Regional
Michela Wrong’s Rwanda hatched job
After reading Michela Wrong’s memoir "Do Not
Disturb" of Patrick Karegyeya, a former Rwandan intelligence chief killed
about eight years ago in a hotel suite in Johannesburg, South Africa, Ugandan
journalist Andrew Mwenda has written an article showing how it is a one-sided
and racist account that lacks context.
Mwenda who indicates he got to know Wrong through
Karegyeya, in Kigali in 2002, among others, notes that by abandoning
journalistic principles of truths and accuracy, fairness and balance, Wrong
relied on Karegyeya, Kayumba Nyamwasa and many other enemies of President Paul
Kagame to tell the Rwandan story. In the process, Mwenda wrote, she denied her
readers basic facts about Kagame and post genocide Rwanda.
Below is Andrew Mwenda’s full article:
Finally, I have finished reading Michela Wrong’s 516
memoir of Patrick Karegyeya, a former Rwandan intelligence chief who was killed
on or about New Year’s Eve or New Year’s Day 2013/2014 in a hotel suite in
Johannesburg, South Africa. Wrong is a compelling writer. Do Not Disturb (that
is the title of the book) is a captivating read, riveting with scintillating
details. One can easily think it is well researched – that is if they are
ignorant of the realities of post genocide Rwanda. It is a one-sided account
that lacks context. Rarely in the history of our profession has a journalist
thrown away all pretense to fairness and balance.
Wrong opens the book with a classic prejudice claiming
that all Rwandans are liars. In fact, she argues quoting contemporary Rwanda
politicians she interviewed, lying for Rwandans is “an art form,” a “part of
their culture.” Then she quotes a 19th Century European traveler saying: “Of
all the liars in African, I believe the people of Ruanda are the most
thorough.” And she agrees. Just imagine in a continent of thousands of
cultures, how could this European have studied all of them to arrive at such a
conclusion. If you are a Rwandan, it would require incredible tenacity to
proceed.
But this is where the contradiction in Wrong’s
convictions comes out. If she accepts that lying is an art form in Rwanda, she
does so only when someone speaks in defense of President Paul Kagame and/or his
government. But when it comes to claims, allegations, accusations and
assertions by Kagame’s enemies against the president, the Rwandans she
interviewed cease to be liars – their every allegation is treated as gospel
truths. Wrong made no effort to do basic journalistic work i.e. listen to
Kagame’s side (fairness). In her court (where she acts as the investigator,
prosecutor, judge and jury) Kagame is not entitled to a defense at all.
There is one great lesson I got from Wrong’s book, and
that is my own culpability in her distorted Rwanda narrative: we African
journalists do not write books about our countries. We leave it to Western
academics and journalists seeking to purvey their prejudices about us, our
leaders and our governments. In fact, when we have written books, we too have
not provided the needed context. Instead we have regurgitated their prejudices.
I am one of the best-informed journalists on Rwanda, having been close to most
of the important players in that country. And I haven’t published a book on
post genocide Rwanda yet. I admit I have failed Rwanda – and Africa.
Interestingly I got to know Wrong through Karegyeya. Once
having coffee in Kigali in 2002, Karegyeya told me: Andrew, you should read a
book titled In the Footsteps of Mr. Kurtz by a journalist called Micheal
Wrong.” Back in Kampala, I bought a copy and devoured it. Something struck me:
everyone had been led to believe former Congolese president, Mobutu Sese Seko,
“looted” $8 billions of his country’s money. Wrong went looking for that
fortune and found only two or three properties in Europe and $20m on a Swiss
bank account. She concluded that for Mobutu, money was not an end but a means
to an end, the end being power. Mobutu had taken a lot of money from the
Congolese treasury, Wrong agreed. But it was not to accumulate a private
fortune. It was to pay for his political survival. She transformed me.
While in London in 2005, Charles Onyango-Obbo introduced
me to Wrong at a dinner at Lancester House. “Andrew”, Charles called me, “do
you know Michela Wrong?” I walked to her with a beaming smile and without
greeting her, held her in both arms around the waist and lifted her off the
ground in hero worship. “I read your book on Congo and it transformed my
thinking about Mobutu specifically and corruption among politicians in Africa
generally,” I said as I put her back on her feet and she adjusted herself to
the shock of a stranger carrying her mid aid. “I wish all my readers could be
like you,” she said. We became “friends” in the lose way we Africans use that
word. Acquaintances would be better used.
