HOTEL RWANDA
Hollywood and the
Holocaust in Central Africa
keith harmon snow
www.allthingspass.com
First published: 04 July 2005;
Text modified: 05 November 2005;
Final version: 04 December 2005.
Revisited Final: 10 January 2006.
(Prefer French? See the translation
on this site.)
Reprinting permitted with proper
attribution to:
<http://www.allthingspass.com>
What
happened in Rwanda in 1994? The standard line is that a calculated genocide
occurred because of deep-seated tribal animosity between the majority Hutu
tribe in power and the minority Tutsis. According to this story, at least
500,000 and perhaps 1.2 million Tutsis—and some ‘moderate’
Hutus—were ruthlessly eliminated in a few months, and most of them were
killed with machetes. The killers in this story were Hutu hard-liners from the Forces
Armees Rwandais, the
Hutu army, backed by the more ominous and inhuman civilian militias—the Interahamwe—“those who kill together.”
“In
three short, cruel months, between April and July 1994,” wrote genocide expert
Samantha Power on the 10th anniversary of the genocide, “Rwanda
experienced a genocide more efficient than that carried out by the Nazis in
World War II. The killers were a varied bunch: drunk extremists chanting ‘Hutu
power, Hutu power’; uniformed soldiers and militia men intent on wiping out the
Tutsi Inyenzi, or
‘cockroaches’; ordinary villagers who had never themselves contemplated killing
before but who decided to join the frenzy.” [1]
The award-winning
film Hotel Rwanda offers a Hollywood version and the latest depiction of
this cataclysm. Is the film accurate? It is billed as a true story. Did
genocide occur in Rwanda as it is widely portrayed and universally imagined?
With thousands of Hutus fleeing Rwanda in 2005, in fear of the Tutsi government
and its now operational village genocide courts, is another reading of events
needed? [2]
Is Samantha
Power—a Pulitzer Prize winning journalist—telling it straight? [3]
Is it
possible, as evidence confirms, that the now canonized United Nations
peacekeeper Lt. General Roméo Dallaire was at the time an agent of the Tutsi
army? Or that the funding for Hotel Rwanda came from a company with powerful
mining interests in Congo—where access is insured by the Rwanda
government?
Hundreds of
thousands of people were killed, that’s clear. There was large-scale butchery
of Tutsis. And Hutus. Children and old women were killed. There was mass rape.
There were many acts
of genocide. But was it genocide or civil war?
“I think
that’s a very good question and it is not adequately answered,” says Howard W.
French, former East Africa Bureau Chief for the New York Times and
author of Africa: A Continent for the Taking. [4]
Howard W.
French operated on the ground in Central Africa (1993-1999) and his reportage
of the RPF Tutsi rebel army hunting down and massacring hundreds of thousands
of Hutus in Congo is exceptional. [5]
“A minority of
fifteen percent [RPF Tutsis] wages a determined effort to take over a country and
rule in an ethnic way, by force of arms, and has been doing this for years. Two
presidents are assassinated.” Howard W. French is adamant. “These are not
excuses for butchery.
But these are things that lead one in the direction of civil war, as a descriptor,
as opposed to the one-sided tale that we have been given, of these sweet,
innocent Tutsis who remind us of Israel, versus the savage Hutus who
cold-heartedly butcher people hand-to-hand for three months.” [6]
From the very
first words and frames, where the image has yet to appear and the screen is
completely black, the film Hotel Rwanda sets up viewers to think a
certain way about what happened in Rwanda in 1994. Here is a story about good
versus evil. An ominous African voice is heard, clearly the announcer on a
Rwandan radio program, and he is describing the Tutsis as ‘cockrrrRRROACHES.’ The voice is black and the cataclysm
unfathomable, as anyone will tell you, and the black screen underscores the
evil darkness of Africa. This voice of terror returns throughout the film to
haunt the innocent but terrified Tutsis, on screen, and the viewers gripping
their seats.
