Hotel Rwanda manager denies link to rebels - Action News
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Hotel Rwanda manager denies link to rebels

The Rwandan hotel manager portrayed by Don Cheadle in the movie Hotel Rwanda could face charges by Rwandan authorities over allegations the man sent money to opposition commanders, Rwanda's top prosecutor says.

The Rwandan hotel manager portrayed by Don Cheadle in the movie Hotel Rwanda could face charges by Rwandan authorities over allegations the man sent money to opposition commanders, Rwanda's top prosecutor says.

But the former manager, Paul Rusesabagina, told The Associated Press on Wednesday that he hasn't sent any money to Rwanda in years, and that the government is launching a smear campaign against him because he has opposed President Paul Kagame in the past.

Hotel Rwanda manager Paul Rusesabagina, seen in 2007, is being accused of funding terrorist activities. ((Jeremy Portje/Telegraph Journal/Associated Press))

Rwanda's top prosecutor, Martin Ngoga, said Rusesabagina helped finance what he described as terrorist activities in Rwanda by helping fund commanders with the FDLR, or Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda. No formal charges have yet been filed.

Ngoga said he is asking U.S. officials for assistance in gathering evidence. Some of the financial transactions he alleges were criminal originated in San Antonio, Texas. Rusesabagina has a house in Texas but said he has never sent money to Burundi or Tanzania as is alleged by Ngoga.

"Those who want to continue considering him as a hero can go on," Ngoga told a news conference late Tuesday. "We consider him a serious criminal suspect who has been financing FDLR, and we are challenging whoever speaks on his behalf to tell us whether he never sent money to these FDLR commanders we have in custody."

After his story was publicized in Hotel Rwanda, Rusesabagina was hailed as a hero around the world. Former U.S. President George W. Bush gave him the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2005, the highest civilian honour in the U.S.

'Manufactured hero,' government says

However, the government of Rwanda did not view him as a hero after Rusesabagina began criticizing the regime of Kagame, who has since called Rusesabagina a "manufactured hero," according to Terry George, the director of Hotel Rwanda.

Rusesabagina, 56, who was released from a hospital operation last week to find that his home in Brussels had been broken into and documents stolen, said he has done nothing wrong.

"It is the latest step in a campaign against me by the Rwandan government that has included public insults, lies and physical harassment," Rusesabagina said.

"My foundation is advocating for a truth, justice and reconciliation process to try to foster sustainable peace in Rwanda but anyone who opposes Kagame inside or outside the country is treated with this kind of harassment."

More than 500,000 Rwandans, mostly ethnic Tutsis and moderate Hutus, were killed in Rwanda's 1994 genocide. Kagame, an ethnic Tutsi, has tried to downplay the role of ethnicity in post-genocide Rwanda, and people in the country rarely refer to themselves as Hutu or Tutsi and can face charges for speaking publicly about ethnicity.

Human rights groups accuse Kagame's regime of iron-fisted control and of silencing opposition politicians and media outlets. Human rights groups and other critics decried the arrest of several opposition figures in the lead-up to Rwanda's August president election, and noted that several others were killed or attacked under suspicious circumstances.

The potential charges against Rusesabagina appear to be intertwined with those against Victoire Ingabire, a Hutu opposition politician who was jailed earlier this month on charges of forming a terrorist group.

Ingabire earlier this year sought representation by Peter Erlinder, a U.S. lawyer, who was jailed by Rwandan authorities for about three weeks when he arrived in Rwanda in May to meet with Ingabire. Erlinder was welcomed back to the U.S. in July by Rusesabagina, and the two appeared together on a news program.

Ngoga said that the FDLR commanders in Rwandan custody have given evidence against both Ingabire and Rusesabagina.

Rusesabagina told AP that the last time he sent money to Rwanda was in 2002 or 2003, and that it totalled at mosta little under $1,500.