Skip to main content

Latest Analysis

Independent analysis, commentary and investigations on Africa, the Great Lakes Region and international accountability.

[AfricaRealities.com] What the United Nations Knows about Rwanda’s Powerful Spy Chief | Foreign Policy Journal

 

What the United Nations Knows about Rwanda's Powerful Spy Chief

Emmanuel Karenzi Karake's reign of terror as head of the notorious Directorate of Military Intelligence

Human skulls at the Nyamata Genocide Memorial. (Fanny Schertzer/Wikimedia Commons)
Human skulls at the Nyamata Genocide Memorial. (Fanny Schertzer/Wikimedia Commons)

Over the last two decades, Emmanuel Karenzi Karake has cut a striking figure in the world of Rwandan intelligence, having navigated the corridors of power with intellectual prowess.

His former colleagues describe him first and foremost as a master at exploiting weakness, a man able to target enemies with astounding precision and never missing his mark. He understood on a visceral level what Paul Kagame wanted to accomplish in the aftermath of the 1994 genocide and knew on a cerebral level how it should be done.

"Quite simply, Karake is the most brilliant officer that Kagame has ever had," said an ex-colleague now in exile.

"He is observant and careful. Kagame trusted him most of the time…except when he suspected Karake might be building his own power base," the officer explained.

Another officer who worked with Karake for years said his boss excelled in organizing "abductions, targeted killings and mass killings."

"At the planning and killing level, he is more shrewd than most. It is hard to escape his traps. Karenzi doesn't miss a target," the source explained.

Raised by Tutsi refugee parents in the Congo, Karake was schooled in Uganda and underwent military training in Tanzania before becoming a civil intelligence officer at Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni's office following the ouster of dictator Idi Amin in the 1980s.

In the early 1990s, after Kagame's Rwandan Patriotic Army (RPA) invaded Rwanda and unleashed a civil war, Karake became a member of an African Union military observer group before becoming a key liaison officer for the Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF) in its dealings with the United Nations peacekeeping mission, UNAMIR.

Karake's ability to move freely throughout Rwanda with internationally sanctioned military missions enabled him to gather crucial information at opportune moments: "It was a golden opportunity to see every corner of the country. He gathered really good intelligence for the final assault on Kigali."

The experience put Karake in good stead when the RPF swooped into the capital, swore in a new government and promised to rebuild Rwanda from its ashes.

Having a predilection for socializing and enjoying the company of women, Karake is the polar opposite of socially austere Kagame. Unlike his boss, he is actually popular with Tutsi officers and soldiers, even among the lowest rank.

His only real nemesis, colleagues pointed out, was Kayumba Nyamwasa, his predecessor who headed the notorious Directorate of Military Intelligence (DMI) before and during the genocide.

Just what was the role of DMI, an institution led by Karake for nearly three years after the genocide? Rwandans have variously described DMI as a repository of malevolence and pain.

Investigators at the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR) set out to discover what DMI did during and after the genocide. Their findings were compiled in a confidential report submitted to Prosecutor Hassan Bubacar Jallow and accessed by this journalist.

"The Directorate of Military Intelligence was created in late 1990 as part of the RPA military structure. From its creation and until the end of the war in 1994, Colonel Kayumba Nyamwasa was in charge of this directorate. The DMI is hated and feared by most of the Rwandan population, inside and outside of Rwanda due to its reputation for cruelty and killing operations. Most of the massacres attributed to the RPA were committed by the DMI," the document states.

The report emphasizes that Nyamwasa was DMI chief until the formation of the RPF government and "'nothing was done without his knowledge." Investigators later state that Nyamwasa "was replaced by Lt Colonel Karenzi Karake."

The report—written by the ICTR's Special Investigations Unit that looked into crimes committed by the RPF—goes on to say that DMI representatives were in every military unit, and that special DMI forces were under the control of DMI headquarters, and special agents called 'technicians' were part of DMI operations.

The report states that technicians were trained to use pharmaceutical products to kill and poison water; they were given courses on how to murder with ropes and hoes, how to smother people with plastic bags, how to inject oil from syringes into victims' ears, and how to tie people's elbows behind their backs and bind their feet as a means of torture. The technicians were also instructed to use bayonets, guns and grenades, in addition to laying landmines.

