Ibimenyetso by'impinduramatwara nk'izabaye muri Tuniziya na Misiri byatangiye kugaragara mu Rwanda
Nyuma yuko urubyiruko muri Tuniziya na misiri rwanze gukomeza gukandamizwa n'ingoma z'igitugu, rugahitamo gusezerera Ben Ali na Moubarak, ndetse iyo nkubiri ikaba ikomereje mu bindi bihugu by'abarabu nka Libye, Yemen n'ahandi, abantu benshi bakomeje kwibaza igihugu cyo munsi ya Sahara kizabimburira ibindi gusezerera ingoma z'igitugu zihiganje. Dore ibimenyetso bibiri byerekana ko Urwanda rushobora kuza ku isonga rugasezerera igitugu cya Paul Kagame.
Urubyiruko rw'Urwanda rwatangiye kuvuga ko rutagishoboye kwihanganira igitugu
1- Urubyiruko rw'abanyeshuri
Mu ibaruwa abanyeshuri b'ishuri nderabarezi bo kuri KIE baherutse kwandikira Kagame bamugezaho akababaro kabo batewe no kwamburwa na leta amafaranga yabagurizaga yo kwiga, bavuze ko niba batarenganuwe, baziha amabarabara, bakaruhuka aruko ibintu bihindutse mu Rwanda. Babivuze muri aya magambo:
"Gusa rero, ibintu bikomeje kugenda nkuko bimeze muri iki gihe, byatuma duhaguruka tukajya mu myigaragambyo, wenda tukaraswa, ariko tukazayihagarika ari uko bihindutse".
2- Urubyiruko rwa gisirikari
Si urubyiruko rw'abanyeshuri rwonyine rwarambiwe igitugu cya Kagame, abasirikari nabo intero ni imwe, igitugu cya Kagame kigomba kurangira. Abavuga ibyo, usanga bababajwe nuko Kagame akomeje kubacamwo ibice bamwe abita igice kimubogamiyeho, ikindi gice kigatotezwa ngo kizira ko kibogamiye kuri Général Kayumba. Ikindi urubyiruko rwa gisirikari rwishingikirizaho ruvuga ko rurambiwe igitugu cya Kagame, n'ubusumbane burangwa hagati yabo, aho abasirikari barinda Kagame basigaye bagenerwa imishahara ikubye inshuro enye iy'abandi.
Kagame arangwa n'igitugu kirenze kure icy'abandi bakuru b'ibihugu byo munsi ya Sahara
Mu gihe abanyarwanda muri rusange bicwa n'inzara, abanyeshuri bakaba batakiga ngo kubera ko nta mafaranga leta ifite yo kubarihira, abasirikari bakaba bafatwa nk'ababoyi ba Kagame, Kagame we akomeje umugambi mubisha wo kwikubira umutungo wose w'igihugu ariko anica, afunga, ahimbira ibyaha uwo wese utemeranya nawe mu gucunga ibya rubanda. Nyuma y'imyaka cumi n'irindwi gusa, Kagame arabarirwa mu bantu ba mbere bakize ku isi. Nta gushidikanya ko abanyarwada batazakomeza kwihanganira ko umutungo wose w'igihugu wiharirwa na Kagame bo bicwa n'inzara.Kagame ari mubanyagitugu bakomeye kuri iyi isi , amatora aba afifite kuburyo azakurwaho n'izindi mbaraga nkuko yanabyivugiye mu Bubiligi(ingero:http://www.veritasinfo.fr/article-le-top-10-des-dictateurs-les-mieux-elus-du-monde-65377581.html ).
Dore uko ikinyamakuru The Daily Mail cyandikirwa mu bwongereza kibivuga:
Forget Gaddafi. Blair's NEW best friend is a despot guilty of even bloodier slaughter
By Paul Scott
Last updated at 12:49 AM on 5th March 2011
One morning a month ago, amid the kind of hearty backslapping and synthetic bonhomie at which he is so adept, Tony Blair played host to a select group of bankers for what is known in the business as a `billion dollar breakfast'.
