Rutunga is among the first people to have been indicted by the Genocide Fugitives Tracking Unit
Dutch Police are holding a Rwandan man wanted on charges related to the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi.
The man identified as Venant Rutunga, 69, had sought asylum in the European country where he has lived for over a decade.
Rutunga is among the first people to have been indicted by the Genocide Fugitives Tracking Unit, according to Prosecutor General Jean Bosco Mutangana.
The unit operates under the National Public Prosecution Authority.
He had an arrest warrant on his head, issued by Rwanda which requested for his extradition.
Speaking to The New Times, the Prosecutor General who said he had seen the news from the media said that this was a step in the right direction.
"This is a man who has been wanted for so long. We generally appreciate the Dutch for their effort to bring to account those who committed the Genocide and we are optimistic that he will be extradited to face charges,” said Mutangana.
Dutch authorities have so far extradited to Rwanda two fugitives; Jean Baptiste Mugimba and Jean Claude Iyamuremye who were both extradited in November 2016. Their respective trials are still ongoing.
Others have been domestically tried by Dutch authorities.
Joseph Mpambara was in 2011 tried and convicted for his role in the Genocide against the Tutsi, which earned him a life sentence.
Another fugitive, Yvonne Basebya, was convicted for the crime of incitement to commit genocide which earned her six and half years of imprisonment.
About the Rutunga
In 1994, the suspect was regional director of ISAR Rubona, an agricultural research institute located outside the southern district of Huye, formerly known as Butare prefecture.
According to witness accounts, at the start of the genocide, in April 1994, more than 1,000 Tutsi sought refuge at the institute.
The suspect is alleged to have alerted and brought in soldiers and militia at the Institute who then killed the Tutsi.
In 2000, the suspect applied for admission as a refugee in the Netherlands.
The Dutch Immigration and Naturalization department rejected his asylum application on grounds that he was suspected to have been involved in the genocide.
He later appealed the decision, a case he lost as well.
Prosecution first cited him in the European country as far back as 2010.
At the time, he was said to have been working as a guest researcher at the Netherlands’s Wageningen University and Research Centre – ISRIC.