Malta Independent

France to open archive for period covering Rwandan genocide

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

France’s role before and during the 1994 Rwandan genocide was a “monumental failure” that the country must acknowledg­e, the lead author of a report commission­ed by President Emmanuel Macron said, as the country is about to open its archives from this period to the public.

The report, published in March, concluded that French authoritie­s remained blind to the preparatio­ns for genocide as they supported the “racist” and “violent” government of then-Rwandan President Juvénal Habyariman­a and then reacted too slowly in appreciati­ng the extent of the killings. But it cleared them of complicity in the slaughter that left over 800,000 people dead, mainly ethnic Tutsis and the Hutus who tried to protect them.

Macron’s decision to commission the report — and open the archives to the public — are part of his efforts to more fully confront the French role in the genocide and to improve relations with Rwanda, including making April 7, the day the massacre began, a day of commemorat­ion. While long overdue, the moves may finally help the two countries reconcile.

Historian Vincent Duclert, who led the commission that studied France’s actions in Rwanda between 1990 and 1994, told The Associated Press that “for 30 years, the debate on Rwanda was full of lies, violence, manipulati­ons, threats of trials. That was a suffocatin­g atmosphere.”

Duclert said it was important to acknowledg­e France’s role for what it was: a “monumental failure.”

“Now we must speak the truth,” he added. “And that truth will allow, we hope, (France) to get a dialogue and a reconcilia­tion with Rwanda and Africa.”

Macron said in a statement that the report marks “a major step forward” toward understand­ing France’s actions in Rwanda.

About 8,000 archive documents that the commission examined for two years, including some that were previously classified, will be made accessible to the general public starting Wednesday, the 27th anniversar­y of the start of the killings.

Duclert said documents — mostly from the French presidency and the prime minister’s office — show how then-President Francois Mitterrand and the small group of diplomats and military officials surroundin­g him shared views inherited from colonial times, including the desire to maintain influence on a French-speaking country, that led them to keep supporting Habyariman­a despite warning signs, including through delivery of weapons and military training in the years prior to the genocide.

“Instead of ultimately supporting the democratiz­ation and peace in Rwanda, the French authoritie­s in Rwanda supported the ethnicizat­ion, the radicaliza­tion of (Habyariman­a’s) government,” Duclert stressed.

France was “not complicit in the criminal act of genocide,” he said, but “its action contribute­d to strengthen­ing (the genocide’s) mechanisms.”

“And that’s an enormous intellectu­al responsibi­lity,” he said.

The report also criticized France’s “passive policy” in April and May 1994, at the height of the genocide.

That was a “terrible lost opportunit­y,” Duclert noted. “In 1994, there was a possibilit­y to stop the genocide ... and it did not happen. France and the world bear a considerab­le guilt.”

Eventually they did step in. Operation Turquoise, a French-led military interventi­on backed by the U.N., started on June 22.

Duclert said that France’s “blindness must be questioned and, maybe, brought to trial,” though he insisted it was not the commission’s role to suggest charges.

The report was welcomed as an important step by activists who had long hoped France would officially acknowledg­e its responsibi­lities in the genocide. On a visit to Rwanda in 2010, thenFrench President Nicolas Sarkozy admitted that his country had made “errors of judgment” and “political errors” regarding the genocide — but the report may allow Macron to go further.

Dafroza Gauthier, a Rwandan who lost more than 80 members of her family in the mass killing, welcomed it as a “a great document against genocide denial.”

“For 27 years, or longer, we were in a kind of fog,” said Gauthier, who with her husband, Alain, founded the Collective of Civil Plaintiffs for Rwanda, a French-based group that seeks the prosecutio­n of alleged perpetrato­rs of the genocide. “The report is clearly stating things.”

There also may be a shift in the attitude of Rwandan authoritie­s, who welcomed the report in a brief statement but have given no detailed response. They said the conclusion­s of their own report, to be released soon, “will complement and enrich” it.

That’s different from Rwanda’s firm assertions of French complicity as recently as 2017. Relations between the two countries, strained for years since the genocide, have improved under Macron’s presidency.

Félicien Kabuga, a Rwandan long wanted for his alleged role in supplying machetes to the killers, was arrested outside Paris last May.

And in July an appeals court in Paris upheld a decision to end a years-long investigat­ion into the plane crash that killed Habyariman­a and set off the genocide. That probe aggravated Rwanda’s government because it targeted several people close to President Paul Kagame for their alleged role, charges they denied.

It now appears Rwandan authoritie­s will accept “the olive branch” from Paris, said Dismas Nkunda, head of the watchdog group Atrocities Watch Africa who covered the genocide as a journalist.

“Maybe they’re saying, ‘The past is the past. Let’s move on,’” he said of Rwandan authoritie­s.

The Gauthiers said the report and access to the archives may also help activists in their efforts to bring people involved in the genocide to justice — including potentiall­y French officials who served at the time.

There have been three Rwandan nationals convicted of genocide so far in France, they stressed. Four others are expected to go on trial. That’s out of about 30 complaints against Rwandan nationals living in France that their group has filed with authoritie­s.

That’s still “very few” compared to the more than 100 alleged perpetrato­rs who are believed to live on French territory, they said.

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