Friday 17 October 2014

When dictators enjoy the immunity of fooling the world for some time: But, This immunity will not last all the time: Kagame Attacks The BBC Over Controversial so called genocide denial Documentary

  Rwandan President Paul Kagame.

MUST READ:


Mercenary intellectual and Dictator Kagame Media bulldog Andrew Mwenda fallaciously attacks a very fair and balanced BBC Documentary : Rwanda the untold story: My rebuttal of Andrew Mwenda’s attack of the BBC documentary on Rwanda


http://watchmanafrica.blogspot.com/2014/10/mercenary-intellectual-and-dictator.html  


What Really Happened in Rwanda? You can only find the truth by thinking outside the Box



Kagame Attacks The BBC Over Controversial Documentary

 http://www.redpepper.co.ug/kagame-attacks-the-bbc-over-controversial-documentary/


Rwandan President Paul Kagame.
Rwandan President Paul Kagame.
Rwanda’s president on Tuesday accused the BBC of “genocide denial” after it aired a controversial documentary on the country’s leadership and the mass killings of 1994.

“Rwanda’s Untold Story”, broadcast this month, highlighted growing criticism of President Paul Kagame and revived allegations that his rebel group was behind the shooting down of a plane that sparked the genocide.
The British broadcaster said the programme challenges “the accepted story” of the massacres as well as the portrayal of Kagame as “the man who brought an end to the killing and rescued his country from oblivion”.
But prominent international academics, experts and diplomats have accused the BBC of being “recklessly irresponsible” by allegedly promoting a revisionist account of the genocide in the documentary.

Kagame told parliament on Tuesday that the BBC had chosen to “tarnish Rwandans, dehumanise them”.
He said the BBC would never challenge the accepted history of the genocide in Bosnia or the Holocaust, “but to Africans and Rwandans they do it and then claim freedom of speech”.
An estimated 800,000 people, mostly minority Tutsis, were killed in just 100 days — a rate of killing that was far faster than the Holocaust in World War II.

A spokeswoman said the BBC “strongly refutes” the claim but would not comment specifically on Paul Kagame’s comments.

“The programme sought to handle this in a respectful and measured tone and in no way did it seek to downplay or conceal the horrifying events of 1994 and subsequently,” she said.

The broadcast highlighted growing criticism of Kagame, who despite being credited with overseeing dramatic economic advances while in office has also faced mounting allegations of suppressing dissent and murdering exiled opposition figures.

It also revived allegations that Kagame’s then-RPF rebels were behind the shooting down of the plane of Hutu president Juvenal Habyarimana, the event that marked the start of the genocide of minority Tutsis and their supporters.

Most experts and historians maintain that the plane was most probably shot down by Hutu extremists, and that in any case the genocide had been planned for months previously.
Rwandan refugees cross Rusumo border to Tanzania from in this May 30 1994 file photo. Reuters
Rwandan refugees cross Rusumo border to Tanzania from in this May 30 1994 file photo. Reuters
The BBC spokeswoman said the network “has a duty to investigate difficult and challenging subjects and we believe the programme is a valuable contribution to the understanding of the tragic history of the country and the region”.

A group of 38 commentators — including Canadian Romeo Dallaire, who at the time of the genocide was in charge of the UN peacekeeping force in Rwanda — have already called on the BBC to apologise to genocide victims.

In an open letter, the group said that while it was “legitimate” to probe crimes by Kagame’s RPF rebels and “to reflect on the contemporary political situation in Rwanda”, it “should not distort the reality of the 1994 genocide” nor “promote genocide denial”.

They said the BBC’s programme made three “untenable claims”: lying about the true nature of the Hutu Power militia, attempting to minimise the number of Tutsi murdered, and trying to blame the RPF for shooting down president Habyarimana’s plane.
AFP

photo

President Kagame with newly-sworn in Senate president Bernard Makuza and vice-presidents Jeanne d’Arc Gakuba and Fatou Harerimana (right) at Parliament Buildings in Kimihurura, yesterday. (Village Urugwiro)

Kagame speaks out on BBC Genocide denial

By: Edwin Musoni 

Published: October 15, 2014


President Paul Kagame yesterday criticised BBC for producing and broadcasting a documentary that denies the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi and portrays perpetrators as victims and victims as perpetrators.