Karake's reign of terror at the helm of DMI

Immediately after Kagame's troops seized the capital and in the smoky weeks before being named DMI chief, Karake directed a series of operations from all over Rwanda that lured and screened young male Hutus into the RPA, in schemes that brought them to killing centers, mainly in remote areas of Akagera Park which was off limits to the UN and NGOs, sources said. He worked closely at the time with Patrick Nyamvumba, who headed the Training Wing and is now Rwanda's chief of defense staff.

The practice of screening Hutus and transporting them to execution sites started during the genocide but was implemented in earnest afterward, entrenching a deadly policy that continued, in varying degrees, for years to come.

From testimony collected from witnesses, investigators stipulated that "after the war, the Hutu population were arrested by DMI agents in given places and eliminated at a great rate. The bodies were incinerated and ashes were buried." Sports grounds and military camps were often created over common graves.

"Places where massacres executed by agents of the DMI sometimes with the assistance of soldiers were: Gabiro, Kami, Masaka, Giti, Nyamirambo, Kidaho, Butaro, Kirambo, Ruhengeri city, Kinihira, Nyungwe Forest, Kabutare, Butare Aboretum, Save, Gikomero, Ndera, Runda, Musambira City, Rambura, Muhura-Buyumba City," investigators wrote.

"It appears that the principal heads of the DMI are responsible not only because of their personal actions but also because of the orders given. They are also accountable on the basis of the responsibility of the superior hierarchy," the investigators concluded.

Camp Kami: a slaughterhouse

One of the preferred killing grounds under the authority of DMI was Camp Kami, a sprawling base on the outskirts of Kigali adjacent to bush. ICTR investigators discovered that "thousands of civilians who had taken refuge in the camp were executed. In May 1994, military prisoners would dig graves during the day, and during the night the bodies of the executed persons would be buried in these mass graves. For many years Camp Kami continued to be used by the DMI as an execution site."

One of Karake's close colleagues confided that while Kayumba held sway at Kami for two months, it was Karake that transformed the military camp into "a true slaughterhouse."

"No one knows how many Hutus were slaughtered at Kami. Those who returned from Zaire and others were killed there," the Tutsi officer said. "Even Tutsis were slaughtered at Kami, but for Tutsis there had to be a reason for being killed."

He said one day in August 1994, at about 5:30 pm, he was heading to Kami just as a soldier was leaving. The soldier said he was exhausted after killing Hutus for eleven hours straight. "There are still many and Afandi KK (Karenzi Karake) wants the job to be completed before tomorrow," the soldier told him.

The Tutsi officer arrived on site and found hundreds of Hutu men "screaming and agonizing," their arms tied behind them and legs bound. "It was horrible," he recounted, adding that soldiers were looking for hoes to bury them alive.

He said Karake visited the camp that night, was pleased with the scene and quickly retreated to DMI headquarters, which was called Ku Kabindi (the Calabash) because it was next to a building with a calabash and straw.

Karake's Achilles Heel, shared by many upper echelon members of the RPF, was his antipathy toward Hutus.

"He hated Hutus. He would kill a person just because he or she was Hutu," the officer said.

And yet many years ago, Karake fell in love with a Hutu girl who was very beautiful. But for a senior ranking Tutsi officer it was unheard of—and even dangerous—to contemplate marrying a Hutu woman.

"He had to drop her and it killed his heart. He became emotionally challenged after that."

Another colleague had a different view. "It wasn't so much that Karake hated Hutus more than other RPF officers did. It was just that killing Hutus was the policy. It was part of the program."

The RPF's Hutu extermination policy reached its apotheosis under Karake's tenure, when DMI supervised with great precision the 1996 invasion of Zaire and the mass killings of Congolese and Rwandan Hutu refugees.

The killing squads in Zaire, now the Democratic Republic of Congo, were supervised by DMI and instructed by Karake, according to an officer involved in operations.

"No intelligence officer could operate without orders from KK. All intelligence officers from all units and sub-units were provided by DMI and could be replaced by DMI," he said, adding that DMI worked closely with the gendarmerie, military police and external intelligence.

In an interview, a former soldier from a mobile DMI unit recounted killing Hutus in the Congo in November 1996.

"We stopped in Kasindi (in Zaire) and conducted 'clean up' operations throughout the area. We got rid of everyone considered an enemy: that meant all Hutus. We found the refugees in the forest. There were starving and sick. There was no water or food for these people. But we were told to eliminate them. So we killed them all. We even killed those who were dying, with perhaps only a few minutes to live. We didn't use guns on the weakest. We used traditional weapons like agafuni (hoes) to finish them off.

