Rwanda Court Upholds Election Ban On Opposition Politician

Post By Diaspoint | March 14, 2024

Ingabire regularly accuses the Rwandan leader of suppressing dissent and neglecting the  poor

A Rwandan court on Wednesday found opposition leader and dissident Victoire Ingabire   ineligible to run in the July presidential polls because of previous convictions for terrorism and genocide denial.

A fierce critic of Rwanda’s long-ruling President Paul Kagame, Ingabire spent eight years in prison before receiving a presidential pardon in 2018 that cut short her 15-year sentence.

She had asked the Kigali high court to allow her to contest the July 15 polls despite a legal ban on convicted candidates who have been jailed for six months or longer.

“The court finds that Ingabire’s request to have her conviction removed is not accepted,” a judge said, reading out the decision.

“I disagree with this ruling. It is clearly politicised. We still have a country where the courts are still not independent,” Ingabire told AFP after the court decision.

According to Rwandan law, she will be allowed to appeal the ruling only after two years.

The polls are widely expected to return Kagame to office for a fourth seven-year term, after he presided over controversial constitution amendments allowing him to potentially rule until 2034.

The 66-year-old has been at the helm of the landlocked African nation for decades, winning presidential elections in 2003, 2010 and 2017 — with more than 90 percent of the vote.

Kagame’s only known challenger in the July polls is Green Party leader Frank Habineza, who secured 0.45 percent of the vote in 2017. All other legally registered opposition parties back the ruling Rwandan Patriotic Front.

Ingabire’s Dalfa Umurunzi (Development And Liberty For All) movement is not officially registered in Rwanda.

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