Rwandan President
Paul Kagame said on Wednesday he did not want a third term in office but had to
bow to entreaties from his people, who were not ready to say goodbye to the
architect of the nation's recovery from a 1994 genocide.
| Paul Kagame, President of Rwanda attends the session ''The Transformation of Tomorrow'' during the annual meeting of the World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos, Switzerland January 20, 2016. |
Speaking at the World Economic Forum on Africa in the capital,
Kagame said he was aware that changing the constitution to allow him to run
again would draw international criticism but had little say in the matter.
The changes, which
technically allow Kagame to stay until 2034, were approved in a December
referendum by a 98 percent majority that Rwanda's tiny opposition and Western
diplomats said was suspiciously high.
"By the way, I
didn't ask for this thing," Kagame said of the third term during a panel
discussion chaired by former British Prime Minister Tony Blair, one of Kagame's
most high profile international supporters.
"I was actually
trying to tell my people: 'You know what, there's room - can't you find someone
else? You need to take a risk and look for someone else,'" he continued.
"And they kept saying 'No. We are not ready
to take risks. We want you to stay.' I said, 'But I'm having difficulties
staying.'"
The
United States, a major donor, led the criticism of Kagame's plans to seek
re-election next year, saying it was another example of an African leader
changing the democratic rules in order to extend his time in power.
Neighboring
Burundi, which shares a history of ethnic fighting with Rwanda, was plunged
into chaos a year ago when President Pierre Nkurunziza sought a third term,
which the opposition denounced as unconstitutional.
Kagame
has overseen a remarkable economic recovery from the 1994 genocide, in which
800,000 ethnic Tutsis and moderate Hutus were butchered by Hutu extremists.
However,
rights groups and political opponents - many of whom now live in exile - say
this has been at the expense of civil liberties.
Reuters
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