Survivors and their families are pushing a special U.N. tribunal in Tanzania will act quickly in trying elderly tycoon Felicien Kabuga on charges of financing the 1994 Rwandan genocide after France's top civil court ruled Wednesday that he could be handed over for prosecution. Kabuga arrested in Paris in May after a 2 decade manhunt. He is accused of financing ethnic Hutu militias who killed hundreds of thousands of Tutsis and moderate Hutus during a 100-day period in 1994. But the tribunal in Arusha, Tanzania will face legal challenges and bureaucratic delays as it prepares for trial. Kabuga’s lawyers say he is too frail to extradite. Attorney Richard Gisagara with the Rwanda Community Association in France. Kabuga has called the charges against him lies, and his lawyers argued that the court hearing his extradition case had not properly examined all international arrest warrants.