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Book: Blood On Their Hands

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  • Book: Blood On Their Hands

    BLOOD ON THEIR HANDS
    by Andrew Wallis
    Reviewed By Rw Johnson

    The Sunday Times, UK
    Nov 12 2006

    SILENT ACCOMPLICE: The Untold Story of France's Role in the Rwandan Genocide

    France has recently infuriated Turkey by making it illegal to deny
    the Turkish massacre of the Armenians in 1915. But if Turkey is in
    denial, so is France, which bears a central responsibility for the 1994
    genocide of 937,000 Tutsis in Rwanda. On occasion, as he tells this
    terrible story, Andrew Wallis's indignation gets the better of him,
    causing him to lapse into heavy-handed infelicities. These do not,
    however, weaken the power of what he has to say.

    For those unfamiliar with French policy in Africa, it may seem
    almost incredible how far it is still driven by imperial rivalry with
    Britain and a sort of bitter fury at the triumph of les Anglo-Saxons,
    producing a defensive rallying of Francafrique, and roping into it
    Rwanda and Zaire, abandoned by the Belgians. Such attitudes are by
    no means confined to Gaullists - it was Francois Mitterrand who,
    as minister of justice in 1957, explained French problems with its
    West African colonies: "It is British agents who have made all our
    difficulties." So while Charles de Gaulle first welcomed Rwanda into
    Franc-afrique, blithely ignoring the massacre of Tutsis carried out
    by President Gregoire Kayibanda in 1963, so Mitterrand as president
    adopted exactly the same attitude to President Juvenal Habyarimana,
    who had deposed (and killed) Kayibanda in 1973. Habyarimana became his
    personal friend, and Habyarimana's wife, Agathe, a sort of African
    Imelda Marcos, became a constant visitor to his household and close
    friend of the first lady, Danielle. Agathe is the founder of the
    extremist Hutu society, Akazu, whose network (le clan de madame)
    is credited with much of the responsibility for the genocide. Its
    power is still greatly feared today.

    After the earlier massacres, many Tutsis had fled into Uganda where,
    under Paul Kagame, they fought alongside Yoweri Museveni against
    Idi Amin and Milton Obote. When Museveni won, Kagame led the Rwandan
    Patriotic Front (RPF) back into Rwanda in 1990. It was immediately
    clear that the RPF was fully a match for the Rwandan army (FAR),
    and French troops were promptly dispatched to prop up Habyarimana -
    for Kagame was Anglophone and American-educated. The French insisted
    that Kagame was a CIA agent, that the RPF was really just the Ugandan
    army, and that the plan was to evict France's client and instal an
    Anglophone regime instead. Their opposition to such an outcome was such
    that they were willing to encourage their Hutu proteges to do anything,
    including genocide, to stop it. Two Frenchmen in succession were put
    in as the effective heads of FAR and, blithely ignoring EU directives
    about "ethical" arms sales, they arranged huge supplies of arms for
    the Hutu regime, much of it routed through Egypt with the help of
    their ally in the Cairo foreign office, Boutros Boutros-Ghali. It
    was an even greater coup when, in 1991, Mitterrand was able to push
    in Boutros-Ghali as UN secretary-general.

    By this time, the first massacres of Tutsis had begun, and a furious
    Kagame flew to Paris where Paul Dijoud, African affairs director
    at the Quai d'Orsay, seems to have threatened that, if he did not
    withdraw the RPF, "you will not see your brothers and your family
    again, because they will all have been massacred". In fact, Wallis
    produces plentiful evidence that some French officers were training the
    Hutus how to capture and tie up prisoners, how to slit their bellies
    so that their bodies wouldn't float and in general preaching that
    "if you let them (Tutsis) carry on producing children . . . you'll
    never be done with them". And it seems there are many eyewitnesses of
    French troops assisting at torture sessions and catching Tutsis and
    handing them over to Hutus who hacked them to death before their eyes.

    These early massacres were as nothing compared to the all-out
    genocide launched upon Habyarimana's death in April 1994. The new
    government, with key genocidaires, was, it appears, formed by the
    French ambassador at a meeting in the French embassy. The man the
    French had put in charge, Colonel Theoneste Bagosora, apparently made
    no secret of his plans: "I have come back to declare the apocalypse,"
    he said. The French, well aware of what was about to happen,
    then got out. The calculation was that any peace deal would mean a
    power-sharing agreement with Kagame - which was anathema. Better let
    the Hutus continue the genocide to completion if that allowed them
    to stay in power, but in that case France, having armed, trained and
    encouraged its proteges towards such an outcome, had to get clear of
    the carnage. As the evidence of the holocaust thus unleashed became
    overwhelming Bruno Delaye, the Elysee's Africa boss, is reputed to
    have said that "that's the way Africans are". When asked how he could
    have entertained genocidaires in his office, he seems to have replied
    that he'd had 400 assassins and 2,000 drug dealers through his doors:
    "You can't deal with Africa without getting your hands dirty."

    Mitterrand shrugged off the killings with "Dans ces pays-la, un
    genocide ce n'est pas trop important" and cynically concocted the
    notion of a "double genocide", ie that the Tutsis were just as guilty,
    which was rather like saying the Jews and the Nazis were as bad as one
    another. When the surrounding states tried to hold an emergency meeting
    on the situation in Tanzania, Paris angrily torpedoed it: "We can't
    let Anglophone countries decide on the future of a Francophone one."

    And so it continued to its dreadful end. Ultimately, Kagame and the
    RPF won and the French sent troops in to get their Hutu proteges into
    Zaire where they could reform and rearm for a fight that has thus far
    cost 4m lives. Mitterrand angrily refused to invite Kagame's Rwanda
    to his last Francafrique summit and made sure the genocide was not
    even discussed. Several genocidaires still live happily in France
    where a parliamentary inquiry, headed by one of Mitterrand's former
    ministers, is accused of whitewashing the whole operation. Jacques
    Chirac and Dominique de Villepin have wholly backed this all up,
    for the French elite are as one in wishing to continue to celebrate
    France as the home of democracy and human rights.

    It is only in the past few years that French responsibility for
    the deportation of 100,000 Jews in the second world war has been
    acknowledged, and nobody yet admits that French eagerness to damage
    Anglophone Nigeria by lending surreptitious support to Biafra cost
    many hundreds of thousands of lives. But all this is dwarfed by the
    enormity of what happened in Rwanda - an enormity so great that neither
    Britain nor any of France's partners seem keen to broach the matter.

    This book (and the news that France is to declassify some documents
    relating to the genocide) are at least a start. The leading
    presidential contender, Nicolas Sarkozy, is fond of talking of the
    need for a frank "rupture" with the past. There is no part of the
    French past that needs honesty and a clean break more than this.

    Read on...

    websites: www.hrw.org/reports/1999/rwanda/ Human Rights Watch on Rwanda

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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