Dah! Hii Taarifa Imenipa Simanzi,Majonzi Na Huzuni! Nimeiwasilisha Kama Nilivyoombwa Na Msimuliaji!
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Genociders wakubwa hao wana tafutwa hasa baba ni muuaji alikua kanali jeshi la zamani yuko UK anajifanya Mchungaji. Baba anaitwa Celestin Mutabaruka.
Hawa hapa
Dah! Hii Taarifa Imenipa Simanzi,Majonzi Na Huzuni! Nimeiwasilisha Kama Nilivyoombwa Na Msimuliaji!
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Huyu dogo anamtetea baba kwa kua anatafutwa na mahakama,wako UK ,baba alikua kanali kwenye jeshi la zamani na alishiliki mauaji.yuko wanted ! Ingia google andika Celestin Mutabaruka. You will know these people.
Pichani baba na mtoto
Célestin Mutabaruka was born in Rwanda in 1956. He became an ordained Pentecostal pastor.
A member of the Hutu ethnic group, he is suspected by the Rwandan government of having been a leader of an
Interahamwe militia during the Rwandan 1994 genocide and of having actively participated in crimes against the Tutsis. Mutabaruka is specifically accused of participating in the massacre of many Tutsis hidden in the Presbyterian church of Gatare on 17 April 1994. In the middle of May 1994, he also allegedly led an
Interahamwe militia during the attacks in Bisesero causing the death of approximately 40’000 Tutsis.
After the genocide, Mutabaruka fled Rwanda to Congo and later moved to the United Kingdom where he lived in the town of Ashford in the county of Kent for over a decade.
LEGAL PROCEDURE
On 30 May 2013, following the extradition requests by the Rwandan authorities, the UK police arrested him with four other suspects:
Emmanuel Nteziryayo,
Charles Munyaneza,
Vincent Brown (Bajinya) and
Celestin Ugirashebuja. These four persons have been already arrested in 2006 but were released later because of denial of the extradition request due to concerns about their right to a fair trial in Rwanda.
On 21 December 2015, a British court refused a repeated request for extradition. It was stated in the decision that despite the progress of Rwandan legislation, the guarantees of a fair trial and respect for basic human rights were not sufficient so far.
The extradition hearing before the High court of Justice started on 28 November 2016 and resulted in yet another refusal of the request.
In January 2018, Rwandan Prosecutor General Jean Bosco Mutangana and Prosecutor Jean Bosco Siboyintore, Head of the Genocide Suspects Tracking Unit, travelled to London to request the United Kingdom to open an investigation against the five individuals suspected of having participated in the 1994 genocide. They recalled the obligation of the United Kingdom to try or extradite such individuals. As a result, the War Crimes Unit reported that it was assessing the available evidence.
On 9 April 2019, British police announced that the allegations against Charles Munyaneza and other four individuals were being examined. Minister of State for Security and Economic Crime Ben Wallace announced that investigations concerning those five individuals might take up to five years. However, he also told members of the Parliament that the UK government would provide all the necessary resources at its disposal so that justice can be served. He announced that officers were sent to Rwanda to investigate on the ground.