Rwanda
Rwanda performs in the low range across all four categories of the Global State of Democracy Indices (GSoDI) framework. Over the past five years, there has been a significant decline in Freedom of Movement. Small, landlocked and with few natural resources, Rwanda is a low-income country, but it has maintained rapid GDP growth over the last decade. While the agricultural sector continues to dominate Rwanda’s economy, there has been significant private sector development and efforts to establish Rwanda as a player in global markets for sports and business.
The territory that is now Rwanda was long inhabited by the Twa, Hutu, and Tutsi peoples. Prior to independence in 1962, it was ruled as a colony first by Germany and then Belgium. While there is disagreement over the nature and origins of the distinctions between the indigenous communities, colonizers rigidified and racialized group identities and made social, economic and political relations more unequal, privileging the Tutsi. Shortly before independence, power shifted to the Hutu in a social revolution that forced many Tutsi into exile and led to Hutu rule. It also gave rise to new cycles of violence, as armed attacks from Tutsi exiles precipitated retaliatory violence by the Hutu government on Rwandan-based Tutsis. This dynamic eventually led to the genocide of 1994, in which over 800,000 Tutsis, Hutu moderates and Twa people are estimated to have been killed by Hutu extremists over the course of 100 days.
Since 1994, Rwanda has been under the continuous and increasingly authoritarian rule of the Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF), led by President Paul Kagame. Though the government enforces a model of national unity that leaves little space for the expression of ethnic identity, the legacy of the genocide remains salient. The Twa minority, for example, receives no recognition or aid from the state despite suffering greatly during the genocide and experiencing widespread poverty. The shift in the country’s language of business from French to English has created its own cleavage, dividing Tutsis who spent the pre-genocide years in exile in English-speaking countries from those who remained in Rwanda. As of 2022, the country has the world’s highest percentage of women in parliament (over 63.8 per cent), yet it has lagged in breaking down gender barriers and reducing domestic violence in the home. Finally, the LGBTQIA+ community faces widespread bias and discrimination.
While the RPF government has maintained political stability and progressed in its fight against corruption, there is little space for political dissent and the opposition is marginalized through administrative measures and more coercive means, such as imprisonment. Many government critics have also been forced into exile, where they contend with the regime’s extensive system of extraterritorial repression. Rwanda is a de facto one-party state without free elections or an independent media. For instance, a 2015 referendum changed the constitution and allowed Kagame to run for additional terms. The government has, however, placed great emphasis on tackling the country’s development challenges, including the large youth population, a shortage of arable land, landlocked status, and low levels of human capital.
Looking ahead, it will be important to watch Civic Engagement, Freedom of Expression and Free Political Parties, partly because the political space in Rwanda remains closed and opposition parties face political pressure to toe the government line. Economic Equality should also be observed, as inclusive growth remains a key challenge, as the poverty reduction momentum has lately diminished.
(Last updated September 2024)
https://www.idea.int/democracytracker/
August 2024
Intensified crackdown on religious institutions as authorities shut thousands of churches
The Rwanda Governance Board (RGB) and the Ministry of Local Government announced that they had closed down nearly 8,000 churches and a few mosques in August for failing to meet regulatory standards. It has affected mostly small Pentecostal churches – some of them operating out of caves or on the banks of rivers. This followed a two-week period beginning at the end of July of intensified inspections of over 13,000 churches – out of which 59.3 per cent have now been closed. Authorities cited non-compliance with infrastructure, safety, and leadership training requirements. This is the biggest major crackdown since law 72/2018 was introduced six years ago to regulate places of worship and which subsequently resulted in the closure of 700 churches that same year. The law mandates organized operations, safe environments, bans loud public address systems, and requires preachers to have theological training. Some critics have described the latest attempt to regulate places of worship in Rwanda as an attempt by Kagame to further centralize power in the hands of the state.
Sources: The New Times, BBC, Monitor, Igihe, The East African, RwandaLII, Council on Foreign Relations
July 2024
Incumbent Kagame wins presidential election with 99 per cent of vote
Rwanda’s presidential and legislative elections were held on 15 and 20 July, respectively. The presidential contest was won by incumbent, Paul Kagame, who secured a fourth term with over 99 per cent of the vote, according to the official results released by the National Electoral Commission (NEC). Frank Habineza of the Democratic Green party came second with 0.53 per cent of the vote and independent candidate Philippe Mpayimana third with 0.32 per cent. Habineza and Mpayimana (both men), were the only two opposition candidates to be approved to run, after several others (including women candidates) were barred by the NEC from running. In the legislative elections, the ruling coalition, Rwandan Patriotic Front-Inkotanyi secured 37 out of 80 seats in the Chamber of Deputies (Lower Chamber), followed by the Social Democratic Party and the Green Party with 5 seats each. 51 women were elected (24 indirectly under the country’s gender quota system), an increase from 48 women elected in 2018. Voter turnout was reported by the NEC to be 98 per cent of registered voters. International election observers from various regional organizations described the voting process as peaceful and orderly.
Sources: France24, The East African, Rwandan National Electoral Commission, BBC, Al Jazeera, COMESA, Reuters, The Chronicles, Parliament of the Republic of Rwanda
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