Not another murder in the Michelangelo
23 January 2014
Being something of a haven of legality on a continent with, let us tactfully say, a rather patchy respect for the rule of law, presents South Africa with some special predicaments. All kinds of weird and wonderful fugitives, political and otherwise, wash up here or try to. Dealing with them is often a real challenge for this government, frequently requiring it to juggle between respect for the law and diplomatic expediency.
Remember Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir, for example, who was invited to South African President Jacob Zuma's inauguration in 2009, along with all other African leaders. But at the same time the South African government warned that if he did, in fact, accept its invitation, it would have to arrest him because he was (and still is) a fugitive from the International Criminal Court, of which South Africa is a member. That backhanded hospitality created tension with the Sudanese government, although diplomatic relations ultimately survived the episode.
However the South African government is still wrestling with the Rwanda file and will no doubt have to do so for some time to come. In 2008 former external military chief Patrick Karegeya fled to South Africa after falling out with his erstwhile close friend, fellow Tutsi and stalwart in the Rwandan Patriotic Front, President Paul Kagame. South Africa granted his request for asylum.
In February 2010, Karegeya's comrade, former army chief General Faustin Kayumba Nyamwasa also fled Rwanda after likewise falling out with Kagame. By then Rwanda had charged both men for conspiring to violently topple the government and asked Pretoria to extradite Nyamwasa. South Africa instead granted him asylum. Then Nyamwasa was shot and wounded, although not fatally, as he was being driven into his home in Atholl, Johannesburg on 19 June 2010.