Citation
The Rwandan genocide of 1994 was one of the defining events of the
   twentieth century. It ended the illusion that the evil of genocide had
   been eradicated and spurred renewed commitment to halting genocides in
   the future.
   For Rwandans, whether inside the country or abroad, the consequences of
   the genocide are direct and tangible. They struggle daily to heal
   broken bodies and traumatized psyches, to seek justice, and to recreate
   trust among themselves. Yet the consequences of this genocide, enormous
   as they are for Rwandans, do not stop at the border of that one small
   country but spill onto the people of neighboring countries and far
   beyond. Those living in the region have suffered from subsequent wars
   of unimaginable cruelty and from the consequences of millions of people
   in flight, both refugees and killers. Those further from Rwanda pay the
   price of their failure to protect others, both in guilty consciences
   and in the material costs of humanitarian aid and assistance in
   rebuilding shattered societies.
   The Rwandan genocide forced us to confront the massive killing of
   civilians in a way we had not done for fifty years. Throughout the
   second half of the twentieth century, we had seen ordinary people
   deliberately slain in many conflicts, but not since the Holocaust had
   we seen civilians massacred so rapidly, so systematically, and with
   such a blatantly genocidal objective. And yet national governments and
   international institutions refused to intervene, backing away from a
   crisis that was politically complex but morally simple.
   As the extent of the catastrophe became increasingly clear, the
   international community was forced to reconsider its ideas and
   practices in the realm of international justice and in the protection
   of civilians in times of conflict. Through these changes international
   institutions may regain some of the credibility lost by their inaction
   during the genocide.
   In 1994, the United Nations Security Council established the
   International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda to judge those who had once
   been permitted to kill without hindrance. By doing so, it sought to
   provide justice for the crimes of the immediate past and also spurred
   the development of judicial precedents for the prosecuting genocides of
   the future, no longer unimaginable as they had been a year before.
   Eight years later, the International Criminal Court was created to
   sanction and hopefully to deter genocide as well as other grave
   violations of international humanitarian law. In addition, several
   governments adopted laws permitting prosecution of genocide, war
   crimes, and crimes against humanity in their own courts. Belgium and
   Switzerland prosecuted and convicted persons accused of genocide and
   war crimes in Rwanda in 1994 and at least two other countries are
   investigating such crimes and may prosecute them.
   Conscious of their own culpability for not halting the genocide, many
   national and international leaders apologized to the Rwandan people.
   The UN and the Organization of African Unity as well as the French
   National Assembly and the Belgian Senate held inquiries about the 1994
   events, hoping that understanding the past would make it easier to
   prevent such tragedies in the future. Unwilling to confront its own
   responsibility, the United States did not investigate its past record
   but instead funded social scientists to develop models to predict when
   and where genocides might occur in the future.
   But foreseeing catastrophe does no good without the will to act and a
   strategy for action. Recognizing this, an international commission
   under Canadian leadership examined the responsibility to protect and
   sought to determine when that responsibility would require states to
   act against another that was putting its own citizens at grievous risk.
   The Security Council too has focused on the protection of civilians,
   particularly women and children, in conflict situations, increasingly
   acknowledging that such protection is central to its responsibility for
   the management of peace and security around the world. In 2001 a deputy
   secretary-general of the United Nations told the Security Council that
   the protection of civilians must become a regular and central aspect of
   United Nations peace operations, and that this must be made clear in
   their mandates.United Nations, Press Release, DSG/SM/129, SC/7051, 23/04/2001. How different from 1994 when the Security Council
   was warned that protection of civilians in Rwanda would be costly and
   might be an inappropriate activity for a peace-keeping force.
   At a meeting in Sweden in 2004 where delegates of various states
   renewed their pledges to prevent and halt genocide, the UN Secretary
   General proposed establishing a post of special rapporteur to bring
   information on possible genocides to the Security Council.
   Recommendations from such a special rapporteur could serve as the
   mechanism to trigger UN intervention.
   More promising than all the reports and pronouncements have been the
   cases where international actors intervened to stop the killing of
   civilians. In 2003 UN peacekeepers in Ituri, in the northeastern
   Democratic Republic of Congo, proved unable to prevent ethnically-based
   killing of civilians. As in Rwanda in 1994, the UN troops were too few
   and their mandate too restricted to permit effective action. But rather
   than turn away from the situation as they had before, European nations
   sent in a European Union force under French leadership. These troops
   secured the main town, providing a safe haven for the threatened, until
   a stronger UN force with a more robust mandate arrived to replace them.
