Fiche du document numéro 8968

Num
8968
Date
Vendredi 10 octobre 2014
Amj
Taille
36749
Titre
Rwanda's Untold Story : Letter to the BBC
Nom cité
Type
Langue
FR
Citation
Letter to the BBC

We the undersigned, scholars, researchers, journalists and historians are
writing to you today to express our grave concern at the content of the
documentary Rwanda’s Untold Story (This World BBC 2 Wednesday
October 1), specifically its coverage of the 1994 genocide of the Tutsi.
We accept and support that it is legitimate to investigate, with due
diligence and respect for factual evidence, the crimes committed by the
RPF, and to reflect on the contemporary political situation in Rwanda;
these issues have indeed received less public attention in the media than
the genocide. However, attempts to examine these issues should not
distort the reality of the 1994 genocide. It is not legitimate to use current
events to either negate or to diminish the genocide. Nor is it legitimate to
promote genocide denial.
The parts of the film which concern the 1994 genocide,
far from providing viewers with an ‘Untold Story’ as the title promises,
were only too horribly familiar. For years similar material using similar
language has been distributed far and wide as part of an on-going
campaign to deny the genocide. This campaign of genocide denial
continually questions the status of the genocide and tries to prove -- like
the programme -- that what it calls the ‘official narrative’ of the 1994
genocide is wrong. At the heart of this denial campaign are convicted
génocidaires and some of their defence lawyers from the International
Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR). The BBC programme Rwanda’s
Untold Story recycles elements from the discourse promoted by these
deniers. This serves to create doubt and confusion about what really
happened.
There are several untenable claims in the programme and
three of these are of the utmost concern: the true nature of the Hutu
Power militia, the numbers of people killed, and the shooting down of the
President’s plane on April 6, 1994. There is a suggestion that ‘only ten
percent of the Interahamwe (militia) were killers’. In fact, this 30,000
strong Hutu Power force, indoctrinated in a disgusting racist ideology, was
trained specifically to kill Tutsi at speed as proved by several militia
leaders who cooperated with the ICTR. In discussing the death toll, the
programme attempts to minimise and distort statistics by using
mathematically unsound figures. These figures, already widely criticised,
were provided by two US academics who worked for a team of lawyers
defending the génocidaires at the ICTR. These academics offer the idea
that in 1994 more Hutu than Tutsi were murdered – an absurd claim and
contrary to all the widely available research reported by Amnesty
International, UNICEF, the UN Human Rights Commission, Oxfam, Human
Rights Watch, Africa Rights, a UN Security Council mandated Commission
of Experts and evidence submitted to the International Criminal Tribunal
for Rwanda and other European courts who have successfully put on trial
several perpetrators.

Great play is made of the mystery surrounding the
assassination on April 6, 1994 of President Juvénal Habyarimana. Corbin
seems determined to promote the idea that the RPF was responsible. This
was the idea put forward by Hutu Power extremists within a few hours of
his murder and it has been promoted ever since then by génocidaires,
their supporters and some ICTR defence lawyers. While we may never
know who was responsible for the assassination. However, Corbin fails to
mention at any time during the programme the chief suspect, Lt. Colonel
Théoneste Bagosora, accused of the crime in the course of his trial at the
ICTR. Nor is there any mention in the film of a detailed expert
investigation published in January 2012 by a French investigating
magistrate Judge Marc Trévidic. This contains evidence from experts who
proved scientifically that the missiles that shot down the plane came from
the confines of the government-run barracks in Kanombe on the airport’s
perimeter, and one of the most fortified places in the country, and a place
where it would have been almost impossible for the RPF to penetrate.
Within hours of the president’s assassination Rwanda’s
political opposition was eliminated and yet the programme pays little
heed to this momentous event. On April 7 the Hutu and Tutsi prodemocracy movements were hunted down and killed including Rwanda’s
Prime Minister, Agathe Uwilingiyimana, and most of her cabinet. These
people separately threatened the Habyarimana regime for advocating
power-sharing and paid for this with their lives. Equally ignored are the
Hutu extremist attempts to divide the internal political opposition along
ethnic lines. Political violence in the film is seen only in the context of a
civil war between the RPF and the Habyarimana government.
Corbin is keen to raise doubts about whether or not the RPF
stopped the genocide. Lt.-General Roméo Dallaire, the Force commander
of the UN Assistance Mission for Rwanda (UNAMIR), a major authority on
the genocide, has been categorical. ‘The genocide was stopped because
the RPF won and stopped it’, he says. Corbin ignores the testimonies of
direct witnesses to what happened in 1994: Dallaire and his volunteer UN
peacekeepers, Philippe Gaillard and the medics at the International
Committee of the Red Cross, and Dr. James Orbinski of Médecins Sans
Frontières. There are years of research and writing by academics and
other experts but it was ignored together with films by journalists who
work for the BBC and whose programmes are now portrayed as
fraudulent.
In broadcasting this documentary the BBC has been recklessly
irresponsible. The programme has fuelled the potential for further
genocide denial and it has empowered the denial discourse devised by the
former genocidal authorities; this continues to be spread by members of
the former regime and those who collaborate with them. It causes the
gravest offence to survivors. For them, the genocide is not a distant event
from 20 years ago but a reality with which they live every day.

The denial of genocide is now widely recognised as the final
stage of the crime. One of the world’s preeminent genocide scholars, the
US academic Professor Greg H. Stanton, describes eight stages in a
genocide including classification of the population, symbolization and
dehumanization of the target group, discrimination, persecution,
organisation of killing, the preparation and extermination of the group.
Denial, the final stage, ensures the crime continues; it incites new
violence and mocks the dignity of the deceased and those who survived.
Denial of genocide is taken so seriously that in some countries it is
criminalized. In 2008 the Council of the European Union called upon states
to criminalize genocide denial. In light of all this, the 1994 genocide
should be treated by all concerned with the utmost intellectual honesty
and rigour. We would be willing -- indeed see it as our duty -- to meet with
journalists and to debate in a follow up programme the serious
inaccuracies in Rwanda’s Untold Story.
We hope the BBC management will quickly realise the gravity
of this matter because the programme will tarnish the BBC’s reputation for
objective and balanced journalism. We call upon the BBC to explain how
the programme came to be made and the editorial decision-making which
allowed it to be broadcast. In the course of any internal BBC enquiry we
hope all relevant documents from the This World archive and from senior
editors involved in approving the programme will be released for study.
We urge the BBC to quickly apologise for the grave offence it has caused.

Signed

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