South African authorities said that for now they were
treating the case as a robbery, but the political allies of the man who was
shot, Seif Bamporiki, had their suspicions of an assassination.
A Rwandan opposition figure was shot and killed in South Africa on Sunday in what the police said was most likely a robbery but that political allies said resembled earlier assassinations of government critics.
Seif Bamporiki was shot in Cape Town sometime after 4 p.m.
while making a delivery, his political party, the Rwanda National Congress,
said in a statement.
Accompanied by a friend, Mr. Bamporiki, a 49-year-old
Rwandan exile, arrived in Nyanga township to hand over a bed from his store to
a client when two men approached his truck and one of them shot him, the party
said. The men took him out the vehicle and fled with it along with some
belongings, the South African police said.
Mr. Bamporiki’s friend, another Rwandan, was reported to
have escaped unharmed.
On Monday, the police said they were investigating the circumstances surrounding the killing and had yet to apprehend any suspects. “We have reason to believe that the motive for the murder was robbery,” Col. Andrè Traut, the provincial commander for media communication for the Western Cape province, said in a statement.
But the Rwanda National Congress, an opposition group in
exile formed by former members of President Paul Kagame’s inner circle, said
the killing was reminiscent of past cases in which critics of President Kagame
were lured to “a compromising and insecure environment” and then murdered.
“While investigations are going on to determine the exact
circumstances of Mr. Bamporiki’ s assassination, the incident resembles
assassinations that happened before, where the victims were lured by people
they knew; but who fatally betrayed them to death,” Etienne Mutabazi, the
R.N.C. spokesman, said in a statement.
Human rights groups have often accused the Kagame government
of reaching beyond Rwandan borders to target opponents, including through
spyware attacks, kidnapping and assassination.
Mr. Kagame, who officially became president in 2000, but has
held power in Rwanda since 1994, has denied these allegations,
In 2014, a former Rwandan intelligence chief, Patrick Karegeya,
was found
dead in a hotel room in Johannesburg after he went to meet a friend; he had been strangled.
In 2010, another member of the R.N.C., a former army chief
named Faustin Kayumba Nyamwasa, was shot
and wounded in Johannesburg.
The killings of Rwandan dissidents in South Africa had led
to diplomatic strains between the two countries, including the expulsion of
diplomats, before a thaw in relations under the current South African
president, Cyril Ramaphosa.
Lunga Ngqengelele, a spokesman for South Africa’s Department
of International Relations and Cooperation, said that South Africa and Rwanda
continue to enjoy “good working relations.”
Of Mr. Bamporiki’s killing, Mr. Ngqengelele said, “We are
being led by the police, and so far they have not indicated that this is a
political killing.”
Beyond South Africa, Rwandan government critics have also
been targeted elsewhere. In Kenya, a former minister was shot dead in 1998 months after he said he was afraid
for his life. In Belgium, a former government official’s mangled body was found
floating in a canal in 2005.
And last August, after an elaborate
ruse that Mr. Kagame called “flawless,” Paul
Rusesabagina, a government critic who was credited for saving 1,268 lives
during the Rwandan genocide, was arrested and charged with terrorism. That case
has drawn
worldwide condemnation.
In the case of Mr. Bamporiki, the man who ostensibly lured him to his death had been calling him consistently for a week, insistent that he wanted to buy a bed from his shop, Mr. Mutabazi, the R.N.C. spokesman, said on Monday. Mr. Bamporiki was at a party conference in Johannesburg at the time, but did not suspect anything untoward, Mr. Mutabazi said.
“Bamporiki was the kind of peaceful man who could not
believe that one would plan to kill him,” he said.
Mr. Bamporiki, who was among a group of Rwandans who sued their government over the invalidation of their
passports and won, was a permanent resident in South Africa at the time
of his death.
Mr. Bamporiki had only just returned to Cape Town on Sunday
morning when the supposed customer, a South African, called him again. he set
off to deliver the bed, just over a mile from his shop.
Nyanga, the township where the murder took place, has some of the highest murder rates in South Africa. Wary of
the neighborhood, Mr. Bamporiki parked his delivery truck in a position where
he could quickly leave if there was trouble. But he was not prepared for the
two men who sneaked up on him, Mr. Mutabazi said.
On Monday, those who knew Mr. Bamporiki said they would miss
his rousing speeches and his activism.
“I have been crying since yesterday when I got the news,”
Serge Ndayizeye, who manages the party’s official radio station, said from
Washington, D.C. “He was the kind of human being who understood the kind of
struggle we are in.”
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