Tuesday, December 2, 2008

Nation & World

USN Current Issue

The Genocide

By Kevin Whitelaw
Posted 4/13/07

The killing was systematic. It was relentless. It was brutal. The weapon of choice was the machete and, the killers were people's neighbors and colleagues and friends. As many as 1 million Rwandans were killed in just three months during the spring of 1994.

Photographs of some of the 1 million victims of Rwanda's 1994 bloodletting hang in Kigali's Genocide Museum.
KEVIN HORAN—AURORA FOR USN&WR

In the years and months leading up to the genocide, extremist elements in the Hutu government planned for a bloody campaign against the Tutsi minority. They imported and distributed thousands of machetes. Vitriolic anti-Tutsi propaganda spewed daily from an extremist radio station, where Tutsis were referred to as inyenzi, or cockroaches. Later, the station broadcast names and addresses of people to be killed–lists that were drawn up in planning meetings months earlier. Militias manned roadblocks throughout the capital and across the country to find Tutsis trying to escape.

The exact origins of the ethnic differences are murky, but the antipathy between Hutus and Tutsis does have some roots in Rwanda's colonial past. Belgium, which ruled Rwanda for 40 years, bestowed preferential treatment on the Tutsi minority. The Belgians conducted a census and, using often arbitrary physical characteristics to identify each Rwandan's ethnicity, issued identity cards recording every person's ethnic group. Amid growing demands for independence in the late 1950s, the Hutu majority grew increasingly restless, and Belgium switched its support to Hutu leaders. In 1959, Hutu gangs protesting the beating of a politician went on a rampage, looting homes and killing Tutsis. Hundreds were killed, and thousands more fled into exile.

After independence in 1962, a Hutu-led government took power. Ethnic tension continued to simmer for years as Tutsis often were excluded from schools and government jobs. Growing numbers of Tutsis in exile founded the Rwandan Patriotic Front, a military movement to overthrow the Hutu regime. As the 1990s began, ethnic killings were common in Rwanda. The Rwandan government trained civilian militias known as the Interahamwe (who would later man the roadblocks where Tutsis were singled out and killed). The RPF conducted raids into Rwanda under the leadership of Paul Kagame (who is the current president of Rwanda). Under pressure, both sides agreed to a shaky peace deal, and a small United Nations monitoring mission was sent in 1993.

On the night of April 6, 1994, unknown assailants used rocket-propelled grenades to shoot down an airplane carrying Rwanda's president, Juvenal Habyarimana, a Hutu who fomented hatred of the Tutsis, as it tried to land at Kigali's airport. The Hutu-controlled media blamed Kagame's Tutsi supports, though suspicions have since shifted to the possibility that the assassination was undertaken by more extremist Hutus opposed to a pending national power-sharing accord. In any event, the killing began within hours, across the country. Moderate politicians were the first to be targeted, along with 10 Belgian soldiers serving as U.N. peacekeepers. (Within a few days, the Belgians pulled their troops out, and the small U.N. team could only watch as the massacres spread. In the United States, the Clinton administration, still smarting from the death of 17 U.S. soldiers during a U.N. peacekeeping mission in Somalia, was reluctant to intervene and blocked efforts to reinforce the U.N. soldiers.)

advertisement

advertisement

Special Report: 1957

A closer look into the year of Sputnik, Little Rock, African Independence, and more.

The Secrets of the Civil War

An estimated 50,000 books have been written about the conflict, but there are still some mysteries left to be solved.

NEWSLETTER

Sign up today for the latest headlines from U.S. News and World Report delivered to you free.

RSS FEEDS

Personalize your U.S. News with our feeds of blogs and breaking news headlines.

USNews MOBILE

U.S. News daily briefings are also available on your mobile device.

Use of this Web site constitutes acceptance of our Terms and Conditions of Use and Privacy Policy.