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U.N. rights chief praises Rwanda death penalty ban
27 Jul 2007 12:40:15 GMT
Source: Reuters
GENEVA, July 27 (Reuters) - The United Nations' top human rights official on Friday praised Rwanda's decision to end capital punishment, a move that should allow suspects in the 1994 genocide to be extradited to stand trial in the country.

Louise Arbour, the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights, called the abolition which took effect this week "a powerful endorsement of the importance of pursuing justice while repudiating violence in all its forms."

Many suspects accused of involvement in the killings of 800,000 Tutsis and moderate Hutus in 1994 are believed to be at large in Europe, North America and West Africa.

Rwanda's parliament voted in June to end capital punishment to smooth the transfer of suspects from countries which refuse to extradite people to nations that practise the death penalty or torture. The law was signed on Thursday.

"With the promulgation of the law banning the death penalty, Rwanda simultaneously takes an important step forward in ensuring respect for the right to life and makes further progress in bringing to justice those responsible for the heinous crimes of the 1994 genocide," Arbour said in a statement.
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A Maasai man rests inside his hut in Amboseli national park, 290 km (188 miles) southeast of capital Nairobi, August 29, 2007. The east African heads of tourist boards want tourists to use a single visa to access attraction centers in Kenya, Uganda, Rwanda, Tanzania and Burundi in an attempt to market the region as a single tourist destination, Kenya's tourist board managing director Achieng Ongong'a said.



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