Abbey Ssemuwemba

 

Why in God’s sakes is it of a value to know who killed a killer? No seriously 
tell me why it is important for me as EM tonight, Toronto time,  to know who 
murdered this crap? When you join this kind of politics, a politics lead by 
Museveni lead by Besigye led by Mugisha Muntu lead by Tinyefunza, lead by any 
crap that does not go to be elected on constituency level, but builds its 
support on hullabaloo innuendoes and talking too  much, you end up shot and 
dead. And that is true to Karegeya as it is true to Ssabassajja Mutebi.

 

Crap always ends up into being crap sir.                              Geez

 

EM
On the 49th

 

 

           Thé Mulindwas Communication Group
"With Yoweri Museveni and Dr. Kiiza Besigye Uganda is in anarchy"
           Kuungana Mulindwa Mawasiliano Kikundi
"Pamoja na Yoweri Museveni na Dk. Kiiza Besigye Uganda ni katika machafuko"

 

From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Abbey Semuwemba
Sent: Friday, January 17, 2014 2:53 AM
To: [email protected]
Cc: Ugandans At Heart
Subject: Re: {UAH} Who killed Karegeya?

 

Moses,

Thanks for sharing though it now increasingly looks like we will never know who 
killed Karegeya (as was the case with Fred Rwigyema and others). That said, the 
latest statement by Kagame about Karegeya's death sounds a bit more like 
confession of some sort, but we wait!

 

Abbey

Sent from my iPad


On 17 Jan 2014, at 06:45, Ocen Nekyon <[email protected]> wrote:

Karegeya, Nyamwasa split

In mid 2013, the Rwanda National Congress (RNC) had scheduled an election for 
its leaders in South Africa for Aug 8. However, in the weeks preceding the 
election, the party experienced infighting and consequently the election was 
postponed. Two camps had emerged, one supporting Emile Rutagengwa and another 
supporting Frank Ntwali, a brother in law Kayumba Nyamwasa, the presumptive 
leader of the party.

Elections were finally held on October 27, 2013. The election pitted former 
Rwandan intelligence chief, Patrick Karegeya against Kayumba. Although the two 
men were not in the race, they backed rival candidates.

This is the first time disagreements between the two erstwhile allies were 
becoming manifest and thereby leading RNC closer to a split. In a highly 
contested vote, the group close to Ntwali took over all the posts.

 

Kayumba was accused by some members for interference in the elections and was 
asked to apologise. Kayumba had “forced” Mike Rwarinda and Ferdinand Barihiga 
to withdraw their candidature in favour of Ntwali. There were complaints that 
Etienne Mutabazi was protected from competition when he was not a good 
performer. It is claimed that RNC members were not happy and have no confidence 
in the leadership.

During campaigns there were character assassinations where some members were 
accused of working with the Rwandan embassy in Johannesburg. This was the first 
time accusations of infiltration on the RNC were taking center stage in the 
party and thus bringing Kayumba and Karegeya into a direct collision course. 
Kayumba wanted his brother in law, Ntwali, to stay in power by blocking Kennedy 
Gihana, supported by Karegeya.

RNC sources say the Karegeya-Gihana group’s strategy was to attract new blood 
who do not identify with RNC – people who question the sudden change from being 
RPF to FDLR. A heated debate ensued with veiled threats and recriminations.

A meeting to discuss the disagreements was called and a compromise was struck: 
Karegeya and Kayumba agreed not to attend the election. But on the day of the 
election, Karegeya appeared at Dovenshire Hotel; Kayumba did not. However, 
voters elected pro-Kayumba candidates among them Ntwali; a genocide suspect 
called Mutabazi was elected vice chair while Gihana was elected SG. 

According to RNC insiders, Karegeya demanded that his choices pass, a factor 
that annoyed Kayumba who considered himself the natural leader. Karegeya 
accused Kayumba of being camera hungry even though RNC was losing momentum and 
becoming disorganised by the day.

Kayumba responded that Karegeya was a womanising traitor who was leaking 
secrets to the government of Rwanda through Gihana. Kayumba believed that this 
(Keregeya’s links with Kigali agents) is what contributed to his (Kayumba’s) 
attempted assassination. 

A compromise was reached after a long discussion between the two. But Kayumba 
advised the executive committee that Gihana should never access any RNC 
documents. The Kayumba group then held a meeting without Gihana.

On 21st December, in a meeting dubbed Ingando and coinciding with RNC’s third 
anniversary as held in Pretoria where both Kayumba and Karegeya attended. 
People complained that they were not satisfied with the executive committee and 
accused Kayumba of threatening them not to vote anyone except Ntwali. The 
meeting quickly degenerated into chaos. Karegeya called Ntwali a disaster for 
RNC and wondered why he (Ntwali) had made no effort to resolve the bad blood 
among members.