The good guys
are the Tutsis, the victims of genocide. They are not killers in the movie:
they are never killers. At the end of the film, when a well-attired guerrilla
force is shown—the ‘rebels’ of the Rwandan Patriotic Front
(RPF)—they are rescuers. They are disciplined, organized. They keep a
tidy United Nations camp safely behind their lines. They don’t kill Red Cross
nurses, or orphaned children, in the film: they reconnect children to their
families.
The Hutus in
the standard Rwanda genocide stories are always the bad guys, and they are all bad guys. Every Hutu is a genocidaire—to use the ominous French term
deployed in English contexts to further underscore the horror, the horror
(sic). The Hutus are the devil incarnate. The Tutsis are saintly. Indeed, they
are beyond reproach, because they are the victims of genocide. The Hotel manager’s wife
bears an obvious cross around her neck, to remind us that the Tutsis are the
chosen people. When the now celebrated United Nations hero Lt. Gen. Roméo
Dallaire shakes hands with the devil—as his own popular book and the
subsequent film Shake Hands With the Devil concur—he is shaking
hands with Hutu. [7]
That is the
ideological framework of the Hotel Rwanda film. There is, today, an
industry behind it.
The Tutsis are
dehumanized by the Hutus and by the Hutu media, in the film, and there was
plenty truth in this in real life. But the RPF pro-Tutsi media that operated in
Rwanda after 1991, for example, was equally dehumanizing, and equally vicious,
but the film does not tell us this. Tutsi guerrilla forces—prior to
1970—were the first to describe themselves as Inyenzi or cockroaches: they were not equated
with the insects that everyone loathes, they were well trained, secretive and
coordinated military forces who attacked at night and withdrew by day. [8]
The RPF would
hit and run and kill with efficiency. It was not a pejorative usage, as it has
been used in the film Hotel Rwanda, although it was bastardized and
turned against the Tutsis by media outlets in Rwanda. Radio Mille Collines
and the other anti-RPF media outlets of the President’s party, the National
Republican Movement for Democracy and Development (MRND), [9] were not the only ones to incite hatred
and murder. Indeed, RPF-controlled Radio Muhabura spread ethnic hatred
and incited widespread killings, but this was—according to
Hollywood—a war with only one army, the ruthless Hutus. [10]
The Pillars of Hotel Rwanda
When Human
Rights Watch investigated the genocide, they sent Alison des Forges to tell the
story, and the product of her long investigations was the fat treatise on
genocide in Rwanda titled Leave None to Tell the Story. Irony is heaped
upon irony when we consider that those who are left to tell the story are
silenced by the authorized
storytellers like Alison des Forges.
“Alison des
Forges is a liar,” Cameroonian journalist Charles Onana, author of the book The
Secrets of the Rwandan Genocide, Investigations on the Mysteries of a President,
published in French in 2001, is adamant. “She is a LIAR.” [11]
Paul Kagame,
RPF General and President of Rwanda, sued Charles Onana for defamation in a
French court: Kagame lost. [12]
“Des Forges has written a book which has
become the bible regarding Rwanda,” says Jean-Marie Higiro, former Director of
the Rwandan Information Office (ORINFOR) who fled the killing, with his family,
in early April 1994. “Everyone points to her book even though some of what she
has produced is fiction. I don’t think she is an intentional liar, but I don’t
know why she investigated Hutu human rights abuses but no RPF human rights
abuses.”
Hotel
Rwanda is built on the pillars of selective human rights reporting, but it
really takes off from the celebrated text, We Regret To Inform You That
Tomorrow We Will Be Killed With Our Families, by Philip Gourevitch, the New
Yorker magazine’s premier Africa expert.
