LeadershipPolitics

Paul Kagame to seek fourth term as president of Rwanda

In the last presidential election five years ago, official figures showed that Kagame won 99% of the vote, which many outside the country dismissed as a sham

Rwanda’s leader, who has been in power for two decades, has said he would consider remaining in office for another 20 years. Paul Kagame told a French TV channel he will stand for president again at the next election in 2024.

In 2015 he changed the constitution, allowing him to stay in office until 2034.

In the last presidential election five years ago, official figures showed he won 99% of the vote, which many outside the country dismissed as a sham.

Asked if he would seek re-election, Kagame, who is 64, said: “I would consider running for another 20 years. I have no problem with that. Elections are about people choosing.”

The Human Rights Watch director for Central Africa, Lewis Mudge, told the BBC, “What comes as a surprise is that some people are indeed surprised.

“Rwanda is a country where it’s very, very dangerous to oppose the government, let alone to be a political opponent … and this authoritarian system is going to be the system for the foreseeable future,” he said.

One prominent Rwandan critic had even stronger words. “If he continues for another 20 years Rwanda will be real hell,” Charles Kambanda, a lawyer and university lecturer now based in the United States, told the BBC.

Kambanda said Rwandans already live in a climate of fear, and alleged that more than one minister has told him that they remain in government because they fear they will be assassinated if they leave.

However, President Kagame has fiercely defended Rwanda’s human rights record, most recently at a Commonwealth summit in the capital, Kigali, in June.

Months earlier, in April, the UK announced controversial plans to send some asylum-seekers who reach its shores to Rwanda for processing and potential asylum there instead.

The move was condemned by the UN, which likened it to “trading commodities”, but the British Prime Minister’s Office has vowed to press ahead with the policy despite Boris Johnson’s departure.

Kagame himself came to power in 1994 after his rebel forces helped end the Rwandan Genocide. Since then he has positioned himself as a champion of development, but critics say he maintains a tight grip over what is an authoritarian regime.

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Source
BBC
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