Regional
Was International Media Complicit In Spreading FLN Propaganda?
![image](webadmin/images/FLN propaganda.jpg-20210917095432000000.jpg)
Available evidence suggests that several journalists working for
international media organisations were complicit in the planning and dissemination
of FLN propaganda in collaboration with Paul Rusesabagina’s political coalition
MRCD (Rwanda Movement for Democratic Change).
Evidence acquired by the National Public Prosecution Authority
through judicial cooperation with Belgian authorities, points to journalists
from at least two well-known media organisations working closely and sharing
information with Rusesabagina and associates, between 2018 and 2019 when FLN
carried out armed attacks on Rwanda.
WhatsApp messages retrieved from Rusesabagina’s computer and
phone following a search of his house in Brussels by Belgian Prosecution,
appear to show that some journalists from the Voice of America (VOA) Kinyarwanda
service and BBC Gahuzamiryango, went as far as sharing
stories with Rusesabagina and his team for approval before airing them.
In other cases, the journalists and editors of the said media
outlets kept in constant contact with Rusesabagina and his team, as they played
the MRCD/FLN mouthpiece role, particularly in the period leading up to the arrest
of FLN spokesperson, Callixte Nsabimana, in April 2019.
In our previous article
we showed how Rusesabagina and other MRCD members hatched a plan to blame FLN
attacks in south-western Rwanda on Government forces, with the then
communication advisor, Espérance Mukashema, acting as the link with the two
international radios.
In one of the correspondences following the arrest of Nsabimana,
Rusesabagina (codenamed ‘Humura’) discusses with Mukashema, VOA’s Thomas
Kamirindi and news editor Etienne Karekezi, how to communicate the FLN
Spokesperson’s arrest, which they agreed to describe as an abduction.
The conversation involves a certain Appolinaire Nsengiyumva, who
seemed to be the focal point, and a BBC journalist, who investigators confirmed
was Ally Yussuf Mugenzi, discussing a press conference held by President Paul
Kagame, touching on regional issues.
One of the chats retrieved from Rusesabagina’s phone shows the exchange between MRCD members involving journalists from internation media houses.
In the chat, it is revealed that VOA’s Karekezi shared with MRCD
the intro and audio of a story filed by Eric Bagiruwubusa for approval before
airing it, warning them that it shouldn’t be shared with anybody else outside
the group.
From the chats, it appears Rusesabagina and his colleagues were
planning how to communicate Nsabimana’s arrest and subsequent repatriation
without causing panic within the ranks of FLN, and later on, the appointment of
Herman Nsengimana as the new spokesperson of the armed group.
“Good morning, I will seek advice from Humura (Rusesabagina) so
that he is the one to speak if possible. It is not possible for me to speak
openly on radio because of where I am,” Nsengiyumva, whose name was mentioned
several times in the FLN trial, told the group in a message with a timestamp of
05:52 on April 20.
Nsengiyumva, who had the alias of ‘Pasteur’, is a member of MRCD
and businessman who at the time was based in Zambia and feared that speaking on
an international radio like BBC or VOA would put him in conflict with the
authorities of his host country.
In this chat, VOA’s Karekezi shared a story seemingly for review before airing it.
He however confirmed that he had talked to Rusesabagina (Humura)
to be the one to give an interview to VOA. “I have just talked to Humura, he
will communicate with Espérance and Kamirindi,” Nsengiyumva informs the group.
In another message dated July 02, 2019, with a timestamp of
16:38, Rusesabagina is informed by a number, which investigators confirmed is
linked to Ally Yussuf Mugenzi, about a press conference President Kagame
addressed and said that Rwanda was ready to support the Government of Democratic
Republic of Congo (DRC) in its efforts to fight armed groups in the eastern
part of the country.
In the same chat, Karekezi of VOA shared an audio and intro of
Bagiruwubusa’s story to a member of MRCD “On Tuesday Rwanda announced its
readiness to assist neighbouring Democratic Republic of Congo in the fight
against armed groups on Congolese soil. In a press conference earlier today,
President Paul Kagame said that these groups are not only threatening Congo but
also neighbouring countries,” the intro reads.
“Eric Bagiruwubusa gives us a detailed story,” he says, adding
the audio for review. The MRCD member warned them to not share it with anyone
else. In another chat dated on April 30, 2019, with a time stamp of 14:38, Ally
Yussuf Mugenzi exchanges with Rusesabagina on the whereabouts of Nsabimana, who
constantly keeps the two radio stations posted on the status of the FLN
spokesperson as reports of his arrest started to emerge.
Rusesabagina was in constant touch with BBC’s Ally Yusuf Mugenzi.
According to investigators, evidence showed that the engagement
between the two radio stations and MRCD/FLN was much more than a relationship
between a news outlet and a source.
The High Court Chamber of International and Cross-border Crimes is set to deliver a verdict in the trial of Rusesabagina and 20 others on September 20.