Agnès Ntamabyaliro Rutagwera
Agnès Ntamabyaliro Rutagwera (born 1937) is a Rwanda politician who was involved in the Rwandan genocide.
Agnès Ntamabyaliro Rutagwera | |
---|---|
Born | 1937 (age 83–84) |
Nationality | Rwanda |
Known for | implicated in the Rwandan genocide |
Political party | government Kambanda |
Life
Ntamabyariro was born in 1937 and she had a Tutsi mother and a Hutu father. In 1994 she was the minister of justice in the provisional government that was held responsible for the creation of the genocide that took place in Rwanda. Starting in April 1994 after the president was assassinated the Hutu majority tried to execute their fellow nationals who were said to be Tutsi.
Ntamabyariro is particularly accused of arranging for Jean-Baptiste Habyalimana to be killed. He was a Tutsi prefect who resisted the genocide. She is said to have organised his murder in addition to inciting and planning the genocide.[1] Ntamabyariro was abducted on 27 May 1997 from her home in Mufulira, Zambia, ostensibly by the Zambian immigration service. The Zambian government denied any involvement, however, and Amnesty International raised concerns about her safety.[2] She was later discovered in a prison in Kigali.[3][4] She would wait a decade before she was put on trial.[1]
She was sentenced in 2009 to life imprisonment by the Rwandan government.[1] Justin Mugenzi and Prosper Mugiraneza were also implicated in Habyalimana's murder but they were acquitted of all charges in February 2013.[5]
References
- Agnes Ntamabyariro, TRIAL International, Retrieved 30 December 2017.
- "Zambia/Rwanda: "Disappearance": Agnes Ntamabyaliro Rutagwera (f)". Amnesty International. 19 June 1997. AFR 01/011/1997.
- "Zambia/Rwanda: Further information on "disappearance": Agnes Ntamabyaliro Rutagwera (f)". Amnesty International. 10 November 1997. AFR 01/014/1997.
- "Amnesty International Report 1998 - Congo (Democratic Republic of the)". Amnesty International. refworld.org. 1 January 1998.
- Rwanda genocide convictions overturned, 2013, AlJazeera, Retrieved 13 March 2016