Rwandan Fabien Neretse is pictured in front of the Palace of Justice
during the first day of his trial in Brussels, on November 4, 2019.
Neretse has also charged with involvement in killings in the Gitaram and
Ruhengeri districts, where the agricultural engineer had founded a
school. PHOTO | JOHN THYS | AFP
A former senior Rwandan official went on trial in Belgium on
Monday accused of taking part in the 1994 genocide against the Tutsi in
his country.
Friends and relatives of the alleged
victims of 71-year-old Fabien Neretse were present as he arrived at the
Brussels court, leaning on a crutch.
For the first time
in a Belgian case, Neretse is explicitly charged with "genocide" over
13 alleged murders between April and July 1994.
He was arrested in France in 2011, but was not in detention and presented himself at court. He denies all charges.
"I'm innocent," he declared to journalists outside the court.
Neretse
did not immediately appear in the dock, as Monday's hearing focused on
jury selection. The first full hearing is to take place on Thursday
Neretse's lawyer, Jean-Pierre Jacques, predicted that the
prosecution would find it "very hard to prove" his client had sought to
target an entire ethnic group.
Under a 1993 law,
Belgian courts enjoy universal jurisdiction to prosecute genocide, war
crimes and crimes against humanity wherever they took place.
This
is the fifth trial regarding the genocide in Rwanda to have taken place
in Belgium, the African country's former colonial power.
Belgian
citizen Claire Beckers was a shopkeeper in the Rwandan capital, married
to a man from the Tutsi ethnic group, with whom she had an 18-year-old
daughter.
All three were killed on April 9, 1994, three
days after the assassination of president Juvenal Habyarimana and the
start of mass killings of Tutsi by Hutu extremists.
Beckers's
Belgian sister lodged a complaint, and Belgian prosecutors argue
Neretse was a leader in her area who sent armed men to prevent Tutsi
escaping the death squads.
Neretse is also charged with
involvement in killings in the Gitaram and Ruhengeri districts, where
the agricultural engineer had founded a school.
Beckers's
sister Martine Beckers told AFP that the trial was the "end of a long
battle", insisting it is "important to honour the victims".
According
to UN figures, the Rwandan genocide cost the lives of 800,000 people,
mainly from the Tutsi minority but also moderate Hutus.
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