France drops genocide probe against widow of former Rwandan president Habyarimana
French judicial authorities have closed the investigation against the widow of Rwanda's former president Juvenal Habyarimana into claims she played a role in the country's 1994 genocide, without pressing any charges against her, several sources close to the case told French news agency AFP.
Agathe Habyarimana, 82, who has been living in France since 1998 and whose extradition has been repeatedly requested by Kigali, will not face trial by a French court at this stage, the sources said, asking not to be named.
The former first lady fled Rwanda with French help just days after her husband's plane was shot down in April 1994, triggering the genocide which saw around 800,000 people slaughtered in one of the 20th century's worst atrocities.
Remembering Rwanda's genocide
The investigation has been under way since 2008, when a French-based victims' association filed a legal complaint against Habyarimana who was questioned over suspicions that she was part of the Hutu inner circle of power that planned and orchestrated the killings of mainly ethnic Tutsis.
In the investigation she had the status of assisted witness, which in France's legal system is between being a witness and being charged.
The investigating magistrates in charge of the case said in a ruling delivered on Friday that "at this stage, there is no serious and consistent evidence that she could have been an accomplice in an act of genocide" or could have "participated in an agreement to commit genocide".
(AFP)
Read more on RFI EnglishRead also:Life sentence upheld for ex-gendarme Philippe Manier in Rwandan genocide caseRwanda marks 30 years since France's contested mission to stem 1994 genocideMacron acknowledges France's 'failure to heed warnings' of looming massacres in Rwanda
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
25 minutes ago
- Yahoo
'Impossible dream' of death row inmate and Catalan jazz artist collab
A US prisoner on death row and a Catalan jazz star who formed an unusual musical collaboration have released a second album together that rallies against capital punishment. Catalan musician Albert Marques and Keith LaMar, who performs over the phone from a maximum security prison in Ohio, debuted their new work "Live from Death Row" at a gathering in New York last Friday. On death row since 1995 after he was convicted of a crime he insists he did not commit, LaMar's execution is scheduled for January 13, 2027. The album, which coincides with LaMar's 56th birthday, chronicles the civil rights struggle of Black people like himself. It features compositions by Marques with lyrics by LaMar, alongside classics such as Billie Holiday's "Strange Fruit" and "Alabama" by John Coltrane. LaMar said that music "saved his life" during solitary confinement, particularly jazz tracks like those on Coltrane's 1964 album "A Love Supreme." "Music is the vehicle through which I've been able to resurrect my bid for freedom," he told AFP. "I love it when a plan comes together, when the stars align to bring to fruition a dream that didn't seem possible. That's what this live album is -- an impossible dream." It follows 2022's "Freedom First," which turned into a clarion call for a fair retrial that could ultimately lead to LaMar's release. "This music is about trust and faith (and) about stepping out even when you can't see the stairs and believing that your foot will find something solid to stand on," LaMar told AFP by email. - 'This crazy thing' - Marques, who is convinced of LaMar's innocence, said "we have done this crazy thing at the highest possible level." After staging concerts worldwide in recent years and "showcasing that we have done everything we could, we need help" to take the fight "to another level," said Marques, a Brooklyn high school music teacher. "We may be tired, exhausted, but we cannot throw in the towel." In 1995, an all-white jury found LaMar guilty of the deaths of five out of nine inmates and one guard killed during one of the worst prison riots in US history. During the incident, which happened in 1993, LaMar was already serving a sentence for the murder of a former friend during a drug dispute in his native Cleveland. LaMar, as well as recent journalistic investigations, claimed that exculpatory evidence was hidden at trial and destroyed, and other prisoners were rewarded with sentence reductions for implicating him. Ohio's governor had postponed LaMar's execution, originally scheduled for November 2023, due to the refusal of pharmaceutical companies to supply the components needed for lethal injection. However, the situation could change following President Donald Trump's January 20 executive order directing the US attorney general to ensure states can access the necessary ingredients. Nineteen inmates have been executed so far this year, compared to 25 in all of 2024. af-gw/jgc
Yahoo
31 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Elon Musk just humiliated Trump, the bromance is over & the internet is roasting
