under suspicious circumstances. Several opposition candidates were refused permission to take part. Kagame firmly denies any election manipulation or violence.
Now attention is already focusing on the next election in 2017.
The crucial importance of whether Kagame runs for a third term can be understood when looking at neighboring Uganda, where President Yoweri Museveni has extended his rule to more than 25 years, and has increased repression there. Further south in Zimbabwe, Robert Mugabe has kept himself in power for 31 years, ruining his country's economy in the process, and at the cost of widespread violence, killings and other human-rights abuses. A third term is a bad sign for a country's democracy.
Kagame states publicly that he has no plans to change Rwanda's constitution so that he will be able to run for another term.
"I will not be around as President come 2017," said Kagame in an interview with the International Reporting Project. But he added a qualification that suggested there might be a loophole. "Let's make judgment about 2017 when we come to 2017."
But more telling may be the statements from officials of the ruling Rwandan Patriotic Front party calling for Kagame to stay in power. The party's faithful do not say things that Kagame does not want to hear, so many in Rwanda fear that, with Kagame's blessing, the party is starting a campaign to keep Kagame in power.
Kagame has a reputation as an adroit politician and he may well choose the option of hand-picking a successor who will allow Kagame to continue calling the shots, something like the arrangement worked out between Russia's Vladimir Putin and Dmitry Medvedev. 
Rwanda has made considerable headway, especially in improving its health, education and economy. But despite efforts to put up a façade of ethnic unity, it is clear that Rwanda has daunting obstacles to strengthening its democracy.
Rwanda's challenge is to build a future that transcends its tragic past.
More from GlobalPost: Rwanda Now
Andrew Meldrum's trip to Rwanda was part of the International Reporting Project's Gatekeeper Editors' tour.
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