Rwanda Genocide Courts Hold Lessons for South Sudan

{A senior official in Rwanda’s reconciliation process is calling on South Sudan to apply lessons on how Rwanda came back from the dark days of the 1994 genocide, in particular the system of the gacaca courts.}

“If you can use them and rebuild peace, rebuild unity, rebuild development, why not for them to use it before they have a tragedy?” Habyalimanana Jean Baptiste, executive secretary of Rwanda’s National Unity and Reconciliation Commission, said during a visit by traditional chiefs from four South Sudanese states last week.

South Sudan should set up programs that encourage reconciliation, Jean Baptiste said. Forgiveness is a key first step on the road to reconciliation, he added.

{{Gacaca courts}}

Rwanda’s home-grown gacaca court system was set up when officials in the country realized that the national court system was unable to handle all of the cases related to the 1994 genocide.

Under the gacaca system, communities at the local level elected judges to hear the trials of genocide suspects accused of everything except the actual planning of the genocide. The courts showed leniency in sentencing if a person was repentant and sought to reconcile with the community.

When the 12,000 gacaca courts closed in May 2012, they had tried more than 1.2 million cases throughout Rwanda. They also helped to promote reconciliation by allowing genocide survivors to learn the truth about the death of their loved ones.

The South Sudanese traditional chiefs who visited Rwanda last week were all from states that have been at the heart of South Sudan’s conflict: Jonglei, Unity, Upper Nile, and Central Equatoria where the fighting started last December.

One of the chiefs, Chief Alphonse Legge Laku Tombe of Central Equatoria state, said he thinks South Sudanese can learn from the Rwandan experience.

“Imagine: Rwandans were misled and when they recognized themselves that what they did was wrong, they came to understand. Why can’t we understand like these people?” he said.

Chief Peter Mading Thiak from Jonglei state said he learnt valuable lessons from the Rwandans, including, “that when the community sat down and discussed among themselves, they were able to have peace. We can also do this in South Sudan.”

VOA

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