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DAR ES SALAAM, Feb. 13 (Xinhuanet) -- The
International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR) on Monday opened its largest
genocide trial of six suspects.
The trial, known as the Butare Case, was scheduled to
begin last Thursday but was adjourned due to lack of defense witnesses,
according to reports reaching here from the northern Tanzanian city of Arusha.
The case was first heard on June 12, 2001, and
involved a mother and a son and four others jointly accused of taking part in
genocide in the Butare prefecture in southern Rwanda.
The mother, Pauline Nyiramasuhuko, is the former
Rwandan minister for family and women affairs while the son, Arsene Shalom
Ntahobali, is a former militia leader.
The defense team has so far called 26 witnesses for
the mother and 13 witnesses for the son.
The United Nations court, based in Arusha, has been
hearing cases of a trial involving four former Rwandan military leaders.
The Butare trial, when fully underway, will be
therefore the largest single trial of Rwandan genocide suspects.
The ICTR was established in 1998 to deal with the
trials of the Rwandan genocide suspects and accused.
The Rwanda genocide in 1994 claimed 800,000 lives in
a space of 100 days. Enditem
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