Thursday, September 12, 2013
France to release genocide suspect
A French court has ordered the release of a
former Rwandan colonel, wanted by the
African nation for his alleged role in the 1994
genocide.
Rwanda had requested the extradition of Laurent
Serubuga, a Hutu, who served as Rwanda's deputy
army chief-of-staff.
The 77-year-old was arrested in July in northern
France under an international arrest warrant issued
by Rwanda.
An estimated 800,000 people, mostly minority
Tutsis, were killed by the ethnic majority Hutus in
1994.
Mr Serubuga's son, Paulin, who was present at the
tribunal said his family was relieved by the ruling.
"We were expecting a political trial. The lies of
Rwanda have not been heard before the judges," he
was quoted by AFP as saying.
'Classic case'
The court in Douai, France, found that at the time the
atrocities were committed, genocide and crimes
against humanity were not punishable by law in
Rwanda, therefore Mr Serubuga could not be tried
retroactively for crimes that were not part of the
penal code.
French law does not grant extradition in cases where
the defendant does not have fundamental
guarantees that his rights will be protected, Mr
Serubuga's lawyer, Thierry Massis, said.
"It's a pretty classic case," Mr Massis, told Reuters.
The lawyer representing Rwanda's interests, Gilles
Paruelle, said he was not surprised by the decision as
France had rejected several similar previous
extradition requests.
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