"Most of the killings of refugees took place in the jungle. But if refugees tried to hide in towns, we went after them and identified them.

"At this stage, there were no ex-FAR (Hutu soldiers) in the area. There were only civilians."

By the time Rwandan troops reached Bafwasende near Kisangani in January 1997, many refugees, more than ten thousand, were killed, the soldier said.

"I was part of a team that unearthed corpses from mass graves. We worked day and night for a long time to take bodies to other locations to be incinerated. It was about the time when people were calling for an investigation to confirm whether indeed there had been massacres of Hutu refugees in the area. Rwanda of course was denying the allegations and we had to destroy the evidence. We needed to hide the proof.

"Bodies were decomposing. It was shocking to be forced to carry out such operations. We did this with our own hands, with no protection or gloves. Our superiors were behind us. These commanders hit us from time to time. It's hard for you to imagine but we had to put corpses on our backs and dump them onto trucks. When we were discouraged they would beat us and force us to carry on. It was forced labor. I became ill afterward."

In 2010, an investigation by the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights concluded that Rwandan troops committed crimes against humanity and possibly genocide in the former Zaire.

The author of that report, a war crimes prosecutor from Montreal named Luc CotĂ©, said that Rwandan Tutsi troops and their rebel allies targeted, chased, hacked, shot and burned Hutus—men, women and children—in the DRC.

Coté previously worked in the ICTR's Office of Prosecutor and was responsible for indicting Colonel Theoneste Bagosora, considered the architect of the 1994 genocide against Tutsis.

In the first disordered weeks of the Rwandan invasion of Zaire, several hundred thousand Rwandan refugees headed eastward back home, while another mass of humanity fled deeper west into the jungle, chased by RPA forces. Mainstream media, channeling officials in Kigali, declared the forced return of Hutus as a victory against genocidal forces that had used the camps in Zaire as rear bases to mount attacks against Rwanda. What journalists did not say was that thousands of Hutu men were systematically separated from their families after crossing the border in late 1996, only to be transported in trucks and killed in Nyungwe Forest, Akagera Park, Camp Kami and other execution sites, according to dozens of Tutsi officers familiar with operations and families of Hutu men who disappeared.

The coordinated killings of Hutu refugees inside Zaire and the elimination of Hutu men that returned home also coincided with a brutal counterinsurgency campaign the RPA had begun to wage in areas along the western border, particularly in Ruhengeri and Gisenyi. The RPA was accused of going house-to-house, slaughtering civilians, burning huts, and of targeting local critics who dared to raise their voices.

It was during that time that Kagame and Karake made a strategic error of epic proportions, their critics say. They decided to target witnesses—several of them foreign nationals working for NGOs—who knew what was going on in the area. On January 18, 1997, three Spanish nationals working for Doctors of the World were murdered in Ruhengeri. The Spanish court holds Karake responsible for the massacre.

An individual who worked with Karake said he indeed organized and monitored the killings of the Spanish humanitarian workers and the murder of Guy Pinard, an outspoken Québecois priest who openly condemned RPA atrocities against civilians during his sermons.

According to a source with knowledge of the operations against the Spanish and the priest, which occurred within two weeks of each other, the killings were organized by DMI in conjunction with the Gendarmerie. The DMI departments involved were Counter Intelligence led by Charles Karamba and the Criminal Investigation & Prosecution, led by Joseph Nzabamwita.

Father Guy Pinard was shot in the back on February 2, 1997 in front of parishioners while giving communion. His attacker, a Tutsi with connections to the RPF, fled the scene and was never charged. Unlike Spain, Canada did not investigate or seek justice.

ICTR investigators collected testimony indicating that RPA troops had temporarily occupied the Catholic Church in Ruhengeri, Father Pinard was in charge of the church when 20 bodies were found in a latrine pit on the premises, after the RPA vacated the site. Pinard was killed shortly thereafter. The priest who was in charge of exhuming the bodies was also murdered, according to the ICTR document.

Absent from the Spanish indictment is the role that DMI, under Karake, played in the murder of another Canadian priest, Claude Simard on October 17, 1994.

Simard, who was beaten to death with a hammer in his home in Butare, had been gathering evidence of RPA killings in the form of audio recordings that he planned to hand over to the international community.

A UN civilian police report concluded that the army had learned of Father Simard's plans to give the recordings to the United Nations.

"From all indications, Father Claude Simard was murdered by the RPA," the UN report said. "The image of the RPA was at stake and they could not simply sit by. Father Claude Simard was about to expose them with a recorded cassette of their crimes."