But when she came to write about Kagame and Karegyeya, Wrong lost herself – that cool, detached assessment of issues. She transformed into a partisan hack, doing a hatchet on Kagame and his government. She got convinced that Karegyeya was killed on Kagame’s orders and proceeded to conduct an “investigation” to prove her hypothesis. Even when her findings cast suspicion on the South African government, she is blind to it. Her mind was closed and hence she made no effort to explore any other hypothesis.
For instance, why did the South African government drag
its feet and ultimately fail to prosecute the case six years later? Wrong
claims it was intimidated by the Rwandan government. Really? President Jacob
Zuma was not a friend of Kagame. He and former South African Intelligence Chief,
Bill Masetera, were very close to Karegyeya. Couldn’t they have pushed for
prosecution? This lead may have led to dead end but it was important to raise
these questions and suspicions about the South African government.
When Karegyeya was murdered, I said on television that
government of Rwanda was the number one suspect, but not the only one. They had
every reason to seek his head because I had seen Rwandan intelligence where it
was alleged he was involved in training rebels in Congo in alliance with Hutu
extremists. However, there were many others who would want his head as well. He
had stepped on many people’s toes as head of intelligence in Rwanda, and they
could have sought revenge. A Burundian musician had been killed in a hotel in
Johannesburg and his family blamed Karegyeya for it claiming he had been
sleeping with his girlfriend. Didn’t they have motive?
I also knew Karegyeya had been involved in arms dealings
for RNC. Arms trade is a dirty business. Did he double cross anyone in this
risky business, including his own friends inside RNC, who could have bumped
Karegyeya off using the same Rwandan double agents knowing they could blame it
on Kagame? Could these Rwandan opposition activists have lied to Wrong that it
was Kagame who killed Karegyeya? Aren’t Rwandans liars as Wrong says in the
introduction to her book?
I once got a tip that Rwandan intelligence had misled
South African intelligence to believe that Karegyeya was, through Apollo
Gafaranga, reconciling with Kagame and was poised to return to Kigali. The
South African and Tanzanian armies were in Eastern DRC to “fight subversive
forces.” But instead they had only beaten M23, a rebel group allied to Kigali,
leaving Hutu extremist forces intact. Apparently, the South Africans and Tanzanians
were using Karegyeya’s contacts among Hutu extremists to trade in minerals.
Zuma’s nephew was a big player. And quite importantly, President Jakaya
Kikwete, like Zuma, was close to Karegyeya.
Could the South Africans have feared that if Karegyeya returned
to Rwanda he would expose their mineral secrets and their work with Hutu
extremists? This hypothesis may be misleading but it is worth exploring. I
shared it with Wrong in London and I feel it deserved a follow-up or at least a
mention in the book. I also shared it with Samantha Power, Obama’s UN
ambassador, and British intelligence. Wrong was not interested. She just wanted
to present Kagame as a violent psychopath, yet he is a leader loved by the vast
majority of his citizens and admired across Africa and the world.
But let us accept that the Rwandan state actually killed
Karegyeya. Would this be because Kagame is a violent psychopath? Karegyeya
himself gave the answer. “You have to understand,” Wrong quotes Karegyeya
speaking to someone in Kenya’s capital, Nairobi in 2002, “we are a small and
densely populated country. We have a higher population density than any other
country in Africa. So we have no space for another war. We just don’t have the
strategic geographical depth. Because of that, every threat will be dealt with
preemptively and extra territorially, because we do not have room for it to
take place on our sovereign territory. So what you call murder is not a crime
but an act of war by other means and if it took place in any other circumstances,
we would be congratulated and praised for it. We have chosen to externalize the
battlefield and preempt the threat. Externalizing the war zone is part of that
policy and so is buffering.”
There is nothing novel in what Karegyeya was saying. Many
countries have always acted preemptively and extra-territorially depending on
their judgement of the nature of the threats they faced. During the cold war,
the Americans, French, British, and Russians intervened in other countries
using coups, civil wars, and targeted assassinations. For example, the
Americans attempted to assassinate Fidel Castro 76 times, attempted to
assassinate Muammar Gadaffi (1986) and Sadam Hussein in the 1990-2003. After
9/11, the America government adopted a policy of preemptive war to any threat
anywhere. The American state has carried out coups, assassinations or sponsored
civil wars and terrorist activities in Iraq, Syria, El Salvador, Guatemala,
Cambodia, Angola, Mozambique Afghanistan, Pakistan, Grenada, Vietnam, Libya etc.
