Saturday, 25 October 2014

Exposing the true colours of a tyrant : Rwanda suspends BBC broadcasts over genocide film: Rwanda MPs condemn BBC over genocide documentary

Rwandan President Paul Kagame.

MUST WATCH:

BBC Documentary : Rwanda the untold story


MUST READ:

Mercenary intellectual and Dictator Kagame Media bulldog Andrew Mwenda fallaciously attacks a very fair and balanced BBC Documentary : Rwanda the untold story: My rebuttal of Andrew Mwenda’s attack of the BBC documentary on Rwanda

http://watchmanafrica.blogspot.com/2014/10/mercenary-intellectual-and-dictator.html  

What Really Happened in Rwanda? You can only find the truth by thinking outside the Box

When dictators enjoy the immunity of fooling the world for some time: But, This immunity will not last all the time: Kagame Attacks The BBC Over Controversial so called genocide denial Documentary

Rwanda suspends BBC broadcasts over genocide film

http://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-29762713  

Photographs of victims in the Kigali genocide memorial  
There are numerous memorials around Rwanda to those killed in the genocide


Rwanda has suspended BBC broadcasts in the Kinyarwanda language with immediate effect because of a film questioning official accounts of the 1994 genocide.

The Rwanda Utilities Regulatory Agency (Rura) said it had received complaints from the public of incitement, hatred, revisionism and genocide denial.

At least 800,000 ethnic Tutsis and moderate Hutus died in the genocide.
The BBC has denied that any part of the programme constitutes a "denial of the genocide against the Tutsi".
On Wednesday, Rwandan MPs approved a resolution calling on the government to ban the BBC and to charge the documentary-makers with genocide denial, which is a crime in the country.


Those killed in the genocide are generally believed to be mostly members of the minority ethnic Tutsi group, and Hutus opposed to the mass slaughter.

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Rwandan genocide:
skulls on display in the Nyamata church
  • 6 April 1994: President Juvenal Habyarimana is killed when his plane was shot down on returning from peace talks with Tutsi RPF rebels
  • 7 April: It is not clear who is behind the shooting but it sparks the systematic mass killing of mainly Tutsis by extremist Hutu militia and military elements
  • April-July: An estimated 800,000 Tutsis and moderate Hutus are slaughtered
  • RPF denies accusations they killed thousands of Hutus as they marched through the country
  • July: RPF captures the capital, Kigali
  • July: Two million Hutus flee to Zaire, now DR Congo
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The BBC programme Rwanda, The Untold Story, includes interviews with US-based researchers who say most of those killed may have been Hutus, killed by members of the then-rebel Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF), which has been in power since 1994.

The programme also included interviews with former aides of RPF leader President Paul Kagame, accusing him of plotting to shoot down the presidential plane - the act seen as triggering the slaughter.

news reports recall how the genocide unfolded
He has consistently denied previous such accusations.
Rura said it had established a commission of inquiry to investigate the allegations it had received about the programme, after which further action may be taken.
The cabinet is meeting next week to discuss parliament's recommendations.
The BBC broadcasts affected by the suspension are produced by the BBC Great Lakes service, which was initially set up in the aftermath of the genocide as a lifeline service.
Its first broadcast - BBC Gahuzamiryango, meaning "the unifier of families" - was a 15-minute transmission aimed at bringing together families who had been separated.

Rwanda MPs condemn BBC over genocide documentary


By  Agencies

Posted  Saturday, October 25  2014 at  01:00
In Summary
Those killed in the genocide are generally believed to be mostly members of the minority ethnic Tutsi group, and Hutus opposed to the mass slaughter. 

Kigali- Rwanda’s parliament has condemned the BBC for broadcasting a documentary which questioned official accounts of the 1994 genocide in the country.
It approved a resolution calling on the government to ban the BBC in Rwanda and to charge the documentary-makers with genocide denial.
At least 800,000 people died in the genocide.
The BBC has denied that any part of the programme constitutes a “denial of the genocide against the Tutsi”.
Those killed in the genocide are generally believed to be mostly members of the minority ethnic Tutsi group, and Hutus opposed to the mass slaughter.

The BBC programme “Rwanda, The Untold Story”, includes interviews with US-based researchers who say most of those killed may have been Hutus, killed by members of the then-rebel Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF), which has been in power since 1994.
The programme also included interviews with former aides of RPF leader President Paul Kagame, accusing him of plotting to shoot down the presidential plane - the act seen as triggering the slaughter.
He has consistently denied previous such accusations.

The resolution said the programme’s producer and presenter, as well as those interviewed for the documentary, should be charged with genocide denial - a punishable crime in Rwanda.