Paul Rusesabagina: From 'Hotel Rwanda' hero to accused terrorist

Paul Rusesabagina, the hotel manager whose heroism is the subject of the film Hotel Rwanda, is seen here with his wife Tatiana in Washington. Picture: AP

Paul Rusesabagina, the hotel manager whose heroism is the subject of the film Hotel Rwanda, is seen here with his wife Tatiana in Washington. Picture: AP

Published Aug 17, 2021

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Nick Perry

Nairobi, Kenya - The mild-mannered hero of "Hotel Rwanda" credited with saving hundreds of lives during the 1994 genocide, Paul Rusesabagina evolved into Kigali's sharpest-tongued critic before being tried for terrorism.

The unassuming hotel manager in a smartly-pressed suit became the world's most famous Rwandan after the film's release, but angered his government by using the Hollywood limelight to crusade for political change in his tightly-controlled homeland.

Outside the country, his journey from celebrated hero to government nemesis went mostly unnoticed until August 2020, when Rusesabagina suddenly reappeared in Rwanda in handcuffs and prison uniform.

Police said the 67-year-old was a terrorist mastermind accused of financing a rebel group responsible for a string of deadly attacks inside the east African country.

His family rejected the allegations, insisting Rusesabagina was a political prisoner, whose character never strayed from the quietly courageous man portrayed by Don Cheadle in the Oscar-nominated blockbuster.

"Dad has always advocated for justice, peace and human rights. Now he's the one whose rights are being violated," Rusesabagina's niece and adopted daughter, Carine Kanimba, said.

'Ordinary Man'

Born in 1954 to farmers in central Rwanda, Rusesabagina briefly studied theology after school before taking a job at a hotel and studying hospitality in Kenya and Switzerland.

Back in Rwanda in 1984, he was hired as assistant general manager at the most prestigious hotel in Kigali at the time -- the Hotel des Mille Collines, a five-star Belgian-owned establishment.

In April 1994, when the genocide began, Rusesabagina was besieged inside the Mille Collines with his family and hundreds of guests - mainly ethnic Tutsis like his wife, seeking refuge from machete-wielding mobs outside the hotel gates.

Rusesabagina, a moderate Hutu critical of the extremist regime, appeased the killers with beers and used his connections to barter for food as guests drank pool water in desperation.

Late at night, he sent SOS appeals to European governments and then US-president Bill Clinton using the hotel fax line.

American journalist Philip Gourevitch, who met Rusesabagina while researching the genocide, described "a mild-mannered man, sturdily built and rather ordinary-looking".

"That is how he seemed to regard himself as well, as an ordinary person who did nothing extraordinary in refusing to cave in to the insanity that swirled around him," Gourevitch wrote in his 1998 book "We Wish to Inform You That Tomorrow We Will Be Killed With Our Families".

Fiery critic

Rusesabagina returned to work but became disillusioned with the new Tutsi-dominated government that ousted the Hutu regime and ended the 100-day slaughter that left some 800 000 Rwandans dead.

He accused the Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF), particularly its leader Paul Kagame, of authoritarianism and promoting anti-Hutu sentiment as the new rulers violently consolidated their power after the genocide.

Rusesabagina left Rwanda in 1996 along with other moderates who believed the space for political opposition was fast shrinking. He relocated to Belgium with his wife and children and faded into obscurity.

But the 2004 release of 'Hotel Rwanda' made Rusesabagina an overnight celebrity.

He was awarded the US Presidential Medal of Freedom, and toured the globe warning of the evils of man.

Over time however, he increasingly used his new platform to thunder against President Kagame and the RPF in fiery tirades that alienated some allies and attracted powerful enemies.

He came under relentless attack, with Kagame supporters shouting him down at speaking events all over the world.

Survivors from the Mille Collines turned against him, accusing Rusesabagina of profiting from their misery and embellishing his heroics.

As the hounding intensified, Rusesabagina's rhetoric turned darker, said Timothy Longman, who first met the hotelier in the mid-1990s.

"He's always been a soft-spoken person, fairly moderate. What's happened over time, of course, is that as he was attacked, he got pushed into more extreme positions," said Longman, a professor of political science and international relations at Boston University.

Enemy of the state

Rusesabagina was closely involved with exiled political opposition groups.

But in a 2018 video, he pledged support for the National Liberal Front - an armed group considered a terrorist organisation by Rwanda.

"The time has come for us to use any means possible to bring about change in Rwanda, as all political means have been tried and failed," he said.

Two years later, Rusesabagina boarded a plane he believed was bound for Burundi but landed instead in Rwanda.

He was arrested and put on trial as an enemy of the state.

Frail and bald, clad in the pink uniform worn by Rwandan prisoners, Rusesabagina is now the focus of a global campaign led by his daughters Anaise and Carine, who have been pushing for their father's release.

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