ALLISON ROBBERT/AFP via Getty Images;President Donald Trump and Elon Musk's bromance may finally be over. The bromance between President Donald Trump and Elon Musk may finally be over. Not only has Musk announced he was stepping away from his position with DOGE (the Department of Government Efficiency), but now he's openly criticizing the mega spending bill that will fund the Trump administration's legislative agenda, calling it a "disgusting abomination" in an extremely public post on X (formerly Twitter). "I'm sorry, but I just can't stand it anymore. This massive, outrageous, pork-filled Congressional spending bill is a disgusting abomination," Musk wrote. "Shame on those who voted for it: you know you did wrong. You know it.' This came amid a flurry of posts from Musk, where he openly admonished Republicans for voting for the 'One Beautiful Bill Act,' which the Trump administration claims will decrease the federal deficit, but Democrats have said will only serve to raise it while cutting social services like Medicaid. Musk spent $288 million on Trump's election campaign, and until recently, the two men have been joined at the hip as Musk helped him campaign, attended his inauguration (where he rallied the crowd with a, and held court alongside Trump at the White House as the head of DOGE. But now Musk has written on X that "Congress is making America bankrupt' and the spending bill 'will massively increase the already gigantic budget deficit to $2.5 trillion (!!!) and burden American citizens with crushingly unsustainable debt.' Although Musk hasn't posted anything about Trump specifically, he doesn't have to as the meaning is clear. The president has spent weeks whipping the vote and making veiled threats against any Republican congresspeople who oppose it. This public break from Trump is likely bothering the president bigly, and it's causing people across the internet to roast the MAGA president and Musk for a divorce that seemingly is in the air. Gay Democratic Rep. Robert Garcia tagged Musk in a post where he pointed out that 'the only people who voted for this bill were House Republicans.' Someone else quipped that "Elon's just mad because Trump's spending bill doesn't cut enough food aid for starving little Ethiopian children,' while other people joked that 'the breakup is complete.' Keep scrolling for the funniest reactions to the end of Trump and Musk being besties! — (@) "OMG the breakup is complete." — (@) "Hey @elonmusk, the only people who voted for this bill were House Republicans." — (@) "Trump is a failure and even Elon Musk knows it" — (@) "Elon's just mad because Trump's spending bill doesn't cut enough food aid for starving little Ethiopian children" — (@) "Elon Musk just went OFF on Donald Trump and the Republicans. Seems like their divorce is happening ASAP!" — (@) "Elon today." — (@) "Two things can be true at once: Elon is correct; and also no one cares what he thinks, least of all Trump." — (@) "ICYMI: Elon Muskrat just tweeted: "I'm sorry, but I just can't stand it anymore. This massive, outrageous, pork-filled Congressional spending bill is a disgusting abomination. Shame on those who voted for it: you know you did wrong. You know it." Only the GOP voted for it" — (@) — (@) "Elon Musk has gone woke" — (@) "Schumer: If even Elon Musk—who is Trump's buddy—says the bill is bad, you can imagine how bad this bill is." — (@) "The girls are fightingggg" — (@) "So in the elon musk and donald trump divorce who gets custody of MAGAts???' — (@) "As the child of divorce I know how hard it must be for Republicans in Congress to watch their daddies fight. But like a broken clock, Elon 'K-Hole' Musk is right." — (@) "'I don't know an Elon Musk, I take a lot of pictures with people. He may have brought me ketamine once or twice.' - DJT"
Yahoo
39 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Bill Gates' trip to Singapore falsely linked to 'vaccine mandate' claims
"Singapore passes law to mandate vaccines and jail the unvaccinated -- days after Bill Gates' high-level visit," reads a May 12 post by an Australia-based Facebook page with more than 9,000 followers. The post links to an article with the same headline on "The People's Voice", a dubious website which AFP has repeatedly fact-checked for amplifying Covid-19 misinformation. The site has also previously claimed Gates and the World Health Organization (WHO) were "forcing vaccination", which AFP has debunked here. "Just as Bill Gates and the WHO's Tedros Ghebreyesus wrapped up high-profile visits with the nation's top leaders, sweeping changes were quietly pushed through the country's legal system—changes that now make it a crime to refuse mandatory government vaccines," reads the article, calling the timing "impossible to ignore". Other posts claiming Singapore would mandate vaccines also appeared on X, Facebook and TikTok. But Singapore's Ministry of Health told AFP the claims are false. "Singapore has not passed any laws on vaccinations after Mr Gates' recent visit to Singapore," the ministry said in an emailed statement on June 3. The billionaire was in Singapore on May 5 to announce his philanthropic Gates Foundation would be opening an office in the country (archived link). The Straits Times and Forbes also reported the announcement (archived here and here). A number of the false posts referenced Sections 47, 65, and 67 of Singapore's Infectious Disease Law (archived link). The provisions state that the director-general of health may direct "any person or class of persons not protected or vaccinated against the disease to undergo vaccination" when "an outbreak of an infectious disease... is imminent" and "it is necessary or expedient to do so for the securing public safety". "The authorities must show these two requirements are satisfied before they can impose any vaccine mandate," Eugene Tan, an associate professor of law at Singapore Management University, told AFP on May 29 (archived link). Penalties for failing to be vaccinated under the amendments would include a fine of up to 10,000 Singapore dollars (around US$7,760) and a prison term of up to six month for the first offence, while a second offence would see the punishment doubled. Tan said the penalties, however, would only apply when a vaccine mandate is in place, though the "likelihood of such a scenario is very low". He added that the statutes within the law make a blanket vaccine mandate "highly exceptional because they are severely intrusive and people cannot be compelled to be vaccinated". More of AFP's reporting on health misinformation is available here.