“Gourevitch's
short book should be compulsory reading for Heads of State and Ministers of
Defence all over Africa,” wrote Guardian reporter Victoria Brittain, “as
well as for all UN officials involved in peacekeeping operations and
humanitarian aid, from the Secretary General on down, and the heads of missionary
orders in the US, France and Belgium.” Victoria Brittain is a Nation
magazine contributor on genocide in Rwanda. [68]
The
International human Rights Law Clinic at American University for several years
(at least) asked students to read Philip Gourevitch on genocide in Rwanda, in
preparation for legal work with the International Criminal Tribunal on Rwanda.
Professor Melissa Crow, who worked with the Law Clinic, followed her term at
Human Rights Watch (1994-1995) by working in Kigali, Rwanda, under the RPF
government, working for the Office of the Prosecutor for the International
Criminal Tribunal on Rwanda. Following this she joined Foley, Hoag and Elliot,
the influential Washington D.C. law firm closely aligned with the U.S.-Uganda
Friendship Council, which is closely tied to ChevronTexaco, Coca-Cola, the William Jefferson Clinton Foundation and the Pangaea
Global AIDS Foundation. The latter foundations are also deeply involved
in Rwanda [69].
Notably,
a U.S. immigration judge in St. Paul Minnesota imposed Gourevitch’s book as
compulsory reading for all attorneys dealing with Rwandan refugees requesting
political asylum. But this is a dangerous and irresponsible precedent. [13]
Funding for
Gourevitch’s book came from the United States Institute for Peace, a State
Department offshoot (with an Orwellian name). [14]
What we never
learn about Philip Gourevitch is that his brother-in-law, Jamie Rubin, was
Madeleine Albright’s leading man and, through him, Gourevitch planted in the
public mind a narrow perspective on Rwanda. [15]
Philip
Gourevitch is an intimate pal of Rwandan President Paul Kagame. I regret to
inform you that Philip Gourevitch is not an impartial journalist, regardless of
how much you may have liked his book, or have been moved by it, because he has
taken sides, and he has told only one side of the story, and he has told it
badly, and he has been rewarded for his fine job in telling it badly. [16]
“Gourevitch
begins the story with the Tutsi as these saintly victims,” the Times’
Howard W. French says. “And I don’t think Gourevitch is a stupid guy. I think
that it’s just sheer intellectual dishonesty… Gourevitch was coming out in the New
Yorker every other month with this very well written and—if you don’t
know the facts—very compelling picture about Rwanda… as the Israel of
Central Africa and the Tutsis as the Jews of Central Africa. That’s powerful
stuff. But I’m on the ground in Central Africa seeing that the reality is very,
very different.” [17]
The theme of
genocide in Rwanda—whether true or false—has birthed an industry
that revolves around a standard, simplified plot. The appearance of the film Hotel
Rwanda marks the coup de grace
in the long process whereby the facts, the ugly realities and dirty details of
what really happened in Rwanda have been distilled into a neat and tidy story
that proliferates in the media, in film, in literature, at seminars on genocide
and workshops on reconciliation, and it is the predominant discourse in
academia. Quebecois journalist Robin Philpot calls it “the right and proper
tale.” [18]
The Falsification of Amerikan
Consciousness
It has become
a mythology: the Rwanda genocide mythology or, better, the Tutsi Holocaust
mythology. But as
African scholar Amos Wilson puts it so simply in The Falsification of
Afrikan Consciousness, “you cannot understand the present unless you first
understand the past.”
To
understand the growth of the mythology on genocide in Rwanda, consider first
the text of Hotel Rwanda—The Official Companion Book, which
describes the process of “bringing the true story of an African hero to film.”
[19]
The
book deletes the most basic facts about the Rwandan Patriotic Front and its
backers’ roles in the ongoing war for the Great Lakes region of Africa, war
that has led to at least seven million people dead since the initial RPF
invasion from Uganda in October 1990. [20]
Instead
the book offers an abbreviated timeline of events that accentuate or exaggerate
those points that serve the predominant Hotel Rwanda mythology, and it
excludes those facts that would undermine this mythology: the entire framework
of the brutal, bloody war for control of Rwanda is obscured.
