Insecurity and a change to the electoral
law risk disenfranchising millions
Elections in Burkina Faso
Sacking the voters
No home and no vote
T
he last
time Trésor Rusesabagina
spoke to his father was on his birthday,
when the latter called from his home in San
Antonio, Texas, to wish his son well. “He
hadn’t been anywhere for ages because of
lockdown and I thought he was just hang-
ing out, watering his plants.”
On August 31st Trésor woke up to a wel-
ter of messages on his phone, asking if he’d
heard the news. Paul Rusesabagina had just
appeared in handcuffs at a press confer-
ence in Kigali, Rwanda’s capital, hosted by
the Rwanda Investigation Bureau. The au-
thorities accuse him of founding and lead-
ing “armed extremist terror outfits” fight-
ing the Rwandan state. Mr Rusesabagina
had told his wife he was flying to Dubai for
a meeting. How he ended up in Rwanda’s
capital remains unclear.
For the former manager of the Hotel des
Mille Collines, the rendition is a nightmare
come true. Since moving his family to Bel-
gium in 1996, where he applied for asylum
before relocating to America, he had lived
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |