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Man jailed in Belgium for 25 years over Rwandan genocide      


FILE - A tourist walks past family photos of victims in an exhibition at the Kigali Genocide Memorial in Kigali, Rwanda, April 4, 2024. Emmanuel Nkunduwimye, 65, was sentenced to prison June 10, 2024, in Brussels for murder and rape committed during the 1994 Rwandan genocide.
FILE - A tourist walks past family photos of victims in an exhibition at the Kigali Genocide Memorial in Kigali, Rwanda, April 4, 2024. Emmanuel Nkunduwimye, 65, was sentenced to prison June 10, 2024, in Brussels for murder and rape committed during the 1994 Rwandan genocide.

A court in Brussels on Monday sentenced a 65-year-old Belgian-Rwandan man to 25 years in prison for murder and rape committed during the 1994 Rwandan genocide.

Emmanuel Nkunduwimye was found guilty of war crimes and genocide for a series of murders as well as the rape of a Tutsi woman.

Nkunduwimye, who was first arrested in Belgium in 2011, owned a garage in Rwanda's capital, Kigali, in April 1994 when the genocide began. The garage was part of a complex of buildings that was the scene of massacres perpetrated by Interahamwe militiamen.

Nkunduwimye was close to several militia leaders - including Georges Rutaganda, who was sentenced to life imprisonment by the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda and died in 2010.

The jury at the trial in Brussels found the accused assisted the militia "with full knowledge of the facts."

"He could not have been unaware of the abuses committed there," the sentencing said, according to Belga news agency.

During the trial, Nkunduwimye was formally identified by the woman he raped, who came to testify in private at the hearing.

Nkunduwimye denied the accusations and his defense called for his acquittal, arguing in particular that the prosecution's evidence was unreliable.

Prosecutors at the trial, which began in April, had requested a sentence of 30 years in jail.

The genocide in Rwanda, which took place between April and July 1994, claimed at least 800,000 lives, according to the U.N. The victims were mainly members of the Tutsi minority, but also included moderate Hutus.

The trial of Nkunduwimye was the seventh such trial to be held in Belgium since 2001 involving alleged crimes committed during the genocide.

Belgium - which controlled Rwanda during the colonial period – can prosecute alleged genocidaires because its court recognizes universal jurisdiction for crimes under international humanitarian law committed outside the country.

In the most recent trial, Seraphin Twahirwa was sentenced in December 2023 to life imprisonment for dozens of murders and rapes perpetrated by himself or the Interahamwe militiamen under his authority in Kigali between April and July 1994.

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