As campaigns to elect a new president for Rwanda gather pace,
the role of local government officials who also double as agents of the
ruling Rwanda Patriotic Front is once again coming into focus with
opposition candidates alleging harassment.
This has attracted the attention of President Paul Kagame, who last week called for investigations into the allegations.
Reacting to the accusations, first raised by aspirant Diane Rwigara, Kagame said on June 23 that the law should take its own course.
“We
want to create a country where the rule of law comes first. If anybody
was denied their rights, herself directly or her supporters, it is
absolutely wrong and should be addressed,” Kagame told the media.
The
electoral commission recently released a provisional list of candidates
for the August 4 presidential elections with the Rwanda Patriotic
Front’s Paul Kagame and the Green Party’s Frank Habineza confirmed as
the only provisional candidates so far.
However, some aspirants have in the past few weeks cited cases
of arrests, harassment and threats to their supporters by purported
security agents and local authorities.
The claims
shared by the Green Party’s flag bearer Frank Habineza and independents
Philippe Mpayimana, Gilbert Mwenedata and Diane Rwigara, were described
as amounting to human rights violations likely to lead to unfair
competition during the August 4th elections.
Rwanda
Human Rights Commission chairperson Madeleine Nirere said there is a
need to educate citizens, political parties and candidates on electoral
rights, laws and regulations alongside monitoring possible rights
violation.
Commission officials could not say much
about the validity of the claims, saying they they were not brought to
the institution’s attention.
The commission
chairperson said only the case involving pictures purported to be Diane
Rwigara’s was closely examined though no conclusion has been arrived at.
The pictures were leaked online shortly after she announced her
intention to run for presidency,
“We
have not kept quiet; we picked up the issue because the act constitutes
a punishable crime. We found out that the police was doing an
investigation into the matter, so we expect that when the investigations
are done with the prosecution will take to court the person behind the
leakage of the pictures,” said Nirere.
Harassment
Ms
Rwigara, like fellow presidential aspirants, cited illegal arrest,
threats and intimidation of supporters by local leaders who often double
as the ruling party chairpersons in their respective jurisdictions.
She
claimed more than 10 of her representatives had been arrested or
threatened while Habineza said his supporters in Gicumbi, Gisagara and
Nyamasheke suffered the same fate and some were forced to abandon the
party.
Mpayimana and Mwenedata also claimed
intimidation and threats were used by the local leaders to make their
job difficult as they tried to raise the mandatory 600 signatures across
30 districts in the country.
Dr Habineza said, if not
addressed, the harassment will be a challenge that is likely to
complicate the race for presidency going forward when aspirants approved
by the electoral commission start campaigning on July 7th.
“There
is no guarantee for free and fair elections if the local authorities
don’t become neutral and separate conflicting roles as public servants
and RPF chairpersons at district and grassroots levels,” he said.
Concerned candidates said they filed complaints with the Ministry of Local Government, the Police and the electoral commission.
Asked
about the issue, incumbent and ruling party Chairman and flag bearer
Paul Kagame, condemned the acts as wrong, adding that should individuals
who were involved be known, they should be held accountable whether
they are RPF members or not.
Monitoring
respect for human rights during elections was on the agenda of a
meeting last week of over 40 local civil society organisations.
Human
Rights Commission chairperson Madeleine Nirere said a joint public
awareness-raising and training exercise that starts in July would enable
the commission to address existing gaps and ensure there is appropriate
intervention in case of rights violation.
However,
some civil society organisations could find it difficult to fully engage
in monitoring elections due to lack of funding.
Alexis
Nkurunziza, the Executive Secretary of Rwanda religious leaders’ forum,
one of the civil society organisations that requested for accreditation
to observe elections, said they were yet to mobilise the more than
Rwf160 million ($189,283) needed for carrying out the exercise.
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