Rwandan President Paul
Kagame has embarked on a major shakeup of the country's military, with a round
of dismissals announced Wednesday after the appointment of a new defense
minister, army chief and head of internal security.
Army spokesman Ronald
Rvivanga told local media that two long-serving generals, Major General Aloys
Muganga and Brigadier General Francis Mutiganda, had been sacked for
"indiscipline."
"According to the
law, this means that they have to hand over military equipment and leave the
army without any benefits, because of what they did," he said, without
elaborating.
Another 14 officers
were also dismissed along with more than 200 others, the Rwanda Defense Force
said in a statement.
On Tuesday, Kagame had
announced a reshuffle in several top security posts, without giving any reasons
for the move.
He said Juvenal
Marizamunda had been appointed defense minister, replacing Albert Murasira who
had served in the post since 2018.
The 58-year-old
Marizamunda was previously the head of Rwanda's correctional services, and also
a former deputy inspector general of police.
Kagame also appointed
Mubarak Muganga as the new chief of defense staff, and Vincent Nyakarundi as
army chief of staff, a statement from his office said.
Jean Bosco Ntibitura
was named director general in charge of internal security in the National
Intelligence and Security Services (NISS).
Other changes were also
made to command roles in the Rwandan force which has been deployed in
Mozambique since 2021 to counter a jihadist insurgency.
Of the sacked generals,
Muganga had been appointed commander of mechanized forces in 2019, while
Mutiganda had been in charge of external security at the NISS until October
2018 when he was called back to RDF headquarters in an unspecified role, local
media reports said.
"He [Kagame] has
also authorized the dismissal of 116 other ranks and approved the rescission of
112 other ranks," the RDF statement said, adding that the moves were
effective immediately.
Last week, the
Democratic Republic of Congo's army accused the Rwandan military and the M23
rebel group of planning to attack the eastern Congolese city of Goma.
The Tutsi-led M23 has
captured swathes of territory in North Kivu province since taking up arms in
late 2021 after years of dormancy, with over one million people displaced by
the fighting.
The DRC has repeatedly
accused neighboring Rwanda and its Tutsi-led government of backing the M23, a
charge backed by several Western countries and independent UN experts, but one
that Kigali denies.
VOA
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