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French court sentences Rwandan ex-soldier for genocide role

Journalists arrive for the sentence of the trial of former Rwandan army captain Pascal Simbikangwa at a Paris court March 14, 2014. Simbikangwa, a 54-year-old former soldier who allegedly supplied killers with arms and instructions and who some in Rwanda nickname "the torturer", on suspicion of genocide and crimes against humanity. The trial of the former Hutu officer is the first trial in France to judge those suspected of participating in the Rwandan genocide. Simbikangwa was arrested on the French island of Mayotte in 2008 under an international arrest warrant for his alleged involvement in the genocide and risks life in jail. REUTERS/Jacky Naegelen (FRANCE - Tags: MEDIA CRIME LAW CONFLICT)

(Reuters) – A Paris court sentenced a former Rwandan soldier to 25 years in jail on Friday for his role in Rwanda’s 1994 genocide, in France’s first trial to punish those responsible for the three-month wave of violence.

Journalists arrive for the sentence of the trial of former Rwandan army captain Pascal Simbikangwa at a Paris court March 14, 2014. Simbikangwa, a 54-year-old former soldier who allegedly supplied killers with arms and instructions and who some in Rwanda nickname “the torturer”, on suspicion of genocide and crimes against humanity. The trial of the former Hutu officer is the first trial in France to judge those suspected of participating in the Rwandan genocide. Simbikangwa was arrested on the French island of Mayotte in 2008 under an international arrest warrant for his alleged involvement in the genocide and risks life in jail. REUTERS/Jacky Naegelen (FRANCE – Tags: MEDIA CRIME LAW CONFLICT)

The court found Pascal Simbikangwa, 54, described by prosecutors as a former soldier who rose to become the No. 3 in Rwanda’s intelligence services, guilty of genocide and complicity in crimes against humanity.

Some 800,000 minority Tutsis and politically moderate Hutus died in the bloodletting.

Simbikangwa, confined to a wheelchair since a 1986 car accident left him a paraplegic, denied the charges against him during the six-week trial and said he was the victim of a witch-hunt orchestrated by the now ruling Tutsis.

Under French law, Rwandans suspected of involvement in the genocide can be tried in a French court.

Other countries, including Belgium, Sweden, Norway and Germany, have already held similar trials. France was long considered a safe haven for those fleeing prosecution for their role in the massacre.

A guilty verdict could smooth future prosecutions by France’s special genocide unit, created two years ago.

Simbikangwa sought during the trial to minimize his importance within the Rwanda secret services, calling himself a mere agent despite his loyalty to President Juvenal Habyarimana, a Hutu whose death in the downing of his plane in April 1994 triggered the slaughter.

But witnesses said he stored arms at his home, gave orders to extremist Hutus, and was known in the capital Kigali as a torturer.

France has nothing on me, but I get charges that not even ministers or generals got, Simbikangwa told the jury before it retired to consider the verdict.

(Reporting by Chine Labbe; writing by Leigh Thomas and Alexandria Sage; editing by Mark Trevelyan)

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