WORLD
EXCLUSIVE:
The
shooting down of Falcon 50 jet carrying President Juvenal Habyarimana
of
An eye witness account. By code name "Water Melon". Narrated on
January 17, 25, and 28, 2007. Narrated to Timothy Kalyegira.
RPA commander, Paul Kagame tours
RPF-controlled areas, Feb. 11, 1993.
1. At the time of the August 1993 ceasefire between the government of
2. The Commanding Office r of the Directorate of Military Intelligence
(DMI) in
the RPA was Colonel Faustin Kayumba Nyamwasa. The vice Commanding
Officer was
Lieutenant Colonel Jackson Mutabazi Rwahama. "Water Melon" was an
escort to Rwahama.
3. At the time of the invasion of
4. Under the terms of the Arusha accords, the RPA's DMI was to provide
security
to the RPF Members of Parliament in
5. The DMI agents used to transport firewood to the RPA soldiers at the
parliament buil dings which was used for cooking. The firewood was
ferried in a
Mercedes Benz trailer lorry.
6. Hidden on the floor of the Mercedes trailer were RPA soldiers whom
the RPA
was secretly taking to
7. Around February 1994, the RPF went on a secret mission. The Rwandese
refugees in
8. Secretly, a large consignment of machetes (known in
9. They were loaded onto a yellowish-green Tata lorry with Ugandan
registered
number plates. The RPA intelligence officer, Lt. Colonel Jackson
Rwahama, came
to the RPA detach in a red
10. Rwahama then drove across the border into
11. In March 1994, the RPA turned to another mission: to try and locate
the
best vantage point to position themselves as close as possible to the
flight
paths over the Kanombe airport. "Water Melon" was able to establish
this new mission based on the conversations that he picked up as a n
escort to
the DMI's vice commanding officer, Lt. Col. Rwahama.
12. To carry out this reconnaissance, the DMI operatives had to evade
roadblocks set up in
13. This Tutsi who worked for the UN, was in his 50s or late 40s, he
lived in a
suburb of
14. This Tutsi man drove a blue Toyota Hilux single cabin pickup and
his role
was to guide the RPA's DMI agents around
15. The UN guide took the RPA DMI personnel on three trips to study the
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17. The RPA had an armory at their camp at the Parliament buildings. In
that
armory the RPA kept three missiles. These missiles and a missile
launcher were
wrapped in an olive green polythene material.
18. After the DMI personnel returned from the Kikukiro suburb on the
19. Supervising the whole exercise was Lieutenant Bosco Rumenera who
was the
Intelligence Officer of the RPA Republican Guard. Also supervising this
mission
of packing the missile was Major Stephen Munyandinda, the Operations
Intelligence Officer of the 600-man Republican Guard.
20. Another man on that missile team was Sergeant James Rwaka of the
DMI staff.
He was in charge of logistics and finances. It was his job to pay the
DMI staff
and pay them on their missions. He had studied for a Law degree from
21. Also on the DMI team was a man called Joseph Nyamitale. He was a
Ugandan of
the Bakonjo tribe from Kasese in western
22. The missiles and launcher were put onto the
23. Bosco Rumenera was dressed in a tan suit, white shirt, and striped
necktie.
He was a tall man and had a mis sing front left tooth.
24. The UN man wore a brown shirt and ash-grey trousers. Nyamitale wore
a black
T-shirt and black jeans.
25. During that day, the RPA commander Major-General Paul Kagame sent a
radio
message to the RPA units in
26. They drove along Masaka road via Mulindi and then turned onto a
dirt
(murram) road off the Masaka road. They drove about five kilometres
along that
road until they reached a house belonging to a friend of the UN man.
27. It was an old house with an iron sheet roof. Outside the house were
four
cows grazing. The DMI team stayed inside the house until after sunset
and then
set off again.
28. The DMI team walked to a small nearby hill (or hillock) and settled
at the
top of it. The hillock was about
29. This hillock was about three kilometres away from Kanombe airport
and the
DMI team could see the lights of the airport in the distance from where
they
stood.
30. The Tutsi UN man remained in his pickup a short distance away from
the old
house as the DMI team settled on top of the hill.
31. On top of that small hill was a large white tent with the initials
"UNHCR" printed on it. The DMI team took the missiles and launcher
with them into the tent where they were unwrapped.
32. The missile launcher was an olive green military colour. It was in
two
parts that the DMI team fitted together into one tube. The point where
the two
tubes were joined together was black. The DMI team then waited for a
while. It
was now around half past seven or coming toward eight O'Clock in the
evening.
