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1994 Genocide Against the Tutsi in Rwanda: France’s history of obstruction laid out in new Report

Author: Tony Karera
On:13/12/2017 11:33
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The Government of Rwanda today released a report by Washington, DC, law firm Cunningham Levy Muse LLP documenting the role and knowledge of French officials in the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi.

The report, which has been shared with the Government of France, is part of wider efforts by Rwanda, announced in November 2016, to thoroughly investigate the responsibility of French officials in respect of the Genocide.

The Muse Report, which is based solely on information available in the public record, indicates there is evidence to substantiate allegations of foreign involvement in the Genocide, including that of French officials. The report also identifies evidence suggesting the accountability process has been, and continues to be, undermined by French actors.

The Muse Report finds that:

1. French officials facilitated the flow of weapons into Rwanda in the build-up to the Genocide, despite knowing about violent attacks against the minority Tutsi group in the country;

2. Despite this knowledge of recurring massacres of the Tutsi during the early 1990s, French officials allowed génocidaires to meet within the French Embassy in Kigali and begin to form the interim government that presided over Rwanda during the Genocide;

3. Private communications between French officials reveal that Opération Turquoise, which was presented as a humanitarian mission, in fact had the military objective of propping up the interim government responsible for the Genocide, and preventing its removal by the Rwandan Patriotic Front, who eventuality halted the atrocities in July 1994.

4. French officials provided safe harbour to suspected génocidaires and obstructed attempts to bring them to justice at various points during the 23 years since the Genocide;

5. French authorities have refused to declassify and release documents that are vital to a full understanding of the activity of French officials at the time of the Genocide, and to allowing the public to finally learn the truth;

6. France has failed either to extradite or to prosecute the majority of the dozens of Genocide suspects residing within the country;

7. The 1998 French Parliamentary Commission’s investigation into the role of French officials was neither transparent nor complete.

Rwanda has accepted the Muse Report recommendation that these facts merit a full investigation into responsibility of French officials in the Genocide against the Tutsi.

Louise Mushikiwabo, Rwandan Minister for Foreign Affairs, stated:

“Historical clarity is crucial and concerns us all. The Government of Rwanda commissioned the Muse Report to inform our ongoing investigation into the role of French officials before, during, and after the Genocide.

“The Muse Report exposes a damning summary of conduct by French officials in Rwanda during the 1990s and thereafter, and we agree with the report recommendation that a full investigation into the role of French officials in the Genocide is warranted.

“We have transmitted the Muse Report to the Government of France, which has responsibilities to face. This is also an opportunity for French authorities to collaborate better with Rwanda in the pursuit of truth, justice and accountability regarding the Genocide against the Tutsi.”

Bob Muse, a partner at Cunningham Levy Muse LLP, said of the Report:

“We have submitted our report to the Government of Rwanda, and it is being released today. The purpose of the report is not to reach final conclusions or judgments, and now a full investigation into these matters should be conducted.

“Any investigation into this matter should not only evaluate what occurred in the 1990s but also what has happened since then, including the extent of France’s cooperation with Rwanda’s ongoing investigation.”

                                                       



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Tony Karera

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