As is so often the case these days, the principal criterion for gaining admission to the event at a luxurious Swiss hotel — and some much sought-after `face time' with the great man himself — was that you should be very seriously rich.
Mr Blair, tight-grinned and tanned in a trademark open-necked white shirt and dark suit teamed, oddly, with a pair of Australian riding boots, was in his element, holding court as red-waistcoated staff poured Buck's Fizz and coffee for the invited international money men.
Scene of horror: The skulls of victims of the Rwandan massacres
At the former Prime Minister's side throughout was a rake-thin and bespectacled black man whom Blair was conspicuously keen to introduce to the assembled movers and shakers. Not surprising, perhaps, given that the event — at which Mr Blair was officially the chairman — was arranged in sole honour of Paul Kagame, the president of the African state of Rwanda.
And this being Mr Blair, the subject on his lips throughout the stylish meeting, held during the World Economic Forum in Davos, was cold, hard cash. Or, more to the point, how much he could persuade the super-rich investment bankers to plough into businesses in his close friend Mr Kagame's emerging economy.
It is a task to which Mr Blair is devoting much of his time. Both he and his wife Cherie are regular guests of Kagame, flying in on a fabulously luxurious private jet (of which more later) and staying in a smart suite at the Rwandan capital Kigali's finest lodgings, the Serena Hotel.
Their relationship, it has to be said, is something of a love-in. Mr Blair describes Kagame, a former rebel soldier in the once war-torn country, as a `visionary leader' and `great friend'. For his part, the grateful Kagame has called on his people to name their children after his new English chum.
Meanwhile, Mrs Blair recently paid a misty-eyed tribute to his regime's promotion of the rights of women.
Which, one imagines, must have put an ironic smile on the face of one of Rwanda's leading female journalists, Agnes Nkusi Uwimana, now languishing in Kigali's grim Central Prison.
Last month, the newspaper editor began a 17-year sentence for publishing critical articles in the run-up to the country's blatantly fixed presidential elections last August that saw Kagame — the country's leader since 2000 — returned to office with a 93 per cent majority.
Friends: Tony Blair greets Rwandan President Paul Kagame inside No 10 in December 2006 while he was still Prime Minister
Another writer on her paper was jailed for seven years. Meanwhile, their paper was summarily closed down by presidential order. Indeed, the increasingly dictatorial Kagame has now closed down all the independent media outlets the country once had.
No wonder Amnesty International has condemned the jailing, while the White House recently attacked Kagame's growing political suppression.
Even so, Miss Uwimana and her journalist colleague can count themselves lucky. Others have suffered much worse fates.
The sham elections, at which 53-year-old father-of-four Kagame banned the two major opposition parties from standing and stood against three members of his own ruling coalition, were marred by the mysterious deaths of some of his political opponents and critics.
In June, the acting editor of another newspaper was shot in the face and killed. The journalist, Jean-Leonard Rugambage, was silenced because he exposed corruption involving Kagame and claimed he had uncovered the government's involvement in the attempted murder of a former Rwandan army general exiled in South Africa.
Worse was to come. A month later, the vice-president of the country's Democratic Green Party, which had been due to stand against the president's Rwandan Patriotic Front ruling party, went missing before his almost decapitated body was discovered. Kagame's government denied any involvement.
In October, the woman leader of the central African country's most prominent opposition party, FDU-Inkingi, was jailed under new defamation laws brought in by Kagame to stifle opposition.
Then, two months ago, four exiled political rivals who used to be part of Kagame's inner circle, but now accuse him of corruption, were jailed by a court for up to 24 years in their absence.
Which makes Mr Blair's congratulatory letter to Kagame, hailing his `popular mandate' after the vote, seem a bit of a sick joke.
Blair's robust backing for his latest dodgy friend bears striking similarities to his long-time support of Libya's Colonel Gaddafi, to whom he shamelessly cosied up during his time as PM, and to whom he has remained close ever since.
Kanobana Antoine