The Borneo Post

Peace still elusive for east DR Congo 30 years after genocide in Rwanda

- Alexis Huguet

GOMA, DR Congo: Sitting at home in Goma in the volatile east of the Democratic Republic of Congo, Rachel Sematumba describes herself as ‘a child of war’.

As the 30th anniversar­y of the genocide in Rwanda approaches, she reflects on how peace remains as elusive now in the city as when she was born.

“Since my birth at the time of the genocide in Rwanda until now with the M23 (rebel militia), there’s only been that in Goma war,” Sematumba said.

In summer 1994, nearly one million Rwandan Hutu refugees fled across the border into Goma, the capital of DRC’s North Kivu province.

Fearing reprisals by the new Kigali authoritie­s, they had left a country riven and traumatise­d by genocide.

Rachel was born in August that year when “all the hospitals in the city were packed with corpses and the sick”, her father Onesphore Sematumba recalled emotionall­y.

Cholera was rife, claiming the lives of tens of thousands of refugees and residents.

Today, a few months shy of turning 30, Rachel is due to have her own child at the end of the week, around the time commemorat­ions begin in Rwanda for the genocide.

In just 100 days between April and July 1994, some 800,000 minority Tutsis and moderate members of the Hutu majority were slaughtere­d, in massacres orchestrat­ed and inflamed by the authoritie­s.

Around 30 years old at the time, Onesphore was a French literature teacher in Rwanda when president Juvenal Habyariman­a’s plane was shot down on April 6.

Hutu extremists went on the rampage, unleashing the 20th century’s last genocide.

“We were on Easter holidays in Congo,” he said.

“The school year was abruptly halted, from one day to the next I found myself unemployed in Goma,” he said, bitterly.

Armed incursions

Onesphore spoke of the “human tide” which three months later flooded from Rwanda into Goma.

“Children, elderly people, cattle, battle tanks, trucks, all the army, the government... it was half a country that poured into the city, without any accommodat­ion or supervisio­n.

“Without anything,” he said. Goma had fewer than 300,000 inhabitant­s then and “looked like a big village”, he said.

Open spaces such as football pitches, churches, schools and roundabout­s quickly filled up, he recalled.

Due to the cholera epidemic, “we began seeing bodies pile up”.

“Refugees were cooking alongside the dying in general indifferen­ce. We even would see babies suckling the dead body of their mother.”

He said ‘huge mass graves’ appeared behind the airport and refugee camps “became like towns” around Goma.

Onesphore would bump into former pupils who would talk of wanting to retake power in Kigali and of carrying out armed incursions into Rwanda.

But it was Paul Kagame and his Rwandan Patriotic Front rebel army who stopped the Hutu extremists, entered Kigali in July 1994 and came to power where he has remained ever since.

Same uncertain future

For 30 years, the Rwandan regime has argued that the presence of Hutu extremists in North Kivu poses a threat that justifies military interventi­on in DRC, directly or via rebel groups.

Wars and conflicts have gone on since 1996, with the mostlyTuts­i M23 currently controllin­g large swathes of North Kivu, including around Goma, with the Rwandan army’s backing.

The rebels claim to be defending Congo’s Tutsi population, as the genocide continues to cast a long shadow over relations between countries of the Great Lakes region.

Rachel remembered as a young child running home when shooting in the city interrupte­d her games with neighbours.

It did not abate as she grew older, although she described her teens as ‘normal’, before adding: “Growing up, you do wonder what’s the reason for all that.”

At the age of 19, she left Goma for the Kenyan capital Nairobi and studied for a master’s in diplomacy, developmen­t and internatio­nal security.

After graduating, Rachel returned to Goma in late 2021, married two years later and moved into a small house near the centre.

From the first week, shots rang out near their home.

“We said ‘OK, welcome to the neighbourh­ood!’” she joked.

Rachel wants to be a diplomat to represent her country and also fight exploitati­on and violence against women.

“Instead of women being brought up, here they are killed, raped,” she said.

In eastern DRC “it’s difficult to move on from the past,” her father said.

Thirty years on, the scenes he witnessed in Goma are back again with the M23 conflict having forced more than 1.5 million people from their homes.

 ?? ?? Rachel Sematumba (left) and her father Onesphore Sematumba sit in front of Lake Kivu, which marks the border between the Democratic Republic of Congo and Rwanda, in Goma, eastern DRC.
Rachel Sematumba (left) and her father Onesphore Sematumba sit in front of Lake Kivu, which marks the border between the Democratic Republic of Congo and Rwanda, in Goma, eastern DRC.
 ?? ?? Rachel Sematumba shows a photo with her father and mother, taken between 1995 and 1996, in a restaurant in Goma, eastern Democratic Republic of Congo.
Rachel Sematumba shows a photo with her father and mother, taken between 1995 and 1996, in a restaurant in Goma, eastern Democratic Republic of Congo.
 ?? ?? Onesphore Sematumba holds a photograph with two of his daughters, taken between 1996 and 1997, in a restaurant in Goma, eastern Democratic Republic of Congo.
Onesphore Sematumba holds a photograph with two of his daughters, taken between 1996 and 1997, in a restaurant in Goma, eastern Democratic Republic of Congo.

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