Today's Headlines
- Two Exhibitions Are On At Ramoma, Nairobi
- Country to Review Tourism Law
- Econet Wireless Finally Rolls Out
- Odinga Warns of Civil Unrest
- Mulee Rules Out Harambee Stars U-Turn
- Taking Up a Women's Agenda
- More Than 6,000 Christian Youth Converge for Prayers
- Catholic Church Outraged By MPs' Refusal to Pay Tax
- Pope Benedict Praying for Release of Abducted Nuns
- Thousands Flee Amid Fears of Border Clashes
- Malaria Rates Plummet Among Children
- Winning Against HIV Stigma Behind Bars
- First Congress of Federation of African Journalists a Historic Milestone, Says IFJ
- Archbishop Lele Urges State to Act as Food Crisis Bites
- Regional Workshop Focus Border Management, Irregular Migration
- Silverbird Acquires Kenya's Nu Metro, Starts Operations in Ghana
- Raila is Evil, Says Minister
- Man Charged With Abduction of Two Catholic Sisters
- UN Censures State On Torture
- Agencies Seek $390 Million to Offset Climate And Food Risks
- UN-Backed Scheme Gives 3,000 Prisoners Clean Water and Sanitation
- Samosa Festival is On in Nairobi
- Heartstrings in Another Comedy
- Govts, Investors Engage RVR in Rail Bid
- Mwangi Replaces Mwebesa At NSE
- Riepa Hosts Business Association
- ICTR Petitions UN for Arrest of Kabuga
- UBA to Invest SH360 Billion in Kenya
- Free Movement of People Too, Not Just Goods and Capital
- Judges Running Out of Money?
Hirondelle News Agency (Lausanne)
May 10, 2008
News Article
The Special Representative of Rwandan government to the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR), Aloys Mutabingwa, has welcomed seizure in Nairobi, Kenya of a property belonging to Felicien Kabuga, alleged financier of the 1994 genocide, but considered the initiative as insufficient.
The High Court of Kenya ordered Tuesday seizure of a spacious house upmarket Kilimani area located along Nairobi's Lenana Road , belonging to Kabuga, wanted for several years by the ICTR.
The Kenyan High Court's orders were issued after prosecutor Keriako Tobiko told it that proceeds from the estate helped the fugitive to evade capture. He said that the move is one of the policies put forward to make it hard for the renegade businessman to operate.
"The impasse has lasted too long; that is why we welcome this initiative. But, only the arrest of this man will put an end to this impasse ", Mutabingwa told the Hirondelle Agency.
The same concern was expressed Tuesday by the ICTR spokesperson, Roland Amoussouga.
"It is good news but additional efforts must be made (by Kenya) to ensure his arrest", remarked Amoussouga.
Timothy Gallimore, spokesperson for the Office of the Prosecutor (OTP), declined any comment at this moment.
At the end of September 2006, the ICTR prosecutor, Hassan Bubacar Jallow, had pressured Kenya to arrest Kabuga. The following month, the Kenyan police had renewed its calls for his arrest, referring him as an "extremely dangerous fugitive".
Accused of having ordered the machetes that were used in the 1994 massacres, Kabuga is the ICTR's most wanted person. He had initially taken refuge in Switzerland before escaping to the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), then to Kenya; where he has escaped at least three attempts to arrest him.
He is suspected of having received protection from the former Kenyan president, Daniel Arap Moi. Kabuga's son-in-law, Augustin Ngirabatware, the former minister of planning, was arrested in September 2007 in Germany, where he is still being held while waiting his transfer to the Arusha-based ICTR.
An influential member of the then Rwandan presidential party, National Republican Movement for Democracy and Development (MRND), Kabuga was also a related to the former Rwandan President Juvenal Habyarimana, whose assassination on 6 April 1994 sparked the genocide.
In addition to Kabuga, 12 other persons accused by the ICTR are still at large. The UN Security Council has asked the tribunal to finish all its first instance trials by end of the year.


