Jean Kambanda (born October 19, 1955) was the prime minister in the caretaker government of Rwanda from the start of the 1994 Rwandan Genocide. He is the first and only head of government to plead guilty to genocide, in the first group of such convictions since the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide came into effect in 1951.
Kambanda holds a degree in commercial engineering and began his career as a low-level United Popular BPR banker, rising as a technocrat to become the chair of the bank. At the time of the April 1994 crisis he was vice president of the Butare section of the opposition Democratic Republican Movement (MDR). He was sworn in as prime minister on April 9, 1994, two days after the President and former prime minister, Agathe Uwilingiyimana was assassinated. The opposition MDR had been promised the prime ministerial post in the transitional government established by the Arusha accords, but Kambanda leapfrogged several levels in the party's hierarchy to take the job from the initial choice, Faustin Twagiramungu. He remained in the post for the hundred days of the genocide until July 19, 1994. During the massacre, Kambanda broadcast incitements to violence over the radio, such as: "genocide is justified in the fight against the enemy." After leaving office he fled the country.
On September 4, 1998, the ICTR condemned Jean Kambanda to life imprisonment for:
This verdict was upheld by the ICTR House of Appeal on October 19, 2000, and Kambanda is currently jailed in Mali.
Although Kambanda pled guilty after receiving legal counsel, his lawyer argued that the prime minister was a "puppet" of the military, who had dragged him from his bank, after killing the previous prime minister, to legitimize their control of their country. He asked the ICTR for a sentence of only two years because he acted "under duress with limited responsibility".
The court concluded that this defense against a charge of genocide was irrelevant, but this doesn't mean they accepted the story that he was "dragged from his bank", or that he briefly fled and was only titular head of government. This version of events is not as plausible as it may appear: although Kambanda seemed to be a relatively obscure member of an opposition party on 8 April1994, commentators have questioned how powerless he really was. (For instance, the 2004 analysis published in the Chicago-Kent Journal of International & Comparative Law notes that Butare is the richest city in Rwanda, so a local politician also head of the largest bank would have significant influence.)
In his appeal, Kambanda said that his confession had been in error, due to poor or misunderstood counsel. He said that his objective was not to plead guilty but to tell the truth. According to the ICTR appeal:
As a head of government convicted by an international court, Kambanda is an important figure, with the verdict against him forming a precedent against the legal principle of State Immunity (which was used to reject an extradition order for Augusto Pinochet, for example ).
House of Lords Should Stand on "Right Side of History," says Rights Group - Human Rights Watch on the implications of the Kambanda conviction to Pinochet case (from 1998).
1955 births | Living people | People convicted by the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda | Rwandan politicians
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