To check Oneindia News on your Mobile
go to:   http://m.oneindia.in/news/
  •  

By George Obulutsa

NAIROBI, May 22 (Reuters) A United Nations court has rejected the transfer of a Rwandan genocide suspect's case to Norway, saying the country lacks a specific law against genocide.

Michel Bagaragaza, a former director general of Rwanda's tea industry regulator, is accused of ordering subordinates to kill hundreds of Tutsis hiding in a cathedral and a factory during the 1994 slaughter in the central African nation.

He surrendered last August and faces three counts of genocide at the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR), set up in Arusha, Tanzania, to try suspected ringleaders of the killing of 800,000 Tutsis and their Hutu sympathisers.

In February, U N prosecutors -- facing a serious backlog of cases -- urged the court to move his trial to Norway, arguing that such a transfer would help create wider international understanding of how genocide can happen.

But the court on Friday denied the request, saying Norway had no laws on its books against genocide -- only homicide laws that would most likely mean that Bagaragaza would face no more than 21 years in prison if convicted.

''Michel Bagaragaza's alleged criminal acts cannot be given their full legal qualification under Norwegian criminal law, and the request for the referral to (Norway) falls to be dismissed,'' the ruling, dated on Friday, says.

The backlogged tribunal is under pressure to clear many cases by the expiry of its mandate in 2008. Prosecutors believe European nations might be able to help them ease the load, analysts and diplomats say.

Rwanda vehemently protested the move in February, but failed to register its complaint to the court in the proper fashion and its arguments were excluded, the court said in its decision.

Rwandan officials were not immediately available for comment.

Bagaragaza is also accused of giving hate speeches to incite Hutus to kill, raising money to train militias and of ordering tea factory employees to give fuel to the Interahamwe militia responsible for much of the killing.

He is currently being held at The Hague.

REUTERS PG BST1959

UT signs agreement with NHPC for 3 MW

Chandigarh, May 22 (UNI) The Chandigarh Administration today signed a power purchase agreement with the National Hydro Power Corporation (NHPC) for the supply of three Mega Watt power to Chandigarh from its Dulhasti Hydro Electric Project in Jammu and Kashmir. A press release issued here today stated that the power supply from this project would be available to the city by December this year. Chandigarh Finance-cum-Engineering Secretary SK Sandhu and NHPC Chief Engineer(Commercial) VK.....

Jalandhar resident arrested

Kolkata, May 22 (UNI) M Singh, a resident of Jalandhar, was arrested by the police today after immigration authorities at NSCBI airport here found that he had travelled to Dubai on another man's passport. Singh was deported from Dubai yesterday after the immigration authorities there found dissimilarities in the photograph on his passport. After interrogation here Singh conceded that he had taken the passport of one Aloke Singh and travelled to Gulf seeking better.....

Contempt plea by Ajay Chautala

Chandigarh, May 22 (UNI) The Punjab and Haryana High Court today directed that the petition preferred by Ajay Singh Chautala seeking directions for initiating proceedings under the contempt of court against certain officers of the Haryana government, be heard along with the main petition on July 16. The petitioner alleged that he had sent a cheque of Rs one crore to the Haryana Urban Development Authority (HUDA) in connection with the land purchased by.....
User Comments
[ Post Comments ]
Be the first to comment on this article.
Oneindia  Oneindia Login