   If the Rwanda genocide had positive consequences elsewhere in spurring
   action to avert genocide, its impact in Rwanda and the surrounding
   region has been devastatingly negative. Since 1994 there has been
   widespread conflict in central Africa: a serious uprising in
   northwestern Rwanda, two major wars in the neighboring Congo and ten
   years of civil war in Burundi. In all nearly four million civilians
   have likely died as a direct or indirect result of military activity in
   the region since 1994. The genocide has cast its shadow over all these
   conflicts, spinning actors in directions they would not otherwise have
   taken and coloring the analysis of events by the international
   community. Both local and international actors claim genocide or the
   need to prevent genocide to cover other political and economic
   objectives. In local Congolese conflicts, such as that in Ituri,
   contenders seeking foreign support charge each other with genocide, an
   accusation that would not have been made before 1994.
   The Rwandan genocide was intertwined with the war between the
   government and the Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF). Even after the RPF
   victory in July 1994, the victors and losers could not behave like
   parties in any ordinary war: neither side could shake loose from the
   genocide. The defeated officials and officers who had led the killing
   campaign had convinced themselves and those under their sway that the
   Tutsi were an enemy to fight to the death. They could not consider
   living in a Rwanda ruled by the Tutsi-dominated RPF. They knew too that
   most of the world believed them guilty of genocide and they feared
   being punished for their crimes if they remained in Rwanda. The RPF
   well understood the threat posed by the former authorities and were
   equally determined to eliminate the rest of their forces. Sure of their
   moral high ground, the RPF would also continue to refuse dealings with
   opposition movements abroad, grouping them all with the authorities
   responsible for the genocide.
   The Rwandan genocide influenced significantly the nature and intensity
   of two subsequent wars in the Congo. One of these wars ousted Sese Seko
   Mobuto, one of the longest-reigning dictators in Africa, and opened the
   way for Rwanda to establish its influence over Congolese politics, an
   influence that continues today, welcomed by some but unwelcome to most
   Congolese.
   In mid-1994 officials of the former government, soldiers, and militia
   fled to the Congo, leading more than a million Rwandans into exile.
   They carried with them their ideology of Hutu supremacy and many of
   their weapons. They sought the support of local Congolese people as
   well as of the government, hoping to broaden their base for continued
   resistance against the RPF. They insisted that Rwandan Hutu and
   different Congolese groups were a single Bantu people because they
   spoke similar languages and shared some cultural traits. They said
   Tutsi were "Nilotic" invaders who, together with the related Hima
   people of Uganda, intended to subjugate the Bantu inhabitants. This
   "Bantu" ideologyand the RPF determination to counter itformed the
   framework for much of the military conflict in the region for the next
   ten years.
   In 1996 Rwanda and Uganda, led by President Yoweri Museveni, invaded
   the Congo. Rwanda wanted to eliminate any possible threat from the
   former Rwandan army and militia who were re-organizing and re-arming in
   refugee camps in eastern Congo. Uganda sought greater political
   influence and control over resources in the region. Together with their
   Congolese allies, the Rwandan and Ugandan troops moved rapidly
   westward, at first hunting down the remnants of the Rwandan Hutu from
   the refugee campscombatants and civilians alikebut then setting another
   objective, that of overturning Mobuto and his government. They
   succeeded, but in 1998 the new Congolese government, led by Laurent
   Desire Kabila, turned against its former supporters. Kabila told the
   Rwandan and Ugandan troops to go home, thus provoking a new war. This
   second Congo war at one point involved seven African nations and a host
   of rebel movements and other local armed groups, all fighting to
   control the territory and vast wealth of the Congo. Casualties among
   civilians were enormous, from lack of food, medical care, and clean
   water as well as from direct attack by the various forces.
   The real nature of this war, like that of the first, was for a long
   time disguised by the references to the genocide. In demanding a return
   to national sovereignty Congolese officials spoke in anti-Tutsi
   language and crowds in Kinshasa killed Tutsi on the streets. Rwanda
   sought to justify making war by claiming the need to eliminate
   perpetrators of the genocide who were operating in eastern Congo with
   the support of the Congolese government. Rwandan authorities continued
   to stress this supposed security threat from the other side of the
   border long after the numbers and resources of the former Rwandan army
   and militia had diminished and their members were widely scattered.
