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Rwanda government objects to early release of genocide criminals

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The Rwandan government is demanding a public hearing before a journalist described by one prosecutor as the “mastermind” of the 1994 genocide be considered for early release.

An international court is expected to approve the early release from prison of one of the architects of the 1994 genocide in Rwanda – despite objections from prosecutors who claim it will undermine confidence in global campaigns to combat extremism.

Hassan Ngeze (L), former member of the MRND and founding member of coalition for the Defence of the Republic and a editor for the Kangura newspaper sit 03 December 2003 in the UN Tribunal for Rwanda in Arusha,

Hassan Ngeze, the editor of an extremist Hutu magazine, was originally jailed for life by a judge in 2003, who told him he had “poisoned the minds of your readers” against Tutsis.

Four years later, the sentence was reduced to 35 years – and now he is being considered for early release by US Judge Theodor Meron, who oversees the relevant court.

But this has sparked outrage, not just within Rwanda, but among the lawyers who originally put him behind bars, according to the UK’s Guardian.

Simone Monasebian, one of the prosecutors in the original case, has written to the judge, arguing the words used in his publication “were more potent and dangerous than any bullets or machetes”.

He was, she added, the “mastermind of the genocide”.

Rwanda’s National Commission for the Fight against Genocide (CNLG) has also issued a damning response to the possibility of Ngeze’s early release.

According to Rwanda’s New Times, 14 people involved in the genocide have been released early, with the CNLG arguing “such decisions demean the genocide against Tutsi, and give room for impunity”.

Rwanda’s attorney-general Johnson Businye has also called for “an investigation into the basis for these releases, and asking that they be brought to a halt”, the newspaper reports.

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