Addressing parliamentarians and other dignitaries after he presided over the swearing in of Bernard Makuza as the new Senate president, yesterday, Kagame said the film, dubbed ‘Rwanda’s Untold Story’, constituted “cynicism of the highest order.”

“The opposite of what they tell us they stand for is what they have done against us. They chose to tarnish Rwandans, to dehumanise them, and deny the very genocide they reported on. This is coming from a part of the world that has a lot of instructions to give us about freedoms. This is not the first time, we see it every day, every week, every month in all forms.”

On October 01, BBC 2 presented the hour-long documentary featuring a group of well known Genocide revisionists and fugitives from justice.

The film has since provoked strong criticisms from within and outside Rwanda, with the umbrella organisation of Genocide survivor associations, Ibuka, urging BBC to apologise, while a coalition of 38 renowned international researchers, former diplomats and investigative journalists has also called on the British broadcaster to retract the documentary and institute an open investigation in the motives.
President Kagame pointed to the hypocrisy of an outlet that prides itself on freedom of speech yet offers a platforms that allows for genocide denial.

He said the documentary invoked memories of the role of hate media such Radio Télévision Libre des Mille Collines (RTLM), the extremist broadcaster that incited the masses to commit the Genocide against the Tutsi two decades ago.

“The freedom they teach us is different when it comes to Rwanda. They selected all those who have been discredited for very obvious reasons to be the ones to tell the story that should be believed about all of us,” said the President.

Giving platform to terrorists
In an apparent reference to Kayumba Nyamwasa and Theogene Rudasingwa of RNC – the political party linked to a spate of grenade attacks in the country in recent years –who featured prominently in the BBC documentary, Kagame pointed to the double standards when it comes to defining and fighting extremism.
“There was terrorism done here. When grenades were thrown, killing our children, it was the first time that I saw terrorism being internationally supported,” he said.

“The world has given a platform to those who actually were behind it. These people in the documentary are the one who were behind the grenades.”

“Would they give the same platform to ISIS?” President Kagame challenged.
1413325563Rwandans-headquartes
Rwandans and other well-wishers protest outside Broadcast House in London last week. (File)
He also spoke of the double standards that continue to characterise the international community, including on matters of regional security matters, suggesting that the genocidal FDLR militia could not have maintained bases in eastern DR Congo for 20 years if there had been genuine commitment to disarm them.

“FDLR has lived for 20 years; you think it is by accident? The FDLR are associated with people who killed our one million people but when it’s something threatening their interests, everybody must cooperate?” President Kagame said.

President Kagame urged leaders to view these challenges as an opportunity to learn a lesson.
“I am saying this to remind you that no one owes you a thing, you are on your own and you should own it. You should own your story, own everything about it, shape it the way you want and the way you deserve.”
He added that challenges facing Rwanda will never end and should serve as a source of determination.
“With every challenge put on our way, we get stronger, not weaker. Our body may get weak but our spirit never will. Let our challenges be the motivation to do more, to get more progress and move faster to develop our nation.”

“We cannot be people who run away from problems. We need to push and fight back.You can choose to spend your time talking but Rwanda is not about words. Rwanda is about action,” Kagame added.
The President urged leaders to fulfill their responsibility towards citizens of Rwanda.
“Let’s be serious about development. Let’s make sure every Rwandan has security and freedom. We cannot outsource it.”



He also spoke of Rwanda’s responsibility to bring its modest national capabilities to bear and work with other countries to contain global challenges such as the Ebola outbreak in West Africa, which has so far claimed more than 4000 lives.

He described Ebola as an urgent security threat to nations and urged the Ministry of Health, Local Government authorities, among others, to put in place strategies that would help adequately respond to any outbreak and stand ready to provide support to the affected countries.

“These things remind us of how interdependent and interconnected the world is and also of our responsibilities to ourselves and to others, in our small way,” Kagame said.