By: Dr David Himbara
He is busy collecting medals and recognitions from the Caribbean, Europe, North America, Middle East, and Across Africa
Kagame’s Unquenchable Appetite for Medals and Recognition on Display
He is busy collecting medals and recognitions from the Caribbean, Europe, North America, Middle East, and Across Africa
General Paul Kagame received the coveted Bahamas Order of Excellence on July 9, in recognition of his “extraordinary leadership.” Kagame is no doubt pleased with his 2023 self-promotion tour that has taken him to North America, Europe, the Middle East, the Caribbean, Western Africa, Eastern Africa and Southern Africa. A leading scholar of dictatorships, Alexander Dukalskis, provides an insight into why autocrats are obsessed with medals and recognition. In his book, Making the World Safe for Dictatorship, which looks closely at China, Rwanda, and North Korea, Dukalskis explains:
“Authoritarian states work hard to manage their images abroad. They invest in foreign-facing media, hire public relations firms, tout their popular celebrities, and showcase their successes to elite and popular foreign audiences. However, there is a dark side to these efforts that is sometimes overlooked. Authoritarian states try to obscure or censor bad news about their governments and often discredit their critics abroad. In extreme cases, authoritarian states intimidate, physically attack, or even murder their opponents overseas.”
As noted above, Dukalskis’ work contains three case studies namely, China, North Korea and Rwanda. He demonstrates how the authoritarian rulers of the three countries manage their image abroad using two methods. On the one hand, the totalitarian rulers use “promotional” tactics of persuasion overseas. On the other hand, they use “obstructive” tactics of repression at home and in the diaspora to silence and even murder their critics. General Kagame has spectacularly succeeded at both. Because of the need to whitewash his image overseas, Kagame relentlessly hunts for invitations for rubbing shoulders heads of state, influential global elites and foreign audiences. At home, meanwhile, repression is business as usual. The latest US Department of State’s human rights report on Rwanda paints the following picture:
“Significant human rights issues included credible reports of: unlawful or arbitrary killings; torture or cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment or punishment by the government; harsh and life-threatening prison conditions; arbitrary detention; political prisoners or detainees; transnational repression against individuals located outside the country, including killings, kidnappings, and violence…
The government did not follow through on conducting full, timely, and transparent investigations of the killing of Kizito Mihigo in 2020, a popular gospel singer and genocide survivor, nor the killings of several political opponents in previous years, such as the 2019 killing of Anselme Mutuyimana, a member of the unregistered United Democratic Forces-Inkingi (FDU-Inkingi) opposition party…The government failed to complete investigations of or take measures to ensure accountability for the disappearances of Rwandan poet Innocent Bahati and political opponents Venant Abayisenga, Eugene Ndereyimana, and Boniface Twagirimana.”
Here is General Kagame’s ongoing self promotion campaign in North America, Europe, the Middle East, the Caribbean, Western Africa, Eastern Africa and Southern Africa:
Bahamas |Nassau, 7 July 2023
Trinidad and Tobago | Port of Spain, 5 July 2023
Seychelles | Victoria, 28 June 2023
Türkiye | Ankara, 3 June 2023
Nigeria | Abuja, 29 May 2023
Qatar | Doha, 23 May 2023
UK | London, 5 May 2023
Guinea-Bissau | Bissau, 17 April 2023
Zimbabwe | Victoria Falls, 26 April 2023
Tanzania | Dar es Salaam, 27 April 2023
Guinea | Conakry, 18 April 2023
Benin | Cotonou, 15 April 2023
US | New York, 12 April 2023
Ethiopia | Addis Ababa, 18 February 2023
Burundi | Bujumbura, 4 February 2023
Senegal | Dakar, 2 February 2023
Where next? Stay tuned.