Rwanda governor jailed for life for genocide

DAR ES SALAAM, (Reuters) – A UN court trying the  architects of Rwanda’s 1994 genocide jailed a former Kigali  governor for life on five counts including ordering the killing  of 60 Tutsi boys in a church-run pastoral centre.

The Arusha-based International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda  (ICTR) had indicted Tharcisse Renzaho of genocide, complicity in  genocide, murder and rape in the massacres in which 800,000  minority Tutsis and politically moderate Hutus were killed.

The court found him guilty of all except complicity in  genocide.
“He has been imprisoned for life. He has been found guilty  on five counts, that is of genocide, two counts of murder as  crimes against humanity, two counts of rape as crimes against  humanity, “ Danford Mpumilwa, associate information officer,  said from the northern Tanzanian town of Arusha, the court’s  seat.

Prosecutors said he was one of the massacre’s main  perpetrators. His name figured among nine major suspects for  which the U.S. government had put out a $5 million bounty.

The court said Renzaho took part in arming participants of  the genocide. He had pleaded not guilty to all the charges.
The court accused him, along with others, of ordering the  removal and killing of 60 Tutsi boys from a church-run pastoral  centre. Prosecutors say Renzaho was near a Kigali hotel when an  army tank shot at Tutsi houses, killing at least 40 people. He  did not try to intervene.

The 65-year-old was also accused of broadcasting orders over  Radio Rwanda asking police, soldiers and militia to put up   roadblocks to identify and kill Tutsis.

“The chamber found that Renzaho supported the killings of  Tutsis at roadblocks, which were set up following his  directives. It concluded he ordered the distribution of weapons,  and that persons who received them, then killed Tutsis,” the  ICTR said in a statement.

“He also made remarks encouraging sexual abuse of women and  was found criminally liable for rape that followed.”

The former army colonel was arrested in the Democratic  Republic of Congo in 2002.
Six other prime suspects with bounties on their heads are  still at large including Felicien Kabuga, said to be the main  financier of the genocide.

Renzaho’s sentencing brings the number of ICTR’s judgments  to 39. Six of these were acquittals.

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