GLPOST

Tell Secretary Blinken to Call for Release of Paul Rusesabagina

Paul Rusesabagina receiving the Presidential Medal of Honor from President George W. Bush in 2005. Photo Credit -- Lawrence Jackson, AP

Paul Rusesabagina receiving the Presidential Medal of Honor from President George W. Bush in 2005. Photo Credit -- Lawrence Jackson, AP

To fully commemorate the anniversary of the Rwandan genocide, Paul Rusesabagina needs to be freed. Now. Sign our petition to U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken to urge him to seek Paul’s release. PLEASE SIGN THIS PETITION

Twenty-seven years ago today, President Juvénal Habyarimana’s plane was shot down as he returned from peace talks in Tanzania with the Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF). This event sparked the genocide where at least 800,000 people were butchered by people they had known all of their lives. People picked up machetes and killed friends, family, and coworkers.

Paul Rusesabagina was a hotel manager at the Hotel des Milles Collines. He didn’t set out to be a hero. He has said that the question shouldn’t be why he acted the way he did but why did others not? As a result of his actions, depicted in the film Hotel Rwanda where he was played by Don Cheadle, 1,268 people survived that 10 horrible weeks in 1994. If that does not make him a hero, what does?

Today, as President Paul Kagame oversees the genocide reenactments that are held every year, Rusesabagina is not sitting alongside his country-mate. He sits in jail on trumped-up charges. His real crime is criticizing Kagame. Today, criticizing Kagame or other high-level government officials is a crime. A guilty verdict carries a sentence of five years in prison. Kagame critics don’t often see the inside of a court. More than a few have died under suspicious circumstances.

Fearing for his life, Rusesabagina left Rwanda. Today is a permanent U.S. resident and Belgian citizen. He speaks out against genocide and been a champion for human rights and democracy. He’s the recipient of the Presidential Medal of Freedom and Lantos Foundation for Human Rights and Justice’s Human Rights Prize.

In August, Rusesabagina was kidnapped, blindfolded, and tied up. He was arrested in Kigali and has been in solitary confinement ever since. He has been denied access to the medication he needs (he is a cancer survivor and suffers from hypertension), his family (he gets one five minute call a week – should he talk to his family or lawyer), the lawyers of his choosing (he can talk to one but there are more on his team), and has been given little to eat (he has lost about 50 pounds). Any legal documents his lawyers do get to him being confiscated. The Rwandan government says he has what he needs because he has a chair and a desk with a shelf. The power to his cell is cut every night at 6:00 pm.

Multiple international, human rights organizations have said Rusesabagina was kidnapped or “forcibly disappeared.” No one thinks the trial can be fair. When Kagame saw Belgium helping the Rusesabagina family, he responded by saying that if the assistance continued, “it will have a negative impact on the relationship between the two nations.”

The world has a nasty habit of looking at a genocide, wringing its hands and saying, “never again” but avoiding any actual evidence when it happens again. When faced with genocide, Rusesabagina did not look the other way. He helped the people he could.

We need more people to act like Paul Rusesabagina. The west looked the other way in 1994, it cannot make the same mistake here. We need to bring him home. PLEASE SIGN THIS PETITION

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