Spain demands justice

Karake is currently director general of Rwanda's National Intelligence and Security Services (NISS), an umbrella spy agency that oversees intelligence gathering in civilian and military spheres.

Karake's formidable and horrifically violent reign as military intelligence chief after the genocide, and his role in murdering three Spanish nationals led to his arrest on June 20 in London under a European Arrest Warrant issued by the Spanish government. He faces an extradition hearing in October.

In 2008, Judge Fernando Andreu Merelles indicted Karake and 39 other RPA commanders on charges of genocide, crimes against humanity, and other offenses that include terrorism in a case of universal jurisdiction. Since then, the Spanish court has collected additional evidence against Karake and other RPF officers, a Spanish lawyer handling the case confirmed.

If the 1994 genocide against Tutsis stands as the most depraved and tragic chapter in Rwanda's history, its corollary is certainly the three years that followed in which a slower, largely hidden campaign of abject cruelty was meted out against Hutu civilians in Rwanda and the DRC, with barely a whimper of international outcry.

If extradited to Spain, Emannuel Karenzi Karake could become the jewel in the crown of witnesses against Kagame's two-and-a-half decades of crime. He was, by all indications, the most successful of Kagame's willing executioners.

And yet Karake's friends insist his culpability is complex. "Yes he was at the center of killing operations in Rwanda for years. But he's been humiliated too, and was aware that things were not going well," said one friend.

"Many bad decisions were taken. But what Kagame wants, Kagame gets," the friend said.

"If Karake is as smart as we think he is, he will not save Kagame this time. He'll tell the truth. It's what Rwanda needs."

Judi Rever

Judi Rever is a Montreal-based freelance journalist, formerly with Agence France-Presse and Radio France Internationale. She has reported from the Democratic Republic of Congo, Rwanda, Sierra Leone, Ivory Coast and the Middle East. She specializes in human rights issues, and is currently doing research for a book that would explore war crimes committed by the Rwandan Patriotic Front and its army. 

###
"Hate Cannot Drive Out Hate. Only Love Can Do That", Dr. Martin Luther King.
###

__._,_.___

Posted by: Nzinink <nzinink@yahoo.com>
Reply via web post Reply to sender Reply to group Start a New Topic Messages in this topic (1)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The hate of men will pass, and dictators die, and the power they took from the people will return to the people. And so long as men die, liberty will never perish.
I have loved justice and hated iniquity: therefore I die in exile.
The price good men pay for indifference to public affairs is to be ruled by evil men.
When the white man came we had the land and they had the bibles; now they have the land and we have the bibles.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Voice of the Poor, the Weak and Powerless.

-----------------------------------------------------------
Post message:  AfricaRealities@yahoogroups.com
Subscribe: AfricaRealities-subscribe@yahoogroups.com
Unsubscribe: AfricaRealities-unsubscribe@yahoogroups.com
List owner: AfricaRealities-owner@yahoogroups.com
__________________________________________________________________

Please consider the environment before printing this email or any attachments.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-http://www.africarealities.com/

-https://www.facebook.com/africarealities

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-New International Scholarships opportunities: http://www.scholarshipsgate.com
http://www.primescholarships.com
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Find  Friends in Africa:
- www.africanaffection.com
- www.datinginafrica.com
https://www.facebook.com/onlinedatinginafrica

.

__,_._,___

Comments

Support Our Work Now !

Africa Realities Media is independent. Your support helps us expose injustice, challenge silence and produce evidence-based analysis on Africa and the Great Lakes Region.

Recent Posts

Show more
Africa Realities Media offre un espace aux Ă©crivains, chercheurs, experts, activistes, voix communautaires, militants, analystes et personnes ayant une expĂ©rience vĂ©cue qui souhaitent contribuer Ă  des contenus rĂ©flĂ©chis, responsables et courageux sur les changements nĂ©cessaires dans la rĂ©gion des Grands Lacs, ainsi que sur les rĂ©alitĂ©s politiques, Ă©conomiques, culturelles et sociales africaines souvent ignorĂ©es, minimisĂ©es ou mal reprĂ©sentĂ©es. Nos articles et vidĂ©os visent Ă  ouvrir le dĂ©bat, renforcer la sensibilisation, encourager la pensĂ©e critique et favoriser une rĂ©flexion plus profonde sur les rĂ©alitĂ©s vĂ©cues par les populations africaines. Nous voulons aider les peuples de la rĂ©gion des Grands Lacs Ă  mieux comprendre leurs droits, notamment leurs droits humains, leur droit au dĂ©veloppement, leur droit Ă  la dignitĂ©, Ă  la sĂ©curitĂ©, au bien-ĂŞtre et Ă  une vie meilleure. Ă€ travers nos contenus, nous cherchons Ă©galement Ă  rappeler aux dĂ©cideurs, aux institutions publiques, aux acteurs rĂ©gionaux et internationaux, ainsi qu’aux responsables politiques, leur devoir de transparence, de responsabilitĂ© et de redevabilitĂ© envers les populations qu’ils prĂ©tendent servir. Notre objectif est de contribuer Ă  une culture de vĂ©ritĂ©, de justice, de participation citoyenne et de protection Ă©gale pour tous les peuples africains.

