FLORENCE, Italy, May 17 (UPI) -- A Rwandan Catholic priest now living and serving in Italy actively took part in the genocide of Tutsis in 1994, human rights activists claim.
Without citing sources, The Sunday Times of London reported an international arrest warrant was being drawn up against the Rev. Emmanuel Uwayezu of Empoli, Italy, near Florence. Uwayezu allegedly was directly complicit in the massacre of more than 80 students between the ages of 12 to 20 at a Catholic school where he was headmaster, The Sunday Times said.
Uwayezu would become the second Catholic priest accused of participating in the Rwanadan genocide of Tutsis. Athanase Seromba, like Uwayezu a member of Rwanda's then-ruling Hutu ethnic group, was tried and convicted by a United Nations war crimes tribunal for killing 2,000 of his parishioners by bulldozing his church as they were held inside.
Both escaped to Florence after the genocide where they took up priestly duties. Uwayezu has been defended by church officials and has denied taking part in the killings, The Sunday Times said.
Rakiya Omaar, director of African Rights, Saturday called on the Roman Catholic Church, Italy and Rwanda to conduct their own probes of Uwayezu.
because being a priest does not in any way put him above the lawALSO
Discovery of ‘genocide’ priest taints Vatican
THE Vatican has come under renewed pressure to purge its ranks of suspected killers after a second Rwandan Catholic priest accused of involvement in the 1994 genocide was found to be working in Italy under an assumed name.
An international arrest warrant is being prepared by Rwanda for Father Emmanuel Uwayezu following the discovery that he is working in a parish at Empoli, near Florence. It will accuse him of direct complicity in the massacre of more than 80 students, aged from 12 to 20, at a Catholic school where he was headmaster.
One of the few survivors lives in Britain. She still has nightmares and is too afraid to be identified by name. Last week she identified Uwayezu and described how he brought soldiers to the school at Kibeho and conspired with them to have the Tutsi students killed.
“He seemed to be happy with what he was doing. He told us to stay in the classroom. Some people who were working in the kitchen were shot in front of his eyes but he did not say a word. Others were hacked to death, raped or buried alive,” she said. “Now Uwayezu is enjoying his life. Is he really a father
?”
Good article from The Times Online