Rwandan opposition leader Bernard Ntaganda in peril after prison hunger strike
by Ann Garrison
KPFA Evening News, broadcast Sept. 15, 2013
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Transcript
KPFA Evening News Anchor David Rosenberg: Rwandan opposition leader Bernard Ntaganda is reported to be in perilous condition after going on a hunger strike to protest inhumane conditions in Rwanda's Mpanga Prison, which is also known as Rwanda's Guantanamo. Rwanda has been a close ally and military partner of the U.S. since President Kagame and his Rwandan Patriotic Front seized power in 1994. KPFA's Ann Garrison has more.
Instead, Bernard Ntaganda was in prison by mid-June, Victoire Ingabire by mid-October, and both have remained in prison since. Rwandan refugees in Europe carry banners of their images when marching on their home country's embassies in Brussels and other European capitals.
Ntaganda's fellow party members report that he went on the hunger strike to protest inhumane conditions that include being constantly bound and shackled in his cell.
In October 2012, Amnesty International published a report titled, "Rwanda: Shrouded in secrecy: Illegal detention and torture by military intelligence," in which they sounded an alarm about rising rates of illegal detention, disappearances and torture in Rwandan prisons, including electric shock, beatings, near suffocation and sensory deprivation.
Before he was arrested and imprisoned, however, Bernard Ntaganda told KPFA that Rwanda's so-called progress has concentrated wealth in the hands of Kagame's Rwandan Patriotic Front Party allies and radically increased wealth disparity, leaving most Rwandans very poor.
Bernard Ntaganda: The problem is not Tutsi. The problem is not Hutu. The problem is a small group of people, a small group of people, who have between their hands the power, all power, government power – they have the wealth – and the majority of Rwandese are very poor.
KPFA/Ann Garrison: Rwandan journalist Didas Gasana said he would like to tell American taxpayers that their taxes are supporting one of the most brutal dictatorships in Africa and that it's a betrayal of the Rwandese people.
Ann Garrison: Gasana fled Kigali, Rwanda, to Kampala, Uganda, in 2010, the same year that Bernard Ntaganda and Victoire Ingabire went to prison instead of running for president as planned. He was granted refugee status in Europe after a fellow refugee journalist was gunned down in Kampala. The Rwandan government then sent him a letter in Europe to let him know that he'd been sentenced to 37 years in prison, in absentia.
Rwanda has one of the highest rates of incarceration in the world, with statistical studies varying between the third and sixth greatest number of prisoners per capita.
For Pacifica, KPFA, and AfrobeatRadio, I'm Ann Garrison.
Oakland writer Ann Garrison writes for the San Francisco Bay View,Global Research, Colored Opinions, Black Star News and her own website, Ann Garrison, and produces for AfrobeatRadio on WBAI-NYC, KPFA Evening News and her own YouTube Channel,AnnieGetYourGang. She can be reached atann@afrobeatradio.com. This story first appeared on her website. If you want to see Ann Garrison's independent reporting continue, please contribute on her website at anngarrison.com.
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