Frank Kagabo
By Frank Kagabo
In Summary
It is almost a month since the murder of the
former chief of external intelligence and —what is widely ignored—former
army spokesman Patrick Karegeya in a hotel room in Johannesburg, South
Africa.
With his burial, and passage of time, I had
thought this elimination of one of the most vocal opposition politicians
would vanish from international news. Not so, it turns out.
Karegeya has been described in many ways by
different people who fall on the different sides of the highly charged
and polarised political climate that this country has become.
After a brief loud silence, the top diplomat in Kigali, Louise Mushikiwabo, came out on Twitter, to comment on the murder
.
.
Her comments, for some observers, were unique by their tone of “callousness to the young children of the deceased.”
For many, they would have been fair game comments
in such a bloody contest of former allies had they been directed at her
opposite officials in the political opposition. Indeed, many were
initially dumbfounded by the lack of diplomatic finesse coming out of
Kigali officials.
The Prime Minister, and most especially, the
Defence Minister, Gen James Kabarebe, a long-time aide of President Paul
Kagame and apparently also a longtime associate of Karegeya and
Kayumba Nyamwasa, seems to have shocked and surprised many.
For those who thought that these officials were
just being over enthusiastic spokesmen of the ruling establishment, it
became apparent that, that was probably the official position of Kigali
when the president spoke at a prayer breakfast meeting.
Speaking to an audience of Kigali’s who-is- who,
the president made it clear how he was “unapologetic” in regard to what
befalls those considered enemies of the state.
Attempts to draw comparisons with other global
powers in their war on terror, seem to have not cut it with the wider
“chattering class” that is outside the Kigali sphere of influence.
The murder of Karegeya and the way Kigali has
tried to frame the whole issue, and how it has been received by the rest
of the world, seems to be having far reaching consequences.
The comments of the US State Department spokesman
seem to reflect the widely held view of the international community in
regard to Rwanda’s government.
Whereas Kigali has over the years distanced itself
from any political assassinations that have been levelled against it,
it seems that other centres of power are not convinced.
But why is it that the US State Department, and
other global political players are seemingly sending messages of
disapproval to Kigali, when it is widely acknowledged that states, many
allied to the US, routinely eliminate political dissidents, without
anyone raising a voice?
Yet, with official investigations yet to determine
the perpetrators of this crime, some global powers are already giving
warnings to Kigali, however feeble they may be.
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