Rwanda’s Paul Kagame: Visionary, despot, or both?

A bus adorned with an image of incumbent Rwandan President Paul Kagame at the central bus station in Kigali, in this July 30 photo. (AFP)
Updated 01 August 2017
Follow

Rwanda’s Paul Kagame: Visionary, despot, or both?

KIGALI, Rwanda: Paul Kagame is revered for stopping Rwanda’s genocide and engineering what admirers call an economic miracle, but his critics see a despot who crushes all opposition and rules through fear.
The 59-year-old former guerrilla fighter is seeking a third term in office in Aug. 4 polls after voters massively approved a constitutional amendment allowing him to run again and potentially stay in office for another two decades.
Kagame frames his run as a duty to his country. However, the move angered international allies whose patience has worn thin with a man once held up as a shining example of successful post-colonial leadership in Africa.
Yet the president of the tiny central African nation has become one of Africa’s most powerful and admired leaders. His counterparts, inspired by Rwanda’s turnaround, have tasked him with reforming the African Union (AU).
Shattered by the 1994 genocide and with not a franc left in the national treasury when Kagame took over, Rwanda is now growing at an average 7 percent a year while Kigali has transformed into a capital with a gleaming skyline, spotless, safe streets and zero tolerance for corruption.
“Kagame is known as a doer and an implementer, not somebody who says things just like everyone else,” said Desire Assogbavi, Oxfam’s liason to the AU who also blogs regularly about the body.
His close friend Tony Blair hails him as a “visionary leader” for the remarkable development he has brought about.
The president’s personality — described as “unapologetically authoritarian” by author Philip Gourevitch, who wrote a powerful account of the genocide — was forged by growing up in exile.
In 1960, when he was three, his aristocratic Tutsi family fled to neighboring Uganda to escape pogroms.
While out of danger, they suffered years of discrimination and persecution that nourished the dream of going back to the homeland they idealized.
Serving in Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni’s rebel force before and after it seized power in 1986, he rose to become its intelligence chief.
Kagame — the only president known to have had military training both in the US and Cuba — later took over command of a small rebel force of Rwandan exiles that sneaked back home hoping to overthrow the regime of Juvenal Habyarimana in 1990, sparking civil war.
Habyarimana’s death in a plane crash in 1994 triggered three months of genocide, mostly of minority Tutsis by youths in the Hutu majority whipped into a frenzy of hate.
Kagame, a father of four, was just 36 when his Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF) rebel army routed the forces who had slaughtered an estimated 800,000 people and seized Kigali, becoming the de facto leader of the nation.
Kagame soon became the darling of an international community deeply ashamed at having stood by during the genocide, even as his RPF was accused of killing tens of thousands of people in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) while pursuing genocide perpetrators.
It was accusations Kagame was backing rebel groups in the DRC — which he staunchly denies — that finally pushed his allies to take a tougher line, with several suspending aid to Rwanda in 2012.
And criticism has grown louder over his rights record.
Kagame’s critics have ended up jailed, forced into exile or assassinated. Rights groups slam the repression of the media and opposition.
Kagame won elections in 2003 and 2010 with 95 and 93 percent respectively. Observers say real opponents are silenced while those allowed to run in elections serve as a democratic facade.
One of Rwanda’s rare critical journalists, Robert Mugabe, describes Kagame as the quintessential modern dictator.
“We have a new breed of dictators... they hire PR agencies they form a narrative and these dictators are smart enough to know what the western world wants to see and wants to hear.”


Tourists empty out of Cuba as US fuel blockade bites

Updated 3 sec ago
Follow

Tourists empty out of Cuba as US fuel blockade bites

  • Several nations have advised against travel to Cuba since the US tightened a decades-old embargo
  • The island of 9.6 million inhabitants has faced hard times since the US trade embargo took hold in 1962
HAVANA: With rolling power cuts, hotel closures, and flight routes suspended for lack of fuel, tourists are gradually emptying out of Cuba, deepening a severe crisis on the cash-strapped island.
Several nations have advised against travel to Cuba since the US tightened a decades-old embargo by choking vital oil imports.
“I found only one taxi,” said French tourist Frederic Monnet, who cut short a trip to a picturesque valley in western Cuba to head back to Havana.
“There might be no taxis afterward,” he said.
A petroleum shortage has led to regular hours-long power cuts, long queues at petrol stations, and has forced many airlines to announce that they will cancel regular services.
About 30 hotels and resorts across the island are being temporarily closed due to low occupancy and fuel rationing, according to an internal Tourism Ministry document obtained by AFP.
Since January, a flotilla of US warships have stopped Venezuelan tankers from delivering oil to Cuban ports.
Washington has also threatened Mexico and other exporter with punitive tariffs if they continue deliveries.
Several Canadian and Russian airlines are sending empty flights to Cuba to retrieve thousands of otherwise stranded passengers, and others are introducing refueling stops in the route home.
American tourist Liam Burnell contacted his airline to make sure he could get a flight back.
“There was a danger that I might not be able to return, because the airport says it doesn’t have enough fuel for the planes,” he said.
‘Critical, critical’
An absence of tourists is more than an inconvenience for the Cuban government.
Tourism is traditionally Cuba’s second major source of foreign currency, behind revenue from doctors sent abroad.
The revenue is vital to pay for food, fuel, and other imports.
And the 300,000 Cubans who make a living off the tourist industry are already feeling the pinch.
A hop-on, hop-off bus touring Havana’s sites on Thursday was virtually empty.
Horses idled in the shade of colonial buildings, waiting for carriages to fill with visitors.
“The situation is critical, critical, critical,” said 34-year-old Juan Arteaga, who drives one of the island’s many classic 1950s cars so beloved by tourists.
“There are few cars (on the street) because there is little fuel left. Whoever had a reserve is keeping it,” he said.
“When my gasoline runs out, I go home. What else can I do?” he said.
The island of 9.6 million inhabitants has faced hard times since the US trade embargo took hold in 1962, and in recent years the severe economic crisis has also been marked by shortages of food and medicine.
On Thursday, two Mexican navy ships arrived in Cuba with more than 800 tons of much-needed humanitarian aid — fresh and powdered milk, meat, cookies, beans, rice and personal hygiene items, according to the Mexican foreign ministry.
Musician Victor Estevez said because tourism has been “a lifeline for all Cubans...if that is affected, then we are really going to be in trouble.”
“The well-being of my family depends on me.”
The tourism sector had already been severely hit by the Covid-19 pandemic, experiencing a 70 percent decline in revenue between 2019 and 2025.
Tourism expert Jose Luis Perello said the island now faces the prospect of “a disastrous year.”