Why We Exist

Many abuses facing African people are committed by African states, ruling elites, armed groups, military forces and security services. But these abuses are often sustained by international silence, Western lobbying, trade interests, migration deals, mineral access, diplomatic partnerships and unequal global accountability. Africa Realities Media exposes that system.

Lived Experience Matters

Survivors, displaced communities, refugees, families affected by repression, journalists, activists, women, young people and diaspora voices are not passive subjects. They are knowledge holders. Their experiences must shape policy, advocacy, journalism and public debate. The people closest to injustice are often closest to the solutions.

Our Principle

Africa Realities Media is rooted in one principle: African lives deserve equal truth, equal justice and equal protection.

Popular Posts

THE BATTLE OF RUBAYA: Rwanda's War for Minerals Exposed

T he FDLR Pretext Collapses Under the Weight of Documented Plunder   Introduction: A Battle That Tells the Truth When Rwandan-backed RDF/M23 forces fought with extraordinary ferocity to seize and hold Rubaya — a remote mining town in North Kivu, eastern Democratic Republic of Congo — the stated justification was security. Kigali's consistent public line has been that its military presence in the DRC is a response to the threat posed by the Forces Democratiques de Liberation du Rwanda (FDLR), an armed group whose leaders include individuals linked to the 1994 genocide against the Tutsi. This narrative has been accepted, qualified, or left insufficiently challenged by Western governments and multilateral institutions for over a decade. The Battle of Rubaya strips that narrative bare. What unfolded in Rubaya was not a counter-insurgency operation against genocidal remnants. It was a sustained military campaign — reinforced by the Rwanda Defence Forces (RDF), prosecuted at sign...

LA BATAILLE DE RUBAYA : La guerre du Rwanda pour les minerais exposée

Le prĂ©texte des FDLR s’effondre sous le poids du pillage documentĂ© Introduction : une bataille qui dit la vĂ©ritĂ© Lorsque les forces RDF/M23 soutenues par le Rwanda ont combattu avec une fĂ©rocitĂ© extraordinaire pour s’emparer de Rubaya et la conserver — une ville minière reculĂ©e du Nord-Kivu, dans l’est de la RĂ©publique dĂ©mocratique du Congo — la justification officielle Ă©tait la sĂ©curitĂ©. La ligne publique constante de Kigali a Ă©tĂ© que sa prĂ©sence militaire en RDC rĂ©pond Ă  la menace posĂ©e par les Forces dĂ©mocratiques de libĂ©ration du Rwanda (FDLR), un groupe armĂ© dont les dirigeants comprennent des individus liĂ©s au gĂ©nocide de 1994 contre les Tutsi. Ce rĂ©cit a Ă©tĂ© acceptĂ©, nuancĂ©, ou laissĂ© insuffisamment contestĂ© par les gouvernements occidentaux et les institutions multilatĂ©rales pendant plus d’une dĂ©cennie. La bataille de Rubaya met ce rĂ©cit Ă  nu. Ce qui s’est dĂ©roulĂ© Ă  Rubaya n’Ă©tait pas une opĂ©ration de contre-insurrection contre des restes gĂ©nocidaires. C’Ă©tait une campagne mili...

