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OpEdNews Op Eds    H4'ed 10/6/09

Rwanda's Democratic Greens shut down, for the third time


Ann Garrison
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by Ann Garrison


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On October 2nd, 2009, over 900 delegates from every district in Rwanda came
to Kigali for a conference of the new Rwandan Democratic Green Party, formed
on August 14, 2009. The meeting was abruptly stopped by the Mayor of
Nyarugenge District, as party delegates looked on in disbelief. (Inset)
Party leader Frank Habineza.


It's hardly surprising that, on October 2nd, 2009, 900 delegates to the new Rwandan Democratic Green Party weren't allowed to meet in Kigali, Rwanda. The Kagame government, which Clinton, Warren, and the Obama/Clinton State Department all point to as the triumph and future of Africa, shut them down, again, for the third time.

How much longer will so much of the world accept the U.S. State Department's official lies about the Rwandan police state, U.S. puppet Rwandan President Paul Kagame, and the Rwandan Defense Force, the U.S.A.'s African proxy army in D.R. Congo, Sudan, and elsewhere in Africa, as needed?

During the previous week, on September 29, 2009, former President Bill Clinton presented Rwandan President Paul Kagame with a Global Citizenship Award. On Friday, Reverend Rick Warren hung his International Medal of Peace around Kagame's neck at a "Saddleback Civil Forum on Peace and Reconciliation," at Warren's evangelical Saddleback Church in Orange County, California. (Warren hung his first "International Medal of Peace" around George Bush's neck last year.)

Alphonse Rutazigwa, reports "A Sad Day for Democracy in Rwanda," for the Rwanda News Agency:

Friday, 02 October 2009

Kigali: They moved hundreds of kilometers " some for the first time to the capital. Others braved the trouble of having to move with babies. Some abandoned their jobs to be in Kigali for the event that did not happen. Up to 900 supposed delegates of the Democratic Green Party of Rwanda (DGPR) found themselves at the center of an unexpected controversy, RNA reports.

The newly formed party was on Friday told it could not hold a scheduled delegates' conference. Interim party officials had booked St. Famille CANA hall " owned by the Kigali catholic diocese. The large number of delegates meant some had to stand outside anxiously waiting for the grand event to start.

These delegates had come all the way to give their nomination signatures to the new party. It is these signatures which party officials hoped would form part of the registration dossier with the Ministry of Local Government.

"I don't know how I will get back to Rusizi district [in western province] - a five hour journey, moreover without accomplishing what had brought me here, said Annonciata Nyirakanyana, while breast feeding her son.

Looking at the crowd, many were youths. Notable among the delegates were also a few older men and women. There are about a dozen mothers. Since all have now been informed the conference is taking place anymore, they all stand outside looking like people who have lost their jobs.

The genesis of the chaos that these people were witnessing first hand started at 8:30 am when an official from Nyarugenge district arrived at the event venue with a letter from the Nyarugenge district mayor Rutayisire Origà ne.

The mayor writes in response to another letter sent September 29 from the Green party which had informed him of the intention to have their meeting on Friday. Party officials were letting him know that they already had a place booked.

"I hereby first inform you that you write [a] letter requesting permission to hold this meeting on this date [October 02] , writes mayor Rutayisire, in a four-sentence official letter.

However, Green party officials had also informed him in their letter that since the Nyarugenge notary was not available, they would secure another notary " which they indeed effected.

The mayor's response meant that even with a new notary, the Green party would not be allowed to hold the meeting " only after seeking new permission. This will now be the fourth time the conference has been forced to postpone. The party has had to incur expenses to transport the delegates.

"From what I have witnessed today, I do not think there is democracy in Rwanda, retorts Munyankumburwa Innocent. "To me, this means that the government is not yet ready for multiparty democracy. If they say parties do exist, then what is this?

For Interim party president Mr. Frank Habineza: "Someone is sabotaging us."

"Imagine all the expenses we have incurred. I really cannot explain who is behind all this, he furiously shouts as he speaks to reporters. "This really is a sad day for democracy in this country.

The smartly dressed female party officials keep loitering around to calm their seemingly frustrated sympathizers. In a corner, one official " looking disturbed slams a bunch of books on a table, when RNA put to her that the party should write another letter for permission as requested by the mayor.

"We are tired of this kind of way of doing things in this country, she dismissively says. "No one seems to be able to tell you the truth. This one says the other is responsible, the other says the next one is responsible.

(Last updated, by the RNA, Tuesday, 10.02.2009.)

Two days after publication, "A sad day for democracy in Rwanda," became inaccessible on the state run Rwandan News Agency (RNA), as did other stories about suppression of the Rwandan Democratic Greens. At 8:00 A.M. PST, on 10.06.2009, the web page where the story had been still read: "You are not authorized to view this resource," http://www.rnanews.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=2073&Itemid=1. In a SKYPE conversation, from California to Rwanda, party co-founder and leader Frank Habineza told me that the RNA's editor was under "big pressure."

Neither I nor others received the e-mail verification promised after attempting to register on the RNA website to gain access. In an e-mail response to a subsequent inquiry, sent to rna@rwanda1.com, the RNA said that I would have to subscribe, but offered me no form for doing so, despite my request for one. Other, officially approved RNA content remains readily accessible at http://www.rnanews.com/.

Last Updated ( Tuesday, 06, October 2009 )




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Ann Garrison is an independent journalist based in the San Francisco Bay Area. In 2014, she received the Victoire Ingabire Umuhoza Democracy and Peace Prize for her reporting on conflict in the African Great Lakes region. She can be reached (more...)
 

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