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UN forces Zim to hunt down fugitive
Patrice Makova,
The Standard (Zimbabwe)
November 18, 2012
http://www.thestandard.co.zw/2012/11/18/un-forces-zim-to-hunt-down-fugitive/
Threats of possible United Nations Security Council action against
Zimbabwe forced the government to launch a manhunt for Protais Mpiranya,
a former top Rwandan official accused of taking part in the 1994
genocide, it has emerged.
After years
of denial, Zimbabwe recently admitted that Mpiranya, who is wanted
by the United Nations' International Criminal Tribunal for
Rwanda (ICTR), was most likely hiding in the country.
Failure to co-operate
with the tribunal could lead to the UN imposing sanctions and other
measures against the country.
US ambassador-at-large
of the Office of Global Criminal Justice, Stephen Rapp told The
Standard at the on-going 11th session of the Assembly of State Parties
of the International Criminal Court (ICC) on Friday that the ICTR
prosecutor was forced to report Zimbabwe to the UN Security Council
in June this year due to non-co-operation by the government.
Rapp, who is
also in charge of the United States "Rewards for Justice"
programme, which is offering a US$5 million incentive for the arrest
of Mpiranya, said Zimbabwe was obliged to co-operate with the Rwandan
tribunal since it was a creation of the UN.
"Since
the prosecutor [Rwandan tribunal] complained to the security council
in June, Zimbabwean authorities are now working with the tribunal.
I hope full co-operation will be established soon," he said.
Rapp said the
prosecutor had "strong" information that Mpiranya has
been hiding in Zimbabwe for many years now.
"These
leads need to be developed to determine whether he is still there,"
he said.
Rapp warned
that Mpiranya was a security threat as the genocide suspect had
a destablising factor wherever he went.
He said although
not much was being said about him, as commander of the Presidential
Guard in 1994, he played a key role in the massacre of an estimated
800 000 ethnic Tutsis and moderate Hutus.
"It is
the presidential guard that began the killing on the morning of
April 7 [1994], including that of moderate Hutu President Juvénal
Habyarimana and others actors (including President Cyprien Ntaryamira
of Burundi)," Rapp said.
He said this
was the catalyst to the genocide that left nearly a million dead.
Rapp said Mpiranya was later involved in civil wars in the Democratic
Republic of Congo. "He is the kind of individual that continues,
to cause problems if he gets an opportunity, so it is important
that he be brought to justice," said the US ambassador.
He challenged
Zimbabweans to take up the issue of the US$5 million reward seriously,
adding they stood to financially benefit from the arrest of the
fugitive.
Police recently
said Mpiranya could be using aliases Theophase Mahuku or James Kakule.
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