Cement factory clash: Probe team should be vigilant

Editor, Are the cracks really a result of the factory’s heavy machinery or they’re a result of the age of the houses in question.

Sunday, September 09, 2012

Editor,Are the cracks really a result of the factory’s heavy machinery or they’re a result of the age of the houses in question. The said commission must be careful, otherwise some population’s claims may not be genuine. (Reaction to the story published on Friday about residents’ complaints whose houses reportedly developed cracks as a result of a nearby cement factory).Kwizera     -----------------------------------------Editor, I wish to react to the story, ‘US Judge delays Genocide trial for five’ (The New Times, September 7) regarding Beatrice Munyenyezi. Why wasn’t this woman been deported to Rwanda? It’s obvious that she entered the United States and lied to get citizenship. It is a logical conclusion, given that her husband and mother-in-law are serving lifelong prison sentences for Genocide crimes, that she was just as deeply involved in the slaughter in Butare. I know it is up to a court to determine her guilt but since there are so many cultural and language barriers along with so many other issues to deal with in the United States’ legal system it would have made sense to deport her. The United States is not usually so hesitant to deport "undesirable” people so I wonder why they have not sent Munyenyezi back to Rwanda to face justice. Canada took a stand and deported Leon Mugesera. The United States should have followed that example and deported Munyenyezi to face justice in Rwanda.Marie Collins