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France indicts president of Rwanda
By Linda Slattery
5 January 2007
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Almost 13 years after the genocide that engulfed the central
African state of Rwanda, the spark that triggered the massacres
remains a topic of much controversy.
On April 6, 1994, two missiles blew the plane carrying Rwandas
President Juvenal Habyarimana out of the skies, killing all on
board, including the President of Burundi and Rwandas army
chief of staff.
The shooting down of the presidential jet seemed to act as
a signal, so that by 9:15 the same morning roadblocks had cordoned
off the capital of Kigali, and the slaughter of the minority ethnic
group, the Tutsis, began. It is estimated that up to a million
people were butchered, approximately one in seven of the population,
over 100 days. The Rwandan regime, based on the majority Hutu
ethnic group, was fully complicit in the mass killings.
In an ongoing court case in France to investigate the crash,
instigated by the families of the crew who piloted the Falcon
jet, presiding Judge Jean Louis Bruguière accused Paul
Kagame and nine Rwandan officials of being involved in shooting
down the plane.
Kagame is the current President of Rwanda and former leader
of the Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF) that swept into Rwanda from
its enforced exile in Uganda in 1994, driving the Hutu regime
and the perpetrators of the genocide into exile. Without revealing
his evidence, Bruguière, who is a leading anti-terrorist
judge in France, called for arrest warrants to be issued against
the nine officials and said he would be writing to the United
Nations demanding Kagame be brought before the International Criminal
Tribunal for Rwanda (ITCR) to answer the charges.
The Rwandan government retaliated by severing all diplomatic
ties with Paris, recalling its ambassador to France and sending
the French ambassador packing.
This is not the first time Kagame and the RPF have been implicated
in the assassination of Habyarimana, nor will it be the first
time the UN has been asked to investigate the plane crash.
Two years ago, an article in the Canadian Toronto Post
cited intelligence pointing to the culpability of the RPF with
the backing of a foreign powerin all likelihood
the United States. The US did indeed arm and train the RPF. And,
with the ousting of the Hutu government, went also French influence
in the regiondisplaced by a regime favoured by the US.
The Toronto Post also alleged that the UN suppressed
the leaked intelligence. In response to requests to investigate
the crash, the UN claimed that the ITCR was set up to try perpetrators
of genocide and not to investigate who or what power lay behind
the plane crash.
There is much speculation as to who was behind the death of
the Rwandan president. In March 2004, Le Monde revealed
leaked interim findings of the Bruguiere investigation. It reported
that the missile launchers involved in the crash had been discovered
and identified as part of a batch bought in Moscow in 1987 and
supplied to the Ugandan government, which was harbouring the RPF.
However, Bruguière, whose investigation has now lasted
eight years, cited as his informants former Rwandan Colonel Bagasora,
as well as French mercenary Paul Barril. Bagasora was an advisor
to the Interahamwe militia, who were central to the butchery,
and it was known that he wanted to see the Arusha peace deal between
the RPF and Hutu government scuppered. Burril was closely associated
with Habyarimanas widow Agathe, who was herself involved
with Hutu extremists.
The objectivity of Bruguières report has also
been greatly undermined by two witnesses called to support it.
Deus Kagiraneza, a member of Rwandas pro-Hutu government
prior to the genocide, described the report as an attempt to exonerate
the Genocide planners and hide Frances role in the
genocide of Tutsis.
Another witness, Emmanuel Ruzigana, has described what was
attributed to him in the report as lies.
If the truth is ever revealed, and it turns out that the RPF,
backed by the US, did fire the missiles, this would not diminish
the shared responsibility of France for the genocide. As more
and more evidence is leaked revealing the intimate ties between
France and the leaders of the genocide, the French ruling elite
are trying to deflect world attention away from their role and
onto the RPF.
Frances ties with Rwanda go back to the 1970s when it
took over from Belgium in continuing the tactic of divide-and-rule
to suppress the population. Whereas, before World War II, rule
was through a Tutsi elite at the expense of the Hutus, this was
reversed after the war in favour of a layer of the Hutu population.
This state of affairs set in train a turbulent history both under
colonialism and after independence, marked by ethnic conflict
and killing on both sides. This situation was mirrored in neighbouring
Burundi where (as in Rwanda before the advent of colonialism)
the mainly pastoral Tutsis and agricultural Hutus had lived side
by side peacefully and intermarried.
