Jean Pierre Kwitonda alias Kapalata was arrested by the Uganda police on November 4 in Lukaya, Masaka District following a red notice issued by Interpol Rwanda.
He has since been detained at Kireka police station, a suburb of the Ugandan capital Kampala.
Kwitonda who fled the country in 1997 is charged with six counts, including Genocide, complicity in genocide and conspiracy to commit genocide.
He also faces murder charges, extermination, formation, membership, leadership and association of criminal gangs whose purpose and existence was to do harm to people or their properties, according to the indictment.
The suspect had been handed a 19-year sentence in absentia by a Gacaca court in Gikondo, where he allegedly committed the crimes during 1994 genocide against the Tutsi.
"During Genocide, Kwitonda is said to have acted individually, or as a part of a joint criminal enterprise with some members of the ex-Far, Interahamwe leaders, interim government authorities that executed the genocide and other known or unknown to prepare, train, equip and organize militias under his supervision in former Gikondo Commune, then Kigali Prefecture," a statement by Interpol partly reads.
A number of witnesses in the area had testified on how he championed the extermination of Tutsis in 1994.
He had been a well established businessman in Lyantonde trading centre, importing goods from Tanzania, Kenya and Sudan.
During his time in Uganda, Kwitonda married a Rwandan woman with whom they had four children.
"I officially hand over Kwitonda Jean Pierre alias Kapalata as per the table request by Rwanda," Tumwesigye said handing the fugitive and his case file to Kulamba.
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