Rwanda's Green Party, the country's tiny but main
opposition, complained Wednesday it was having trouble finding a lawyer
to handle its challenge to moves to allow President Paul Kagame stand
for a third term.
The Rwandan constitution, which was adopted in 2003,
limits the number of presidential terms to two, and therefore bars
Kagame -- who was elected first in 2003 and again in 2010 -- to stand
for a third term.

But officials last month said parliament would soon
debate a change to the constitution in response to what Kagame's aides
have described as "popular demand" for the strongman and former rebel
leader to stay.
The Green Party has vowed to challenge this in
court, but said it was being hampered by the reluctance of lawyers to
take up the case.
"Five lawyers have refused to take the case. One
said he was threatened, another said God was against it, others said
they were afraid or did not want to go to court against millions of
Rwandans," party president Frank Habineza told AFP.
Habineza said the challenge centred on the Green
Party's belief that the constitution can only be revised to "reduce or
prolong the duration of the president's mandate."
Kagame, 57, has been at the helm since 1994, when an
offensive by his ethnic Tutsi rebel force, the Rwandan Patriotic Front
(RPF), put an end to a genocide by Hutu extremists in which an estimated
800,000 people were massacred, the vast majority of them Tutsis.
He first served as defence minister and vice
president, and then took the presidency by winning 95 percent of the
vote. He was re-elected with a similarly resounding mandate.
Rwandan officials have strongly denied that it is
Kagame who is angling for a third term, insisting that the president --
hailed by his supporters as a guarantor of post-genocide security and
stability, as well as a champion of economic development -- enjoys
popular support for him to stay.
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