[s1e2] Fг©licien Kabuga: The Financer Of The Gen... May 2026

Kabuga’s eventual capture served as a stark reminder that the "wheels of justice turn slowly, but they grind exceedingly fine." Although his trial in The Hague was eventually halted in 2023 due to his advancing dementia, his arrest shattered the myth of his untouchability.

His story took a cinematic turn in May 2020. At age 87, the "Financier of Genocide" was finally cornered not in a jungle or a war zone, but in a quiet, nondescript apartment in , a suburb of Paris. He had been living under a false identity, shielded by his children and the anonymity of urban life. A Legacy of Accountability [S1E2] FГ©licien Kabuga: The Financer of the Gen...

After the 1994 genocide, Kabuga became one of the world’s most elusive fugitives. For 26 years, he vanished into a shadow world of aliases and high-level protection, traversing Africa and Europe with a $5 million bounty on his head. Kabuga’s eventual capture served as a stark reminder

The story of Félicien Kabuga is a chilling study of how immense wealth can be weaponized to dismantle a nation. Once one of Rwanda's richest men, Kabuga didn’t just fund a genocide; he industrialized it. The Architect of Hate He had been living under a false identity,

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