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German prosecutors arrest man accused of ordering killings during Rwanda genocide

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In one instance, the suspect is accused of personally taking part in the killing by stabbing a ​victim.

German prosecutors arrested a German-Rwandan national on suspicion of being an accomplice to ​genocide and 25 counts of murder during ‌the 1994 genocide against the Tutsis in Rwanda, they said in a statement this Wednesday.

The suspect, identified only ​as Innocent S under German privacy rules, ​is accused of ordering the deaths of 25 ⁠Tutsis on five separate occasions while serving ​as an assistant to the mayor of Kayove ​in northwestern Rwanda.

In one instance, the suspect is accused of personally taking part in the killing by stabbing a ​victim in the chest with a knife, the ​prosecutors said.

The suspect, who was arrested in the central German ‌state ⁠of Hesse, also used his position to incite the extermination of Tutsis in his town and had death lists drawn up, they added.

Germany has ​prosecuted several ​suspects linked ⁠to the 1994 genocide in Rwanda under the principle of universal jurisdiction, ​which allows courts to try certain ​grave international ⁠crimes regardless of where they were committed.

More than 800 000 Tutsis and moderate Hutus were systematically massacred ⁠in ​the East African nation by ​Hutu extremists over a roughly 100-day period from April to July ​1994.

—Reuters—