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Bayingana Or Kagame, Who Killed Rwigema?

Fred Rwigema was a Rwandan military officer and revolutionary who played a significant role in shaping the country’s history. Born on April 10, 1957, in Gitarama, southern Rwanda, Rwigema was considered a Tutsi and fled to Uganda with his family in 1960 following the Rwandan Revolution.

Rwigema’s military career began in 1976 when he joined the Front for National Salvation (FRONASA) in Tanzania. He later traveled to Mozambique and joined the FRELIMO rebels, fighting for the country’s liberation from Portugal’s colonial rule. In 1979, he joined the Uganda National Liberation Army (UNLA) and participated in the capture of Kampala, forcing Idi Amin to flee into exile.

Rwigema’s leadership skills earned him recognition, and he became one of the most significant military leaders in the National Resistance Army (NRA). He was commissioned as a Major General alongside Yoweri Museveni’s brother Salim Saleh Akandwanaho and Elly Tumwine. Rwigema’s reputation as a charismatic leader and his nickname “Mungu wa vita” (Swahili for “god of war”) were earned during his counter-insurgency operations in Northern Uganda.

On October 1, 1990, Rwigema led a splinter group of 10,000 NRA troops in an invasion of northern Rwanda, starting the Rwandan Civil War. Tragically, he was shot in the head and died on the second day of the war at Nyabwenshogozi Hill. The circumstances of his death are disputed, with the official line stating he was killed by a stray bullet, while historian Gérard Prunier claims he was killed by his subcommander Peter Bayingana following an argument over tactics.

Rwigema is remembered as one of Rwanda’s national heroes, and his body was buried at the Heroes Cemetery in Kigali.

The circumstances surrounding Fred Rwigema’s death are disputed, with different accounts emerging over the years. The official narrative presented by the Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF) and the government of Paul Kagame states that Rwigema was killed by a stray bullet on October 2, 1990, during the early stages of the Rwandan Civil War.

However, some sources, including historian Gérard Prunier, suggest that Rwigema was actually killed by his own comrades, specifically Peter Bayingana, following a disagreement over military tactics.

Prunier’s account, based on interviews with eyewitnesses, claims that Rwigema and Bayingana had a heated argument, which ended with Bayingana shooting Rwigema. This narrative implies that Rwigema’s death was not an accident, but rather a deliberate act of betrayal.

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