Would Wrong accuse any US president of being a violent psychopath because of
this?
This is the problem I have with many Western scholars,
journalists and diplomats. When something is done by their countries, they
focus on the national policy that informs the decision, not the personality of
the leader who made it. They can criticize the policy but rarely do they
attribute it to some mental or psychological pathology of the leader. When the
same thing is done by an African leader, they ignore the circumstances that
informed such a decision and accuse the individual leader of madness or
psychopathy. I hate to use the word racism. But if this is not racism, what is
it? Wrong quotes Keregyeya’s well-articulated explanation for Rwanda’s
preemptive and extraterritorial operations. Yet she ignores that explanation
and presents such policy as the product of a Kagame’s psychopathy.
Wrong goes a notch higher. In her world, there is hardly
anything good Kagame has done. She claims Rwanda’s economic growth figures are
distorted and that IMF does not respect them. All she needed to do is visit the
IMF website or contact its Africa department. When highly respected world
political leaders like Bill Clinton, Tony Blair, George Bush etc., religious
leaders like Pastor Rick Warren or business leaders like Bill Gates and Howard
Buffet or world renown academics like Michael Potter and Paul Farmer hail
Kagame, Wrong claims it is because of guilt about the genocide or ignorance of
basic facts about Rwanda.
Yet across the globe, celebrities from Hollywood, leaders
of China and India, leaders of other African nations, the world’s leading
sports stars, authors, prelates and intellectuals all marvel at the
achievements of Rwanda under Kagame’s leadership. Many Africans I take to
Rwanda are awed by its transformation. To Wrong all these people are stupid to
buy Kagame’s propaganda, ignorant or guilty. Jesus! Only one person in the
world, with a small army of human rights Taliban, and whose source of
information are enemies of Kagame, knows the truths about that country – and
that is Michela Wrong.
By abandoning journalistic principles of truths and accuracy,
fairness and balance, Wrong relied on Karegyeya, Kayumba Nyamwasa and many
other enemies of Kagame to tell the Rwandan story. In the process, she denied
her readers basic facts about Kagame and post genocide Rwanda. On so many
issues – from how Karegyeya and Kayumba fell out with Kagame, on their claims
that they asked for retirement and Kagame refused, on the issue of the
exploitation of Congolese resources, on the issue of Karegyeya’s daughter’s
visit to Kampala and getting a Ugandan passport, on how Kayumba went to study
in the UK in 2001, on the killing of Seth Sendashonga, on the election of
Kagame as chairman of RPF, Wrong reproduces fabrications, distortions and
outright lies.
Wrong even claims that it is Karegyeya who advised Kagame to “sponsor” my newspaper, The Independent, when the facts were in front of her. Karegyeya fell out with Kagame in 2004 when I was employed by Daily Monitor with no plans of establishing my own newspaper. I left Monitor in 2006 to go to Stanford University and returned in 2007. I resigned from Monitor in August of that year and The Independent was born in December 2007, after Karegyeya had escaped from Rwanda and gone to exile.
Space does not allow a detailed demonstration of the lies
and distortions she indulges in. I reserve that for another article. In all,
Wrong’s Do Not Disturb is not a work of journalism but a propaganda hatched job
no Western publisher would have entertained about a Western country. She did it
because she knew she was writing about Africa where Western publishers do not
care about the factual veracity of the work. This is not to say that Wrong is
wrong in every claim she makes against Kagame or that the Rwandan president is
without weaknesses. Rather, anyone who knows Kagame and Rwanda would agree that
his many weaknesses pale into insignificance when set side by side with his
contribution to Rwanda’s reconstruction after the genocide.
At the funeral of Africa’s political and intellectual giant, Kwame Nkrumah, one of our continent’s greatest revolutionaries, the great Amilcar Cabral, reminded us of two African proverbs which Rwandans should note. First is that no man’s hand, however big, can be used to cover the sky. No number of books by anyone can be used to hide the gigantic achievements of post genocide Rwanda under Kagame’s leadership. Second that those who try to spit at the sky end up spitting in their own faces. In trying to tarnish the name of Kagame, Wrong has soiled her own reputation.