Karegeya said good leaders must know how to handle crisis otherwise they would 
be stoned to death. He said the executive should have handled the conflict 
before Ingando. According to our sources, Karegeya left the meeting saying he 
had another meeting which he claimed was in RNC’s “actual interest.” This was 
the last time Karegeya was seen with Kayumba.

On the morning of Jan. 1, 2014, Karegeya’s body was discovered in room 905 at 
the Michellangelo Hotel in the plush Sandton area of Johannesburg, Gauteng, 
South Africa.

Hotel records indicate that Karegeya had booked into the US$350 
(Approx.900.000) a night hotel on Dec.29.

Hotel security opened the room with a master key after Karegeya’s nephew, David 
Batenga, showed up at the hotel and refused to leave without speaking to him.

He was suspicious because all his earlier attempts to contact Karegeya at his 
home and at the hotel room had failed. All Karegeya’s three phones were off.

When Karegeya’s room was opened, reports indicate that security sensed that the 
occupant of the room was slumped on the bed in an unusual position.

“I don’t think this person is sleeping. Call the police,” the receptionist is 
quoted to have said.

When police arrived, they confirmed Batenga’s worst fear.

South African authorities said Karegeya might have been strangled after they 
found a rope and a blood soaked towel in a safe in his room.  Initial reports 
do not say whether it was Karegeya’s blood on the  
<http://www.independent.co.ug/images/stories/issue299/Kayumba_299.gif> Former 
Rwandan chief of staff, Maj. Gen. Kayumba Nyamwasatowel.

Batenga, who is now believed to be the last family member to have seen Karegeya 
alive, says he had last spoken to his uncle via Blackberry Messenger (BBM) at 
7.47pm on December 31, 2013.

By lunchtime on January 1, according to some reports, Batenga “couldn’t take it 
anymore”. He went to Karegeya’s home, but apart from his car not being there, 
nothing seemed unusual.

Batenga then went to the hotel. His uncle’s Audi was in the parking lot.

At the reception, hotel staff got no answer when they called room 905.

A porter went upstairs and, ignoring the “Do not disturb” sign, knocked. There 
was no answer.

Karegeya had a home in the same Johannesburg area and speculation is rife about 
why he hired the expensive hotel room.

By the time of writing this story, neither the special unit of the South 
African police’s Directorate for Priority Crime Investigation, called the 
hawks; nor the hotel staff were offering any clues. Most of the information was 
being gathered from family members and members of the Rwanda exile community in 
Johannesburg, including Batenga.

Batenga is quoted to have said Karegeya hired the hotel room for one Apollo 
Gafaranga, a well-known businessman based in Rwanda. What is unclear is why 
Gafaranga did not hire the room in his names if he was the one using it?

Many queries, few answers 

One line of inquiry suggests that Karegeya, if he hired the room for Gafaranga, 
clearly he possibly wanted his guest’s visit to be kept secret. If that is the 
case, why did Karegeya; as his nephew says, personally drive to Gautrain 
Sandton station on December 29 to allegedly collect Gafaranga?

If the visit was secret, why did Karegeya and Gafaranga allegedly spend at 
least three days together? The duo allegedly met on December 30 and, on the 
fateful day December 31, 2013, Karegeya reportedly told his nephew David 
Batenga that he had gone to meet Gafaranga again. He never returned.

It was not clear by the time we went to press if Gafaranga, who is apparently a 
well-known personality in Kigali, had been questioned by the Kigali police, 
Interpol, or the Hawks.

The Sunday Times of Rwanda’s Sunday Magazine interviewed him in its May 24, 
2009 issue. It described him as humorous, down to earth, intelligent, and one 
of the more successful entrepreneurs in the country. He is the proprietor of a 
top Cinema in Kigali and deals in real estate.

The South African police had also not published any CCTV images of individuals 
seen entering or leaving room 905 during the period Karegeya is thought to have 
been murdered.

All this is unusual because Karegeya, even in exile in South Africa, was a very 
high profile figure.

Karegyeya was a top member of a very vocal opposition in exile to Rwandan 
President Paul Kagame that includes the former Rwandan chief of staff, Maj. 
Gen. Kayumba Nyamwasa. The duo are said to be connected to the highest levels 
of South African security, foreign affairs, and even President Jacob Zuma.

Karegeya grew up in Uganda just like several other former Rwandan refugees 
including President Kagame. He worked in the country’s intelligence before 
going to Kigali towards the end of 1994.

He served in the Kigali government as the chief for external intelligence from 
1994 to 2004.

But once he fell out with Kagame, he was demoted to army spokesperson, later 
relieved of his duties, stripped of his rank as Colonel and jailed twice. He 
fled to South Africa where at one point, he was said to travel on a Ugandan 
passport in the names of Patrick Batenga.

