Colourful 
Radio Player Radio
TV Player Television


Tell a Friend Advertising Information Contact Colourful
Rwandans seeking reconciliation 14 years after genocide
Tuesday, April 15, 2008
4283 Reads Discuss Feedback Print Send

If security for genocide survivors can be provided - and it is a big if - then we can hope for possible reconciliation with the killers.

Brigitte Mukandoli, rape victim

Brigitte Mukandoli was a schoolgirl when a group of militias manning a roadblock near her village of Bishenyi, close to the Rwandan capital, Kigali, seized her. She was taken to a nearby village and raped by 10 men. One of the militia leaders asked her to make a choice: become a wife or be killed.

She became a wife. Later, she learnt that her family had all been killed. That was in 1994. Now 32, Mukandoli is struggling to accept that it is possible to forgive her tormentors. "There is no reconciliation before pardon," she told IRIN. "If security for genocide survivors can be provided - and it is a big if - then we can hope for possible reconciliation with the killers."

Mukandoli is just one of the thousands of Rwandan women who suffered abuse during the 100 days of genocide when Hutu militias turned their guns and machetes on Tutsis and moderate Hutus. Rwandan scholars say more than one million people were killed between April and July 1994. Hundreds of thousands of women and girls suffered various forms of sexual violence.

According to AVEGA-AGAHOZO, an NGO for genocide widows, 80 percent of its 25,000 members suffered sexual abuse during the genocide.
Rwandan officials, pushing for a long-term solution, initiated traditional “gacaca” courts to try some of those responsible for crimes committed during the genocide, and to decongest the prison system.

"Reconciliatory justice is an important stage in the eradication of the culture of impunity [and] in the process of reconciliation," Domitille Mukantaganzwa, executive secretary of the national authority in charge of gacaca courts, said. According to the authority, the courts were set up because “classic justice didn’t meet expectations” - after five years, only 6,000 out of 12,000 suspects had been tried. The 12,103 gacaca courts, manned by about 250,000 “judges”, elected by the local population, were therefore a strategy to expedite justice.

Mukandoli and other survivors are sceptical, however, arguing that the process does not offer adequate protection. Théodore Simburudali, head of the umbrella organisation for genocide survivors, known by its local name Ibuka, which means "remember" in Kinyarwanda, concurs. The authorities, he said, were reluctant to arrest and prosecute all those charged with killing genocide survivors. Even those charged are released for flimsy reasons, he added.

"It is unbelievable to talk about reconciliation when the criminals are freed for the simple reason of having repented their crime publicly," he said. However, Samson Gwakwavu, a 40-year-old perpetrator, who was freed by a gacaca court, insisted that the system offers true reconciliatory justice. "It was difficult to believe that there could be a presidential pardon for such acts," he said while doing community service for agreeing to testify before a gacaca court.

Some analysts argue that despite the trials, genuine reconciliation has yet to be achieved. According to Anne N Kubai, a Swedish-based researcher, some Rwandans see the gacaca process as “victors’ justice”, which has not yet addressed the root causes of the conflict. "As many Rwandans say, forgiving is an effort that one makes in order to make life liveable, especially since victims and the ex-prisoners have to live together as neighbours again," she noted in a May 2007 paper.

"Describing the experiences of living in the same communities, some survivors said that despite having forgiven and reconciled, they found it hard to look each other in the eye."
This assessment is echoed by Mukandoli: "The existence of survivors is still as a danger to the killers," she told IRIN. Rwandan authorities, however, argue that the gacaca courts have worked well. According to the national authority in charge of gacaca courts, the process has involved 85 percent of the population, and helped alleviate suspicion.

By December, up to 761,446 people will have been brought before these courts - a much faster way of handling the backlog of cases in a manner that enables people to live again in peace and harmony.

"We believe that punishing perpetrators, honouring victims and rehabilitating survivors are the pillars of post-genocide reconstruction and the basis for preventing new genocide," Kamali Karegesa, Rwanda's envoy to Uganda, noted during the official mourning week that ended on 14 April.

Article reprinted with permission of IRIN News.





COMMENT:Have your say. Click Feedback


Bookmark this page:
facebook stumbleupon delicious digg reddit blinklist bluedot magnolia netvous blogmarks simpy diigo yahoo newsvine

feature in pictures
West Indians treasure the old 11/2/2008 Remembering what the West Indian family used to be like 9/21/2008 Jamaicans bolt to prominence... and dominance at Beijing Olympic Games 8/26/2008 Dare to be Great - All things are possible! 8/10/2008
White America opens its arms to Obama - Is Black America ready for a more perfect 'union'? 8/4/2008 Asylum Commission calls for safe and sure returns of refused asylum seekers and new deal 6/30/2008 How the racial sins of the past live on, multiplying suffering 6/23/2008 Whose money is on the table for climate change? 6/16/2008
European Court turns it back on migrants with HIV 6/9/2008 Black Shakespearian actors taking centre stage 6/9/2008 Miami’s Urban Beach Week – are blacks targetd by police? 6/2/2008 New report warns of bleak future for asylum seekers seeking UK sanctuary 5/27/2008
South Africa military’s ban on HIV positive people ruled unconstitutional 5/19/2008 How a one night stand could change your life forever 5/12/2008
Advertising
Advertising
 RSS Advertising Information Contact Colourful Terms & Policy Tell a Friend
SITEMAP:
 articles : - Books - Business - Comment - Entertainment - Feature    community : - Competitions - Discussions - Events - Polls   news : - News   tv : - TV 
 radio : - Ade Daramy - Aitch B - Andy Smith - Black Eye Boyz - Chris Philips - Dave P - Dave VJ - Dr Bob Jones - Elaine Parke - Elayne Smith - Femi Fem - Gordon Mac - Guest DJ - Jerry Bascombe - Juju - Julie Ann - Keith Lawrence - Leroy Johnson - Lindsay Johns - Mastermind - Mickey D - Mistri - Nana Fani-Kayode - Paulie B - Rosemary Laryea - Stretch Taylor - Sy Sez - The Cookup 

Published by Colourful. Address: P O Box 194, London SW11 5WQ. Advertising: 0844 8500 194; General: 0844 8400 194
Colourful © Copyright 2008. All rights reserved.