Les remèdes cosmĂ©tiques de la France face Ă  la guerre dans l’est de la RDC

RĂ©solution 2773, ConfĂ©rence de Paris, doctrine macronienne du dialogue et pari de la Francophonie La politique de la France Ă  l’Ă©gard de l’est de la RDC a produit un schĂ©ma constant : un langage public fort, une faible application des dĂ©cisions, aucune pression visible fondĂ©e sur les sanctions, et des appels rĂ©pĂ©tĂ©s au dialogue qui laissent largement intact le levier militaire et politique du Rwanda. La France ne peut pas rĂ©diger des rĂ©solutions, organiser des confĂ©rences, rejeter les sanctions, appeler au dialogue, puis revendiquer la neutralitĂ© pendant que les civils restent sous occupation, dĂ©placement et violence. Dans une guerre de cette ampleur, le silence et l’inaction ne sont pas neutres. Ce sont des actes politiques. Introduction La France se prĂ©sente comme l’une des puissances occidentales les plus engagĂ©es dans la recherche de la paix dans l’est de la RĂ©publique dĂ©mocratique du Congo. Elle a parrainĂ© la RĂ©solution 2773 du Conseil de sĂ©curitĂ© des Nations unies. Elle a organ...

President Macron Against US Sanctions on Rwanda

How France's Interests in Mozambique Obstruct Peace in the DRC A Critical Analysis of Emmanuel Macron's Interview with TV5 Monde, Africa Forward Summit, Nairobi, 12 May 2026 Published by The African Rights Campaign (ARC)   |   London, May 2026   1. Introduction This analysis is based on French President Emmanuel Macron's interview with TV5 Monde, conducted on 12 May 2026 during the Africa Forward Summit in Nairobi, Kenya. In that interview, Macron was asked a direct question: given that Rwanda's support for the M23 armed group has been documented by United Nations experts, and given that the United States has imposed sanctions on the Rwanda Defence Force and several of its senior officers, why have France and the European Union declined to do the same? Macron's response was unconvincing, dishonest and analytically incoherent. It revealed not a carefully calibrated position of principled neutrality, but the operational logic of a government that has c...

[AFRICAFORUM] Tr : [hinterland1] Tr : L'OCCUPATION RWANDAISE EN MARCHE

  ----- Mail transfĂ©rĂ© ----- De : Mpania Jean <drjeanmpania@yahoo.fr> Ă€ : Hinterland <hinterland1@yahoogroupes.fr> EnvoyĂ© le : Mercredi 26 fĂ©vrier 2014 17h13 Objet : [hinterland1] Tr : L'OCCUPATION RWANDAISE EN MARCHE   Le Mercredi 26 fĂ©vrier 2014 9h56, congokdp <congokdp@gmail.com> a Ă©crit : L'OCCUPATION RWANDAISE EN MARCHE :   Voici comment les institutions et tout le système de sĂ©curitĂ© de la RDC sont sous contrĂ´le du Rwanda et les officiels congolais infiltrĂ©s par des «hirondelles» rwandaises! L'OCCUPATION RWANDAISE EN MARCHE :  Voici comment les institutions et tout le système de sĂ©curitĂ© de la RDC sont sous contrĂ´le du Rwanda et les officiels congolais infiltrĂ©s par des «hirondelles» rwandaises! Le processus d'occupation de la RDC par le lobby tutsi rwandais passe par le...

The Kagame Myth: Western Power, Private Jets and Rwanda’s Controlled Reality

  ANALYSIS AND INVESTIGATION Introduction: The Myth and the Man Behind the Myth There is a version of Paul Kagame that exists in the conference halls of Davos, in the pages of Western magazines, in private hotel meetings in London, Paris and Washington, and on the sleeves of European football shirts. In this version, Kagame is a visionary. A builder. A disciplined African moderniser. A leader who pulled a broken country from the ashes of genocide and turned it into what admirers often call the “Singapore of Africa”. In this version, Rwanda is clean, efficient, safe, investment-friendly and orderly. Kagame is presented as the African leader the West wants to believe in: controlled, polished, pro-market, security-focused and comfortable in elite Western spaces. Then there is the Rwanda that many Rwandans, exiles, journalists, opposition figures and human rights organisations describe. In this Rwanda, YouTubers and online commentators are jailed for what they say. Critics die in custo...

Dr Phil Clark ( SOAS University of London): A biased lecturer and researcher about African issues.

Dr Phil Clark   was born in Sudan and   is currently   working at SOAS University of London. He is known to be   biased lecturer and researcher about African issues, particularly the Rwandan genocide.     With his poor judgement and analytical thinking, this man only talk about   the results   of events and forget the     root causes. He is a staunch supporter of the criminal, dictator and killer Paul Kagame , the President of   Rwanda. He is singing the song of the winner of the Rwandan  war. He is in the same boat with Linda Melvern, a biased British   freelancer who received a medal from the dictator Paul     Kagame. "> "> Dr.Phil Clark "> Linda Melvern I am asking Dr Phil Clark   one question:   Dear   Dr Phil Clark, What     was the   role of   Paul Kagame and RPF in the Rwandan  massacres and genocide in and outside Rwanda?   Based...

