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Bernard Ntuyahaga : ウィキペディア英語版 | Bernard Ntuyahaga Major Bernard Ntuyahaga (probably born in 1952) was a Rwandan army officer convicted by a Belgian court for the murders of ten United Nations peacekeepers at the start of the Rwandan Genocide. ==Military career== Bernard Ntuyahaga was born in Mabanza, Kibuye Prefecture in the Belgian mandate of Ruanda-Urundi (modern-day Rwanda). In 1972, he went to the army officer's school in Kigali. At the time of the Rwandan Genocide in 1994, he held the rank of major in the Rwandan Armed Forces.〔(Bernard Ntuyahaga: facts ), Trial Watch〕 On 7 April 1994, the day after the assassinations of the presidents of Rwanda and Burundi, the house of Prime Minister Agathe Uwilingiyimana, which was under the protection of fifteen peacekeepers under the United Nations Assistance Mission for Rwanda (UNAMIR), was surrounded by soldiers of the Rwandan Armed Forces. After the five Ghanaian and ten Belgian peacekeepers were disarmed, the Ghanaians were released and Madame Agathe and her husband were murdered.〔 The murders were carried out in front of Ntuyahaga and other soldiers.〔("Genocide suspect 'likely to be tried'" ), ''BBC News'', March 20, 1999〕 A Belgian court later found that Ntuyahaga had transported the ten Belgians to a military camp, where they were subsequently killed by fellow Rwandan soldiers. He was further found to have murdered an undetermined number of Rwandan civilians during the genocide and sentenced to twenty years in prison.〔(" Rwandan gets 20 years for murders of civilians, peacekeepers" ), ''Reuters'' via ''CNN'', 5 July 2007〕
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