Rwanda's exiled former
army chief Faustin Kayumba Nyamwasa on Thursday accused Kigali of
"intimidating" and "terrorising" the opposition after state prosecutors
reportedly issued a warrant for his arrest.
According
to Rwandan news website Igihe, which is close to the regime of President
Paul Kagame, the prosecution "issued arrest warrants against exiled
general Kayumba Nyamwasa and other leaders of the new P5 rebel group".
P5
is a platform made up of five Rwandan opposition parties, including
Kayumba Nyamwasa's Rwandan National Congress (RNC), that Kigali has
accused of fomenting rebellion -- a charge it denies.
"It
is the way the government of Rwanda works... by intimidation and
terrorising the opposition," Kayumba Nyamwasa told AFP in South Africa
where he has been living in self-imposed exile since 2010.
"If
you oppose Kagame, either he will kill you (or) if he does not kill
you, he will imprison you, (and) if he does imprison you, he will harass
you," he said.
Kayumba Nyamwasa has been targeted by at least four assassination attempts.
There was no immediate comment from Kigali while Pretoria said it had not been informed about the warrants, which also targeted Kayumba Nyamwasa's brother-in-law Frank Ntwali and Kennedy Gihana, a lawyer based in South Africa.
There was no immediate comment from Kigali while Pretoria said it had not been informed about the warrants, which also targeted Kayumba Nyamwasa's brother-in-law Frank Ntwali and Kennedy Gihana, a lawyer based in South Africa.
Deflecting attention?
The former army chief said the arrest warrants, which were issued on January 18, were timed to deflect attention from a fresh probe into the murder of fellow Rwandan dissident Patrick Karegeya, which opened in Johannesburg on January 16.
The former army chief said the arrest warrants, which were issued on January 18, were timed to deflect attention from a fresh probe into the murder of fellow Rwandan dissident Patrick Karegeya, which opened in Johannesburg on January 16.
"They are trying to divert
attention from the inquest and try to engage South Africa, the
international community and the media so that the inquest is
overshadowed by this question of the arrest warrants," he said.
Karegeya,
Rwanda's former spy chief and a former close aide to Kagame, was found
dead in a luxury Johannesburg hotel room on January 1, 2014. He had been
strangled but so far, no-one has been charged with his death.
He
went into exile in 2007, heading for South Africa where he was joined
three years later by Kayumba Nyamwasa. There, the pair founded the
opposition RNC.
On January 21, South African
prosecutors said that "close links" existed between Kagame's regime and
four Rwandan suspects who quickly fled the country immediately after the
murder, one of whom had booked Karegeya's hotel room.
Kigali is regularly accused of threatening opponents in exile, notably of seeking to kill them - a charge Kagame has always denied.
Kigali is regularly accused of threatening opponents in exile, notably of seeking to kill them - a charge Kagame has always denied.
Kayumba Nyamwasa said his RNC wanted to change the democratic process in Rwanda.
"We can not support a president who rigged up to 99 percent of the elections, meaning effectively, there is no opposition in Rwanda," he told AFP.
"We can not support a president who rigged up to 99 percent of the elections, meaning effectively, there is no opposition in Rwanda," he told AFP.
Any president who scored such a high number in an election "cannot be anything other than a dictator".
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