Le Président Macron contre les sanctions américaines imposées au Rwanda

Comment les intĂ©rĂŞts français au Mozambique font obstacle Ă  la paix en RDC Analyse critique de l'entretien d'Emmanuel Macron avec TV5 Monde, Africa Forward Summit, Nairobi, 12 mai 2026 PubliĂ© par The African Rights Campaign (ARC)   |   Londres, mai 2026     1. Introduction La prĂ©sente analyse est fondĂ©e sur l'entretien accordĂ© par le prĂ©sident français Emmanuel Macron Ă  TV5 Monde, le 12 mai 2026, lors de l'Africa Forward Summit Ă  Nairobi, au Kenya. Au cours de cet entretien, Macron s'est vu poser une question directe : Ă©tant donnĂ© que le soutien du Rwanda au groupe armĂ© M23 est aujourd'hui documentĂ© par les experts des Nations Unies, et Ă©tant donnĂ© que les États-Unis ont imposĂ© des sanctions aux Forces de dĂ©fense du Rwanda (FDR) ainsi qu'Ă  plusieurs de leurs hauts responsables, pourquoi la France et l'Union europĂ©enne n'ont-elles pas fait de mĂŞme ? La rĂ©ponse de Macron s'est rĂ©vĂ©lĂ©e peu convaincante, malhonnĂŞte et analytique...

Kagame’s Image Machine: Who Profits While Rwanda Stays Poor

I nvestigation:  Paying to Stay Poor: How Western PR Firms, Lobbyists, Sports Clubs and Media Outlets Profit from Rwanda’s Image Economy Introduction: An Ecosystem of Paid Influence Rwanda is often presented internationally as a model of discipline, security, investment promotion and post-genocide recovery. That image has been carefully built, repeatedly amplified and professionally protected. Behind it sits a costly international network of sports sponsorships, lobbying contracts, public relations firms, legal consultancy, political access, favourable media relationships and diplomatic narrative management. The moral problem is clear. Rwanda remains heavily dependent on foreign aid and external financing. According to World Bank-linked data, foreign aid received by Rwanda reached approximately 1.39 billion US dollars in 2023. UNDP’s 2025 Human Development Report gives Rwanda a Human Development Index value of 0.578 for 2023, placing it 159th out of 193 countries and territories. U...

Justice ou théâtre politique ? Les procès français du génocide rwandais et le travail inachevé de la réconciliation entre Rwandais

Introduction Depuis 2014, les tribunaux français ont poursuivi une sĂ©rie de ressortissants rwandais hutu pour leur rĂ´le prĂ©sumĂ© dans le gĂ©nocide de 1994 contre les Tutsi. Le premier procès, celui de l’ancien chef du renseignement Pascal Simbikangwa, a Ă©tĂ© suivi par les condamnations des anciens bourgmestres Octavien Ngenzi et Tito Barahira en 2016, puis par la condamnation, en 2023, de l’ancien officier de gendarmerie Philippe Hategekimana. Aucun accusĂ© jugĂ© en France, au titre de la compĂ©tence universelle, pour le gĂ©nocide rwandais n’a Ă©tĂ© acquittĂ©. D’autres poursuites devraient suivre. Ces procĂ©dures ont Ă©tĂ© largement saluĂ©es comme la preuve que la France affronte enfin son passĂ© d’État ayant protĂ©gĂ© des auteurs prĂ©sumĂ©s du gĂ©nocide sur son territoire. Des organisations internationales de dĂ©fense des droits humains, des spĂ©cialistes du gĂ©nocide et une partie de la sociĂ©tĂ© civile française les ont prĂ©sentĂ©es comme une contribution tardive, mais bienvenue, Ă  la lutte mondiale contre l’...

Why Africa Realities Media Is Different

Africa Realities Media speaks to Africa and to the developed world. Many abuses facing African people are committed by African states and ruling elites, but they are often protected by international silence, lobbying, public relations, trade interests, migration deals and unequal global accountability. While governments pay lobbyists to present a good image abroad, ordinary African people continue to face violence, hunger, disease, poverty, repression and exclusion. We challenge the normalisation of African suffering and demand equal truth, equal justice and equal protection.