Three years after he arrived in South Africa, Karegeya and Nyamwasa in 2010 
formed a political party, the Rwanda National Congress (RNC). Other top figures 
in the party are the former director of cabinet, Theogene Rudasingwa, the 
former Director of Public Prosecutions, Gerald Gahima, and its leader, Frank 
Ntwali.

According to Frank Ntwali, who heads the RNC in Africa, when Karegeya arrived 
in South Africa in 2007, the South African government put him under state 
protection.

But Karegeya’s death comes just one year after Karegeya and the South African 
government agreed in 2012 to end the close protection.

"They agreed that they would allow him to walk without bodyguards or without 
protection, which has turned out to be a miscalculation," said Ntwali

"He knew that his life definitely was in danger... that's why he fled Rwanda, 
but I think he got to a level where he thought that here he would be able to 
evade them," Ntwali is quoted to have told journalists.

It is not clear why Karegeya felt the security provided by South Africa had 
become an encumbrance.

The RNC in a statement described Karegeya as “a courageous soldier who died on 
the battlefield”.

“His vision for an inclusive and free Rwandan society earned him the admiration 
and respect of most Rwandan political actors, both in the predominantly Tutsi 
ruling party and in the predominantly Hutu opposition political parties,” the 
party said.

The RNC, perhaps as expected, also pinned the murder of their former party 
member on Kagame’s government, which they claim is in the habit of targeting 
key Rwandan opposition figures in “South Africa and the rest of the world”.

“…investigations have found overwhelming evidence of the involvement of Rwanda 
intelligence operatives in those assassination attempts,” reads their 
statement, “By killing its opponents, the criminal regime in Kigali seeks to 
intimidate and silence the Rwandan people into submission.”

The party cites assassinations; including two attempts against Gen. Nyamwasa in 
Johannesburg in June 2010, to reinforce their accusations.

But Kigali’s High Commissioner to South Africa, Vicent Karega dismissed the 
allegations. It is always best, in situations of such accusations to wait for 
official police statements.

No evidence

In the past, despite claims by opponents that there was clear evidence linking 
the Kagame regime to the Nyamwasa shooting, the trial of suspects has not 
produced any results since 2010. A related case, which claimed that assassins 
had been sent to finish off Nyamwasa as he lay sick in hospital over the first 
shooting fell apart after the main witness withdrew his testimony. He told 
court that the South African police had bribed him to pin the other five 
witnesses.

Karegeya himself has been no stranger to accusations of assassinating his 
enemies and other sins.

James Kabarebe, a former Chief of Defense Staff of Rwanda in a 2010 interview 
with The Independent described Karegeya as a very reckless man “who has no fear 
for anything, even telling a blatant lie that would be discovered – just to get 
his way.”

“Karegyeya lacks seriousness and never takes anything seriously,” Kabarebe said.

At the time, The Independent was investigating a case in which Karegeya had 
successfully won a United Nations (UN) consultancy job worth US$ 77,000 a 
month. The problem, The Independent found, was that he lied to get it.

In 2011, there were reports of a Burundian woman who claimed Karegeya led her 
to kill; by poisoning, a popular Rwandan singer, Jean Christophe Matata.

The woman, whose identity remains a secret to protect her family, allegedly 
claimed Karegeya was upset when in late December 2010, she hooked up with 
Matata.

Matata died abruptly on January 03 in a South African hospital when he had gone 
to preform there. His death was explained as multiple organ failure.

Karegeya, who was her sexual partner and apparently appears to have been spying 
on her, allegedly told her that Matata could be used by his enemies in Rwanda 
to harm him through her.

He then told her to spike Matata’s drink so that she could go through his phone 
records and other documents. Unknown to her, the substance Karegeya supplied 
her to use on Matata was a slow acting poison. None of this has been 
independently confirmed.

Karegeya fact file

*       In 1979 was student at Old Kampala Senior Secondary School in Uganda.
*       1982 to 1985: He was charged with treason and jailed in Uganda’s Luzira 
Maximum Security Prison under Milton Obote’s regime.
*       1987 and 1988: He was a director of counter-intelligence at the 
Directorate of Military Intelligence in Uganda.
*       1990 to July 1994: Worked in Uganda Revenue Authority’s Anti- Smuggling 
Unit. 
*       End of 1994: Arrived in Rwanda.
*       2004 to 2006: Worked in National Security Service of Rwanda under the 
Ministry of Defence.
*       2006: was stripped of his rank of Colonel and dismissed with disgrace 
from the army. After trial he was jailed in Rwanda for deserting the force, 
misconduct and disobeying his superiors.
*       2007: Fled Rwanda upon completion of an 18-month sentence.
*       2010: Formed Rwanda National Congress.

- See more at: 
http://www.independent.co.ug/cover-story/8594-who-killed-karegeya#sthash.0PXrVsht.dpuf

-- 

Ocen Nekyon

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