Rwandan government published a report on Wednesday that it had commissioned from a ‘US Law Firm’ alleging France to help army and protect the perpetrators of genocide before, during and after genocide period in which many Tutsis were killed.
Rwanda’s Foreign Affairs Minister, Louise Mushikiwabo said that some French officials had “got away with murder, literally”.
The report by Washington law firm Cunningham Levy Muse, which was handed to the French government by Rwanda’s ambassador to Paris on Tuesday, urges Paris to release classified documents relating to the period.
The “Muse Report”, which Rwanda says is the most complete account of French complicity to date, accuses French officials of continuing “to conceal their own role in the genocide and to undermine attempts to prosecute genocide suspects”, many of whom live in France.
Although Rwanda was a Belgian colony, France gained significant influence in the central African country from the 1970s and was a backer of the government of Juvenal Habyarimana.
There was a systematic cover-up and fabrication of a narrative to hide the traces of French military and political collaboration in the genocide.
According to the report, the French government of François Mitterrand trained the police and army who took part in the genocide and may have helped create the lists of Tutsi citizens marked out for killing. It also claims senior French officials “joined in the elaboration of genocide ideology” by participating in “anti-Tutsi vitriol”.
The report casts French support for the interim Rwandan government that carried out the genocide as an attempt to shore up France’s influence in central Africa against a perceived attempt by Britain and the US to bring Rwanda into the Anglo sphere of influence.
It quotes General Christian Quesnot, the chief military adviser of the then president, as telling Mitterrand that an invasion from neighbouring Uganda by the Rwandan Patriotic Front was an attempt to create a “Tutsiland with Anglo-Saxon help”.
In 1998, a French parliamentary commission found no evidence of French collaboration in the genocide. It defended an intervention in June 1994, known as Opération Turquoise, as a genuine attempt to provide safe harbour for refugees.
President Paul Kagame, led RPF invasion in 1990 that put an end to the genocide and took over the country in 1994. Under Kagame leadership, Rwanda changed its main language to English and broke diplomatic relations with France between 2006 and 2009. Currently, there is no French ambassador to Rwanda after Kigali refused to give accreditation.
“There had been a systematic cover-up and fabrication of a narrative to hide the traces of French military and political collaboration in the genocide,” Mushikiwabo has said.
Will Jones, a Rwanda expert at Royal Holloway, University of London, said Kigali was justified in pursuing French complicity, the evidence of which “was extremely well documented and non-controversial”.
The argument that France was defending its sphere of influence and backing a government against an invading force could never “justify genocide”, Mushikiwabo said, adding that Mitterrand had dismissed genocide in Africa as “no big deal”.
According to Mushikiwabo, talk of a “double genocide” perpetrated by both Tutsis and Hutus was part of an attempt by some in France to cover up the country’s role.
French journalists, academics and civil society groups have continued to investigate France’s alleged role in the genocide. In September, France’s public prosecutor opened an investigation into allegations that BNP Paribas transferred more than $1.3 Million of funds that were ultimately used to finance the purchase of 80 tonnes of weapons used in the genocide.
The French government did not respond to requests for comment.
{{Source: Financial Times}}
Leave a Reply