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06:39 PM
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London taxi driver linked to One Million murders yet cannot be deported
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In accordance with industry accepted best practices we ask that users limit their copy / paste of copyrighted material to the relevant portions of the article you wish to discuss and no more than 50% of the source material, provide a link back to the original article and provide your original comments / criticism in your post with the article.
[quote:Anonymous Coward 12543514:MV8yMDM3NjA5XzM0MjU0MDk2XzY3RTkzMEY2] [quote:Anonymous Coward 1082682:MV8yMDM3NjA5XzM0MjUzNzUwX0JBQTdGNEYz] Wow, before I clicked on this thread, I thought Henry Kissinger had gotten a job as a taxi driver! [/quote] ahhh check your history, dr kissinger is death, he,s responsable fo not 1, but uncountable millions of deaths and unimaginable counts of terrorism and i could go on an on, i still cant figure out whats keepin him alive and with so much power , must be from another planet.:alone: [/quote]
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link to www.dailymail.co.uk
]
A suspected war criminal accused of playing a role in the slaughter of nearly a million Rwandans is working as a taxi driver in Britain and cannot be deported because of human rights laws.
Modeste Kennedy Hakizimana, 41, is alleged by the UK Border Agency's War Crimes Unit to have helped Hutu soldiers kill members of the Tutsi ethnic group during the genocide in 1994.
As a prominent member of the ruling party which is accused of planning the genocide in the central African country, he is also alleged to have made speeches in favour of the massacre.
But for the past 13 years Hakizimana has been living in Britain and now works as a mini-cab driver in Redbridge, East London.
Hakizimana arrived in Britain in 1999 after Rwanda was taken over by a Tutsi-dominated party. He sought asylum, but his application was turned down. An immigration tribunal has since ruled he does not qualify for refugee or humanitarian protection in Britain because he is suspected of crimes against humanity in Rwanda.
But he has been allowed to remain because of a precedent set in the High Court which let four suspected Rwandan war criminals stay in Britain on the basis that they would not get a fair trial in their home country, breaching their human rights.
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