News Flash
KIGALI, May 8, 2024 (BSS/AFP) - Diane Rwigara, a vehement critic of Rwanda's
iron-fisted President Paul Kagame, announced Wednesday she planned to run
against him in this year's elections.
"A new chapter for Rwanda begins now. Together we will make history! Join me
as I run for President," Rwigara posted on X, formerly Twitter.
Rwanda, which has been de facto ruled by Kagame since the end of the 1994
genocide, is due to hold both presidential and parliamentary polls on July
15.
The 42-year-old Rwigara, who is leader of the People Salvation Movement, had
planned to stand in the 2017 election against Kagame but was disqualified.
Just days after she had announced her candidacy, nude photos allegedly of
Rwigara surfaced online. She later told CNN the images had been doctored in a
bid to "silence me".
Rwigara was later barred from taking part in the 2017 race for allegedly
forging the signatures of supporters for her application.
She was arrested and charged with forgery and inciting insurrection for
comments criticising the government and Kagame in the run-up to the vote.
After spending over a year in jail, she and her mother were released on bail
in 2018 and acquitted in December of that year.
Rwigara is the daughter of Assinapol Rwigara, an industrialist who in the
1990s was a major donor to Kagame's ruling Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF)
party before falling out with its leaders.
Kagame has been praised for putting Rwanda on the path of economic
transformation after the genocide, but he faces frequent criticism over
rights abuses and intolerance of the opposition.
In addition to Rwigara, Kagame will face two other candidates in the polls --
Frank Habineza of the Green Party and Philippe Mpayimana, an independent
candidate.
Kagame, who became president in 2000, has won three elections with more than
90 percent of the vote and is widely expected to win again in July.