33. About 30 minutes after they arrived at the hillock, a male voice
came on
Lt. Bosco Rumenera's Motorola two-way radio. Lt. Bosco Rumenera's radio
code
name was "Sixteen-Charlie".
34. The voice called out, in English: "Sungu-Sungu, Four-Nine-Romeo."
Sungu-Sungu replied, in English, "Go ahead."
Four-nine-Romeo then said, in English, "Connect me Double Five."
Sungu-Sungu called out three times: "Double Five?" but there was no
reply from Double Five.
Sung-Sungu then told Four-Nine-Romeo, in Kiswahili and English: "Enda
direct kwa Two-Zero-Nine." ("Go direct to Two-Zero-Nine")
Four-Nine-Romeo then called out three times, in English:
"Two-Zero-Nine,
Four-Nine-Romeo?"
Four-Nine-Romeo then came back, in English: "Two-Zero-Nine connect me
Sixteen-Charlie."
Two-Zero-Nine then called twice, in English: "Sixteen-Charlie,
Two-Zero-Nine?"
Two-Zero-Nine then replied, in English: "Four-Nine-Romeo, go ahead."
Four-Nine-Romeo then called out, in English: "Sixteen-Charlie,
Four-Nine-Romeo?"
Sixteen-Charlie then replied, in Kiswahili: "Sukuma ujumbe."
(Send your message")
Four-Nine-Romeo then gave the order, in Kiswahili: "" Okiwone
kitu
yote, piga!" ("If you see anything, fire!")
After that order, Sixteen-Charlie replied, in English: "Over, out."
35. The artillery specialist, Private Joseph Nyamitale, then got the
launcher,
now with a missile inside it, and placed it on his shoulder. He pointed
the
launcher into the dark night sky.
36. The missile launcher then started giving off a wailing, siren-like
noise.
Nyamitale then told his colleagues in Kiswahili: "Missile ena
liya.
Kwisha pata target." ("The missile is whining. It has located
its
target.")
37. After Nyamitale said this, the escort "Water Melon" of the DMI
was ordered to leave the location and return to the old house. A
teenage boy at
the old house who had followed the team out of curiosity was also sent
back to
the house.
38. The escorts had barely left the location when they heard a single
explosion
at the location w here the DMI officers stood. It was the sound of the
missile
being fired.
39. The escorts stayed at the house while the team led by Bosco
Rumenera
remained at the location where they had fired the missile. During the
aftermath
of the firing of the missile, Bosco Rumenera and his team got into
steady radio
communication with unknown people in another part of town.
40. The lights at the airport remained on for a while in the immediate
aftermath of the shooting down of the presidential jet.
41. Three hours later, at about 11:00 p.m., on April 6, 1994, the
escorts were
finally called back and told to pack the remaining two missiles onto
the back of
the Toyota pickup. The team then drove off.
42. The team, driven by the UN Tutsi official, encountered a roadblock
at
Mulindi manned by the government soldiers. The UN man suggested that
they avoid
the roadblock and instead walk through the nearby bush back to the
Parliament
buildings.
43. The DMI t eam got out of the pickup and started walking in the
direction of
the airport while the UN official turned back and drove in the opposite
direction with the two remaining missiles and other accessories.
44. The DMI team emerged from the bush and onto the road leading from
the
airport to the Lemera suburb of
45. They walked on, toward a place called Kyemihurura and encountered a
serious
roadblock, manned by soldiers and men in civilian clothes holding
machetes. The
DMI team were ordered to stop but pleaded to be allowed to go on their
way.
46. The soldiers ordered them to sit down by the roadside. At that
point,
sensing danger, Bosco Rumenera drew out a pistol and shot two of the
civilians
in the chest. They fell down dead on the road.
47. Other men at the roadblock, seeing this, pounced onto the DMI team
and
overpowered them. They cut Bosco Rumenera into pieces with a machete.
Joseph
Nyamitale, the man who fired the missile that blew up the Falcon 50
jet, was also
hacked to death by this group manning the roadblock. Sergeant Rwaka was
taken
away captive.
48. The escort "Water Melon" had been walking at a distance of about
49. After he watched his colleagues being hacked to death, he fled the
scene
and back in the direction from which they had come, toward town until
he found
the St. Famie Church and took refuge there. Inside the church were
ordinary
civilians, both Hutu and Tutsi, and some of them were listening to the
news
over small radios.
50. The news was entirely about the death of the Presidents of Rwanda
and
51. There was no other aircraft that had been shot down by a missile or
any
other gunfire that night over
52. Lieutenant Bosco Rumenera and Private Joseph Nyamitale died at the
roadblock without knowing the magnitude of the mission that night,
April 6,
1994.
END