How the Hero of "Hotel Rwanda" Fell Into a Vengeful Strongman's Trap
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/09/18/world/africa/rwanda-paul-rusesabagina.html
KIGALI, Rwanda As the manager of a five-star hotel where 1,268 people sheltered from the 1994 genocide in Rwanda, Paul Rusesabagina was known for his cool head a quality that kept the killers at bay, helped ensure that all his guests survived, and led to an Oscar-nominated movie, Hotel Rwanda, that brought his story to a global audience.
Now Mr. Rusesabagina is back in Rwanda, but this time under arrest, in a spartan cell in Kigalis central police station, where he sleeps in a simple bed draped in a mosquito net. He still cuts the figure of an unruffled hotelier pressed blazer, white shirt, polished loafers even as he wrestled with how to explain the latest twists of a life story that threatens to outdo even its Hollywood version.
Not long ago Mr. Rusesabagina, 66, was the toast of America, feted by Oprah Winfrey, awarded the U.S. Presidential Medal of Freedom and earning large fees for his speeches around the world a human rights icon who warned about the horrors of genocide and offered a living example of standing up to it.
Now he finds himself in a country he vowed never to return to, at the mercy of a president who pursued him for 13 years, and preparing to stand trial for murder, arson and terrorism.
How I got here now that is a surprise, he said with a wry smile, in a jailhouse interview this past week, with two Rwandan government officials in the room. I was actually not coming here.
*snip*