Dear sir,
 
  Thank you for asking my opinion on this subject.
 
   I personaly believe that the Rwandan police acted properly and 
professionaly on apprehending Mr Rwigara.
 
 Mr Rwigara was officialy wanted by the authorities to explain what 
had happened at his construction site.The entire country knew that 
the police was looking for him.The national media did a wide coverage 
about it.Why did Mr Rwigara did choose to ignore the police?No where 
in the world a sane person will behave this way.When the authorities 
are looking for someone is up to him to turn in himself rather than 
wait for them to catch up with you.That the way it is all over the 
world. The LAW is tough but it is the LAW.As for the orphans.Let me 
remind you that there was ORPHANS and WIDOWS as result of that 
incident at the construction site.Those are real Orphans and very 
poor who will never see again their fathers who were employed and 
probably poorly payed by Rwigara.
 
  As for General RUSAGARA,I am very disappointed.I have always had 
and still have a great respect for the General.But in this case he 
used a poor judgement for a person of his caliber.
 
   A General does not interfere with police work.Especially low 
ranking officers executing official orders.What the General should 
have done was to identify the person who had issued the WARRANT and 
negociate with him or whatever.But no one does stop the police on 
duty.
 
   On final note let me state that EVERYONE IS EQUAL UNDER THE 
LAW.There are not gonna be two forms of justice(One for the Rich and 
another one Poor).
 
                        Thank you.
 
 
                                Sharangabo Rufagari
 
    
 
 
 
 
 

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"thong.prenomdo" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
thong.prenomdo 
 
 
Re : ISRAEL NEED TO HAVE HIS OWN PAUL KAGAME.Do you think so ? 


(Publicité)

   
Sharangabo,
Don't you have any comment on Rwigara & Rusagara issue? Let us know
the authorised statement.What about the controversial police's
spokesman declaration? And don't forget some pictures(ladies first)
from our beloved country.
do


sharangabo rufagari <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
 
Rwanda is lucky in having its own David Ben-Gurion at a critical time 
in its history. We were lucky in having the original, back then when 
our state was established. What we need now is to have our own Paul 
Kagame! (DAVID KIMCHE in the JERUSALEM POST)
 --- Dans [EMAIL PROTECTED], "thong.prenomdo" 
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> a écrit :
>
> Sharangabo, 
> Don't you have any comment on Rwigara & Rusagara issue? Let us know 
> the authorised statement.What about the controversial police's 
> spokesman declaration? And don't forget some pictures(ladies first) 
> from our beloved country.
> do
> --- Dans [EMAIL PROTECTED], sharangabo 
rufagari 
> <sharangabor@> a écrit :
> >
> >    
> >     Rwanda is lucky in having its own David Ben-Gurion at a 
> critical time in its history. We were lucky in having the original, 
> back then when our state was established. What we need now is to 
> have our own Paul Kagame! (DAVID KIMCHE in the JERUSALEM POST)
> > 
> >    
> >    
> >   
> >                 Lessons from Rwanda, the 'Israel of Africa'
> > By DAVID KIMCHE
> >                 Print  Subscribe       E-mail  Toolbar    
> >    'Where were you when the killing began?" I asked my 
> driver.   "I was here. I managed to hide," he answered.   "And what 
> happened to your family? Were they able to hide, too?"   "No," he 
> replied. "My mother, my father, my brothers and sisters were all 
> massacred. I am the only member of our family who stayed alive."   
> No, we were not talking about the killing fields of Nazi-dominated 
> Europe. Our conversation took place in Kigali, the capital of 
Rwanda 
> where, during 100 days in 1994, nearly one million people were 
> butchered.   Two different peoples, nine million inhabitants in a 
> country the size of Israel, have lived side-by-side in uneasy 
> coexistence. Violence was never far below the surface. Tens of 
> thousands of Tutsis and Hutus were killed during the years that led 
> up to the genocide of 1994.   The scars of that genocide are still 
> there, everywhere. On a hill overlooking the capital, the 
> Rwandan "Yad Vashem" serves as a constant reminder of those 
terrible 
> hundred days.
> >  The Memorial recounts the massacres in harrowing pictures. It 
> relives the horror and the bestiality as children, women and men 
> were hacked to death in a frenzy of killing. It gives the story of 
> the Hutu leaders who planned the genocide; of the discussions at 
the 
> cabinet level and of how one minister declared that all Tutsis 
> should be eliminated; of how the media - radio and television - 
> whipped up their listeners to fever pitch, exhorting them to kill, 
> kill, kill.   The Memorial also reminds visitors of the passivity 
of 
> the world; how the UN forces in Rwanda were instructed by the 
> secretary-general not to intervene and to limit their activities to 
> evacuating foreign nationals; how the US refused help and only 
> reluctantly admitted that a genocide was occurring after more than 
> half a million people had been cut down.   The French are singled 
> out as having played a sinister, suspect role; after it was all 
> over, the president of Rwanda gave the French ambassador 24 hours to
> >  close down the embassy and leave the country with all French 
> members of his staff. "If you are not out in 24 hours we will bus 
> all of you to the frontier and leave you there," he told the 
> ambassador.   When UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan asked to come to 
> Rwanda to apologize, the president told him: "You can come as far 
as 
> the airport" - and, indeed, he received the apology at the foot of 
> Annan's plane, and did not allow the secretary-general to come into 
> Kigali.   The massacres came to a halt when Paul Kagame, who today 
> is president of Rwanda, led a force of Tutsi soldiers from 
> neighboring Uganda and succeeded in overthrowing the Hutu 
> government. Nearly two million Hutu refugees fled the country, 
> mainly to Congo. Most of the leading perpetrators of the genocide 
> have since been tried and sentenced; field trials are still taking 
> place.   The amazing thing about Rwanda today, however, is that 
> Tutsis and Hutus are living together in peace, despite the terrible 
> events of 12
> >  years ago. Under President Kagame's dynamic leadership, the 
> economy has grown at an annual rate of 8.7 percent, one of the 
> highest in the world (and double that of Israel).   The president 
> stunned his population by appointing a Hutu as prime minister and 
by 
> abolishing the identity cards in which inhabitants were classed 
> as "Tutsi" or "Hutu," something that the Belgian colonizers had 
> installed. "From now on we are all Rwandan," he declared.   
> Reconciliation became the dominant policy of the president: Today 
> Tutsis and Hutus work side by side, at peace with each other, the 
> slaughter of 12 years ago by no means forgotten, but put aside for 
> the common good.   Continued
> > 1 | 2 | Next »
> >                 Print  Subscribe       E-mail  Toolbar  
> > 
> > 
> > 
> >                 Sharangabo Rufagari
> >    
> >      Montreal
> >   
> > 
> >       http://www.rpfinkotanyi.org/?page=indirimbo
> >    
> >    
> >   RWANDA RAVE REVIEWS
> >    
> >    
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > 
> >        
> > ---------------------------------
> > Be smarter than spam. See how smart SpamGuard is at giving junk 
> email the boot with the All-new Yahoo! Mail
> >
>





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