Skip to main content

Rwanda: Prisons so clowded that detainees are handcuffed on windows


Rwanda: Prisons so clowded that detainees are handcuffed on windows

By Ambrose Nzeyimana
The Rising Continent
September 19, 2013

Jean Baptiste Icyitonderwa: one of the four who are still detained by the police and whose head has been seriously injured by the beating according to sources in Kigali. With his colleague Emmanuel   Ntakirutimana, they are in a very critical condition.
Jean Baptiste Icyitonderwa: one of the four who are still detained by the police and whose head has been seriously injured by the beating according to sources in Kigali. With his colleague Emmanuel Ntakirutimana, they are in a very critical condition.
On Tuesday September 17th, 2013 we reported about the 40 Rwandan students who were highhandedly taken into custody by the police in Kigali. Luckily some 20 were released the same day, but for the rest of the group people were still unaware of where they were detained.
Boniface Twagirimana, the Interim Vice-President of the not yet registered political party FDU-Inkingi, who spoke on Radio Ijwi Rya Rubanda on Wednesday evening, reported from Kigali that four detainees, namely Jean Baptiste Icyitonderwa, Martin Ntavuka, Emmanuel Ntakirutimana, and Samuel Hitimana, were also still in detention. The police consider them as the leaders of the group who took their grievances by writing to the prime minister.
Since Tuesday, it has not been possible to get them anything to eat or sleep on. This particular small group of the so called leaders has been seriously tortured. Emmanuel Ntakirutimana is unable to sit down. Jean Baptiste Icyitonderwa has been seriously beaten up on his head and injured by the police. He is in a critical situation. So far the police authorities are not allowing them to be taken to hospital though they are between life and death.
It was learned from a detainee who was leaving the detention building that the prison
Don't Be Blind This Time. It is time for Rwandans to wake up seriously; for those countries too continuing to support the dictatorial regime of Paul Kagame.
Don't Be Blind This Time. It is time for Rwandans to wake up seriously; for those countries too continuing to support the dictatorial regime of Paul Kagame.
was so crowded inside that new arrivals were handcuffed at windows. People should imagine the cold or rain or sun while someone is being tied to a window without any possibility of movement, come night or day.
When the radio presenter of Ijwi Rya Rubanda asked Boniface Twagirimana if the detainees had been tortured as they usually are by the police, he replied that he could not be categorical for that since he had not been a direct eyewitness, but he confirmed that by depriving them of getting any meal or some sort of relative comfort, that was no different from torture.
One student from the 40 who was by chance released on Tuesday reported that the policemen who were beating them up at the police station kept telling detainees this: "You stupid people!! We liberated this country with guns; you think you could have it back with only talking while you are still alive?"
When Antoinette Mukamusoni, the lawyer who was called upon to help the group at the police station, asked to see her 4 detained clients, she was told that she could only see 2 of them. The police could not bring the others considered their critical health following the beating. They lied to the lawyer that the detainees had already been seen by somebody else.
So full that detainees have today to be handcuffed on windows. US, UK and other Kagame's foreign partners should be ashamed of supporting a such abject regime.
So full that detainees have today to be handcuffed on windows. US, UK and other Kagame's foreign partners should be ashamed of supporting a such abject regime.
On Tuesday when the police intervened it was also reported that there had been a foreign journalist from Afrique 24 television who had captured on his camera the police brutality towards the students at the Kacyiru car station . The police took away all of his equipment and destroyed all of the evidences that could incriminate them. They then let the journalist go with his equipment.
In perspective, what this story is keeping reminding Rwandans is that the dictatorship of President Paul Kagame will not end without more and more sacrifices. As those policemen beating up the detained students were telling them, does that mean that the end has to come through guns? Over to you the readers for the answers.
Please click HERE to read the letter sent by students to the Rwandan Prime Minister which triggered the excessive reaction of the security forces of the RPF regime and ended up detaining 40. The letter is in French and its annex in Kinyarwanda. The later shows the categorization of the Rwandan population according to its levels of wealth or poverty which are referred to in the letter.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Pourquoi les sanctions américaines contre le Rwanda sont-elles si importantes ?

Pourquoi les sanctions américaines contre le Rwanda sont-elles si importantes ? Auteur : The African Rights Campaign. Londres, Royaume-Uni Publié en : mars 2026   Introduction Lorsqu'un gouvernement est accusé d'exécutions extrajudiciaires, de déplacements massifs, de violences sexuelles, de violations des droits de l'homme et du pillage systématique des ressources naturelles d'un pays voisin, la réponse diplomatique attendue est un démenti catégorique, étayé par des preuves. Le Rwanda ne l'a pas fait. Lorsque le département américain du Trésor a imposé des sanctions aux Forces de défense rwandaises (FDR) et à quatre de leurs commandants les plus haut placés, le 2 mars 2026, la porte-parole officielle de Kigali, Yolande Makolo, a délivré une déclaration que les analystes diplomatiques étudieront attentivement pour ce qu'elle omet conspicuement. Elle a dit que les sanctions étaient « injustes », qu'elles ciblaient « uniquement...

Le Rwanda au Mozambique : qui les a placés là, pourquoi ils ne peuvent pas rester et pourquoi la SADC doit les remplacer avant que les dégâts ne deviennent permanents

  Qui a placé le Rwanda là-bas, pourquoi la France refuse de le remplacer, comment le déploiement est devenu un bouclier contre les sanctions, et pourquoi la SADC doit agir avant que les dégâts ne deviennent permanents Mars 2026   Résumé exécutif Les sanctions occidentales contre les Forces de Défense du Rwanda (RDF), imposées par les États-Unis le 2 mars 2026 en vertu du Global Magnitsky Act et relayées par une pression croissante de l'Union européenne, ont mis à nu une contradiction stratégique de premier ordre. La même force militaire sanctionnée pour son soutien opérationnel direct au groupe rebelle M23 en République démocratique du Congo est simultanément le principal garant sécuritaire d'un projet de gaz naturel liquéfié (GNL) de 20 milliards de dollars exploité par le géant français TotalEnergies à Cabo Delgado, dans le nord du Mozambique. Cette analyse répond à trois questions interconnectées dont les réponses définissent ...

Why US Sanctions Against Rwanda Are So Important

Why US Sanctions Against Rwanda Are So Important Author: The African Rights Campaign. London, UK Published: March 2026   Introduction When a government is accused of extrajudicial killings, mass displacement, sexual violence, human rights abuses, and the systematic pillage of another country's mineral resources, the expected response in international diplomacy is an unequivocal denial backed by evidence. Rwanda did not do that. When the United States Department of the Treasury imposed sanctions on the Rwanda Defence Force (RDF) and four of its most senior commanders on 2 March 2026, Kigali's official spokesperson Yolande Makolo made a statement that diplomatic analysts will study carefully for what it conspicuously omitted. She said the sanctions were 'unjust,' that they targeted 'only one party to the peace process,' and that they 'misrepresent the reality and distort the facts.' Rwanda's government, described by Bloomb...

BBC News

Africanews

UNDP - Africa Job Vacancies

How We Made It In Africa – Insight into business in Africa

Migration Policy Institute