Pourquoi Africa Realities Media est différent?

Africa Realities Media s’adresse Ă  l’Afrique et au monde dĂ©veloppĂ©. De nombreux abus subis par les peuples africains sont commis par des États africains et des Ă©lites dirigeantes, mais ils sont souvent protĂ©gĂ©s par le silence international, le lobbying, les relations publiques, les intĂ©rĂŞts commerciaux, les accords migratoires et une responsabilitĂ© mondiale inĂ©gale. Tandis que des gouvernements paient des lobbyistes pour prĂ©senter une bonne image Ă  l’Ă©tranger, des Africains ordinaires continuent de faire face Ă  la violence, Ă  la faim, aux maladies, Ă  la pauvretĂ©, Ă  la rĂ©pression et Ă  l’exclusion. Nous contestons la normalisation de la souffrance africaine et exigeons une vĂ©ritĂ© Ă©gale, une justice Ă©gale et une protection Ă©gale.

BBC News

Policy and Systems Change

Our work is designed to trigger debate, discomfort and action. We do not only expose injustice; we work for policy and systems change. We want governments and institutions to address the root causes of inequality, disadvantage, discrimination, exclusion and barriers affecting African people. We believe lasting change must be shaped by people with lived experience.

Exposing Injustice in Africa

Africa Realities Media is an independent African accountability platform based in London. We report, analyse and challenge the systems that shape African suffering, silence African victims and protect abusive power. We are not here to repeat diplomatic language. We are here to ask the questions that are often avoided: why are African deaths treated as normal? Why are African victims given less urgency? Why are governments that imprison, exclude, displace or kill their own people protected when they serve powerful international interests?

Africanews

Africa Realities Media gives space to writers, researchers, experts, activists, community voices, campaigners, analysts and people with lived experience who want to contribute thoughtful, responsible and courageous content about the changes needed in the region, as well as the political, economic, cultural and social African realities that are often ignored, minimised or misrepresented. Our articles and videos aim to encourage debate, raise awareness, stimulate critical thinking and support reflection. We seek to help people in the Great Lakes Region understand their rights to human rights, development and wellbeing, while also encouraging decision-makers to be more transparent, responsive and accountable.

Appel Ă  contributions

Sensibilisez le public aux causes qui vous tiennent Ă  cĹ“ur. Prenez part au changement que vous souhaitez voir Ă©merger. Aidez Ă  combattre l’injustice partout oĂą elle se manifeste.

Africa Realities Media accueille des articles originaux, analyses, tribunes, réflexions communautaires et commentaires fondés sur des faits concernant la région des Grands Lacs africains, ainsi que les questions liées à la justice, aux droits humains, à la gouvernance, aux conflits, à la paix, aux réfugiés, aux ressources naturelles et à la responsabilité publique en Afrique.

Nous accueillons Ă©galement les annonces concernant de nouvelles ou d’anciennes publications liĂ©es Ă  nos domaines d’intĂ©rĂŞt. Vous pouvez annoncer gratuitement votre publication, notamment un livre, un rapport, une Ă©tude, un article acadĂ©mique ou tout autre travail pertinent.

Les articles doivent être rédigés en anglais ou en français et ne doivent pas dépasser 1 500 mots.

Veuillez inclure le nom complet de l’auteur, qui sera publiĂ© avec l’article s’il est acceptĂ©.

Avant de soumettre votre article, veuillez d’abord lire nos pages du site web afin de vĂ©rifier si votre article correspond Ă  nos prioritĂ©s Ă©ditoriales, Ă  nos thèmes et Ă  nos domaines d’intĂ©rĂŞt.

Si vous avez un article, un commentaire ou une annonce de publication Ă  partager avec un public plus large, veuillez l’envoyer par email Ă  :

africarealitiesmedia@gmail.com

Nous Ă©tudierons la possibilitĂ© de publier gratuitement les articles et annonces de publications appropriĂ©s s’ils rĂ©pondent Ă  nos critères Ă©ditoriaux, notamment la pertinence, la clartĂ©, l’originalitĂ©, l’intĂ©rĂŞt public, le respect des communautĂ©s concernĂ©es et l’utilisation responsable des informations et des preuves.

Les articles sont publiĂ©s tels qu’ils sont soumis s’ils rĂ©pondent Ă  nos critères et Ă  notre politique Ă©ditoriale. Nous ne procĂ©dons pas Ă  une modification supplĂ©mentaire de votre article avant sa publication.