Appointments
Kagame of Rwanda is sworn in for a fourth term following a 99 percent election victory.
By Kajal Agarwal - 13 Aug 2024 10:20 PM
On August 11, Paul Kagame, the all-powerful president of Rwanda, took the oath of office for a fourth term. He had won elections previous month with a majority of almost 99% of the vote.Paul Kagame, the all-powerful president of Rwanda, took the oath of office on August 11 for a fourth term. He had won elections last month with a majority of more than 99% of the vote. In Kigali, where crowds had begun to assemble in the early hours of the morning, a crowded 45,000-seat stadium hosted several dozen heads of state and other guests from African countries for the inaugural ceremony.Kagame took office and took an oath. In front of Chief Justice Faustin Ntezilyayo, Kagame took the oath of office and swore to “preserve peace and national sovereignty, consolidate national unity.” For the iron-fisted Kagame, who has dominated the small African nation since the 1994 genocide, the results of the July 15 election were always certain, first as president and later as de facto leader.Paul Kagame: Who was he? Since 2000, Paul Kagame, a politician and former military officer from Rwanda, has served as the country's president. Prior to its 1990 invasion of Rwanda, he commanded the Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF), an armed rebel group. One of the combatants in the Rwandan Civil War and the military force that put an end to the genocide in Rwanda was the RPF. When he served as President Pasteur Bizimungu's vice president and minister of defense from 1994 to 2000—the year the vice presidency was eliminated—he was regarded as Rwanda's de facto leader.
Rwanda is devoid of democracy The National Electoral Commission reports that he received 99.18% of the votes cast, which is good for an additional five years in office. Human rights advocates claimed that the 66-year-old's resounding victory served as a clear reminder of Rwanda's lack of democracy. ruined country following the genocide After Hutu extremists unleashed a 100-day violent bloodletting on the Tutsi minority, killing some 800,000 people—mostly Tutsis but also Hutu moderates—Kagame is credited for reconstructing the devastated nation. However, opponents and rights advocates claim that he instills terror in the community and crushes any dissent with enforced disappearances, arbitrary detentions, and murders.