In her book Conspiracy to Murder,* Linda Melvern
details the close relations between French imperialism and the
regime that carried out the genocide. France was Rwandas
biggest supplier of arms and sent French troops into Rwanda in
1990 to repel the RPF, which had invaded from Uganda. In the three
years of civil war that preceded the genocide, the French military
often took command in the field. At the time of the mass killings,
47 high-ranking French officers were embedded in the Rwandan army.
In April 1994, French-trained officers from the Presidential Guard
eliminated members of the political opposition and figures who
supported the Arusha Accords peace agreement. The French also
trained the Paracommandos and Reconnaissance battalion that, as
soon as the presidential plane plunged to earth in flames, began
killing anyone with a Tutsi identity card.
According to Melvern, there is evidence that French military
personnel also trained the Hutu extremist Interahamwe militia,
and French officers were in commando-training centres where torture
was perpetrated. First on the scene after the air crash were French
personnel.
A government-appointed commission of inquiry is sitting in
Rwanda to decide if there is sufficient evidence of French complicity
in the genocide to file a suit against Paris. One ex-militia member
came forward to testify that French troops transported hundreds
of Interahamwe to the Bisero Mountain area to kill Tutsis seeking
refuge there. Another witness claimed French soldiers stood by
and watched the murder of 50 Tutsis at camp Gysenyi military barracks
in northwest Rwanda. Other witnesses claimed French soldiers committed
rape, while yet another said he had participated in transporting
weapons from a French plane to be used in the massacres.
The UN played its usual role in Rwanda, as a mechanism for
advancing the competing interests of rival imperialist powers.
Both France and the US, in their role as members of the UN Security
Council, vetoed the implementation of the 1948 Genocide Convention
that would have allowed the UN force UNAMIR to be expanded. UNAMIR
was charged with acting as a police force in Rwanda at the time
of the genocide, under the Arusha Accords.
UNAMIR commander General Romeo Dallaire had repeatedly requested
more troops with a mandate to protect the thousands of terrified
people holed up in churches and schools. But in 1994, the UN did
nothing that would have possibly provoked a conflict with its
member states, and was complicit in allowing a massacre to take
place while the US and France competed over which would hold sway
in Rwanda through a Hutu-based client regime.
It was only in the aftermath of the mass murders, when it was
apparent that the RPF were overwhelming the Rwandan army, that
the French sent in troops with the backing of the UN. They did
so to provide a safe escort out of Rwanda to the perpetrators
of the genocide. This was known as Operation Turquoise. Tens of
thousands of Hutus, including 37,000 troops, fled before the advance
of the RPF into neighbouring Zaire (now Democratic Republic of
Congo), where the Hutu extremist militias continued to terrorise
those in the refugee camps. The ringleaders were flown to France
or Belgium, where they enjoy immunity today. Despite all the evidence,
France still denies its role in the genocide and puts the casualties
down to the civil war.
In 1998, on May 1, Jean Kambamba stood before the ITCR in Tanzania
and pleaded guilty to genocide, offering full cooperation in return
for protection for his family. Kambamba was prime minister of
the Rwandan government that was supposed to give way to a power-sharing
regime with the RPF, but instead directed the genocide. He informed
the tribunal that Habyarimana had been warned by President Mobutu
of Zaire not to attend a meeting in Dar-Es-Salaam on April 6 to
secure the Arusha Accords. It was on the return journey that his
plane was shot down.
Mobutus source was a high-ranking French official. On
April 7, a senior French official, Francois de Grossouvre, who
worked for President Mitterand as an advisor on African affairs,
committed suicide after learning about Habyarimanis fate.
And a French lawyer representing the widow of the Falcons
pilot said there was evidence implicating people in France who
knew what was going to happen, but did nothing to stop it.
There is yet another explanation offered by Collette Braeckman,
the African Editor of Le Soir in Brussels. Braeckman received
a letter from someone called Thadee who claimed to be a militia
leader in Kigali. According to this contact, two members of the
French Detachment dAssistance et LInstruction, clad
in Belgian uniforms, had launched the missiles, acting on behalf
of the extremist Hutu political elite. French academic Gerard
Prunier cites witnesses who saw white men on Masaka hill from
where the missiles were launched on April 6. Prunier believes
that Habyarimana was too moderate for the Hutu extremists who
wanted him out of the way.
What is not in doubt in this tangle of intrigue is that imperialism
created the conditions whereby the government of Rwanda, backed
by the French, was able to mobilise large sections of the Hutu
population to embark on a policy of wiping out all the Tutsis.
* Conspiracy to Murder: The Rwandan Genocide, Linda
Melvern, Verso, New York, 2004
See Also:
Rwanda10 years
since the genocide
[3 May 2004]
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