   In 1997 and 1998, in the hiatus between the two Congo wars, soldiers
   and militia of the genocidal government, supported by thousands of new
   recruits, crossed from the Congo and led an insurrection in
   northwestern Rwanda. The RPF forces suppressed the rebellion at the
   cost of tens of thousands of lives, many of them civilians who happened
   to live in the area. A substantial number of the rebel combatants had
   not taken part in the genocide and seemed more focused on overturning
   the government than on hunting down Tutsi civilians, but others
   continued to harbor genocidal intentions and singled out Tutsi to be
   attacked and killed.
   Events in Burundi, a virtual twin to Rwanda in demographic terms, first
   influenced and then were influenced by the Rwandan genocide. Burundi
   was already immersed in its own crisis with widespread ethnic slaughter
   in late 1993. These killings, as well as international indifference to
   them, spurred genocidal planning in Rwanda. After April 1994 Burundians
   viewed with horror the massacres of others of their own ethnic group in
   Rwanda, Tutsi identifying with victims of the genocide and Hutu
   identifying with those killed by RPF forces. Burundian Tutsi and Hutu
   feared and distrusted each other more because of the slaughter in
   Rwanda and each group vowed that its members would not be the next
   victims. Former Rwandan soldiers and militia at times joined Burundian
   Hutu rebel forces, bringing them military expertise and reinforcing
   their anti-Tutsi ideas. RPF soldiers on occasion came south to help the
   Burundian army prevent a victory by Hutu rebels.
   Within Rwanda the RPF used the pretext of preventing a recurrence of
   genocide to suppress the political opposition, refusing to allow
   dissidents to organize new political parties and eliminating an
   existing party that could potentially have challenged the RPF in
   national elections. Authorities jailed dissidents and drove others into
   exile on charges of divisionism, equated to an incipient form of
   genocidal thinking even when opponents sought to construct parties that
   included Tutsi as well as Hutu. During 2003, under RPF leadership,
   Rwandans adopted a new constitution that enshrined a vague prohibition
   of divisionism and made liberties of speech, press, and association
   subject to regulationand possible limitationby ordinary law. In
   presidential and legislative elections, the RPF came close to asserting
   that a vote for others was a vote for genocidepast or future. With such
   a campaign theme and with a combination of intimidation and fraud, the
   RPF re-affirmed its dominance of political life.
   In the years just after the end of the genocide, many international
   leaders supported the RPF as if hoping thus to compensate for their
   failure to protect Tutsi during the genocide. Even when confronted with
   evidence of widespread and systematic killing of civilians by RPF
   soldiers in Rwanda and in the Congo, most hesitated to criticize these
   abuses. Not only did they see the RPF as the force that had ended the
   genocide but they also saw all opponents of the RPF as likely to be
   perpetrators of genocide, an assessment that was not accurate either in
   1994 or later. So long as the parties were defined this way,
   international leaders acquiesced inor even actively supportedthe RPF
   activities in the Congo. Similarly international actors frequently
   tolerated RPF limits on civil and political freedom inside Rwanda,
   readily conceding the RPF argument that the post-genocidal context
   justified restrictions on the usual liberties.
   As the ten years after the genocide drew to a close, the international
   community moderated its support of the current Rwandan government and
   exerted considerable pressure to obtain withdrawal of its troops from
   the Congo. Some international leaders began to question the tight RPF
   control within Rwanda; diplomats and election observers from the
   European Union and the United States noted abuses of human rights that
   marred the 2003 elections. Despite these signs of growing international
   concern, the RPF-led government appeared firmly seated for the near
   future. Whether it will be able to assure long-term stability and
   genuine reconciliation may depend on its ability to distinguish between
   legitimate dissent and the warning signs of another genocide.
   Human Rights Watch reissues this booksubstantially the same as the
   original printingto ensure that a detailed history of the genocide
   remains available to readers. Since its first publication in English
   and French, the book has appeared in German and will shortly be
   published in Kinyarwanda, the language of Rwanda. The horrors recorded
   here must remain alive in our heads and hearts; only in that way can we
   hope to resist the next wave of evil.