October
1990: Guerrillas from the Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF) invade Rwanda
from Uganda; the RPF is mostly made up of Tutsis. A ceasefire is signed on
March 29, 1991.
First: the
above statement uses the definitive term for the RPF action: invaded. The
Rwandan Patriotic Army invaded Rwanda from Uganda. However, the context of the
RPF ascension to power is obliterated. RPF infiltration of Rwanda began around
1986 after Yoweri Museveni, with powerful western backers, shot his way to
power in Uganda. Paul Kagame, current president of Rwanda, was head of
Museveni’s Directorate of Military Intelligence, and later commanded the Rwandan
Patriotic Front. But the RPF invasion was a gross violation of international
law against a sovereign nation—a point the Hotel Rwanda industry
ignores.
Never
condemned by the international ‘community,’ the RPF ‘struggle’ was supported by
powerful western agents and institutions, including the World Bank and the IMF,
who shackled Rwanda with austerity programs in perfect synchronization with the
RPF assault. This led to the heightened inculcation of structural violence throughout Rwanda. Combined
with the crash of coffee prices on the world market, millions of Rwandans found
it impossible to make ends meet as the 1990’s began. Suffering hit new lows not
seen in Rwanda for decades.
The majority
of people in Rwanda, besieged by the propaganda of competing factions—a
spectrum of political interests aligned with or against the RPF or the Rwanda
government of Juvenal Habyarimana—found scapegoats according to their
positions in society. Economic interests predominated as a few elites increasingly
controlled the life or death of the many. The rising insurgency and structural
violence provoked hostility amongst and between groups, and elites controlling
media outlets of all stripes began to use their venues to sow ethnic rivalry as
the veneer for the deeper agenda: class warfare.
Hutus were
dehumanized as often as Tutsis. “Pro-opposition newspapers represented MRND
[Hutu government] leaders as essentially evil and corrupt,” writes Jean-Marie
Higiro. They were “liars, idiots, animals, bloodthirsty murderers and
warmongers. Some of these newspapers published drawings of President
Habyarimana covered with blood.” [21]
The RPF and
Rwandan Tutsi Diaspora had their own publications. The best known of these is Impuruza,
published in the United States (1984-1994). Tutsi refugees joined Roger Winter,
the Director of the United States Committee for Refugees, to help fund the
publication. The editor, Alexander Kimenyi, is a Rwandan national and a
professor at California State University. Like most RPF publications Impuruza
circulated clandestinely in Rwanda amongst Hutu and Tutsi elite.
“A nation in
exile, a people without leadership, ‘the Jews of Africa’, a stateless nation,”
wrote Festo Habimana, the president of the Association of Banyarwanda in
Diaspora USA, in the
premier issue of Impuruza. Habimana called for the unity of Tutsi
refugees. “But our success will depend entirely upon our own effort and unity,
not through world community as some perceive… As long as we are scattered, with
no leadership, business as usual on their part shall always be their policy. We
are a very able and capable people with abundant blessings. What are we waiting
for? Genocide?” [22]
The Association
of Banyarwanda in Diaspora USA,
assisted by Roger Winter, organized the International Conference on the
Status of Banyarwanda [Tutsi] Refugees
in Washington, DC in 1988, and this is where a military solution to the Tutsi
problem was chosen. The US Committee for Refugees reportedly provided
accommodation and transportation. [23]
Winter is intimate
with USAID, and a long-time ally of Susan Rice, former Assistant Secretary of
State on African Affairs (1997-2001), Special Assistant to President Clinton
(1995-1997), and National Security Council insider (1993-1997). Roger Winter is
also a staunch supporter of US. Rep. Donald Payne.
Winter acted
as a spokesman for the RPF and their allies, and he
appeared as a guest on major US television networks such as PBS and CNN.
Philip Gourevitch and Roger Winter made contacts on
behalf of the RPF with American media, particularly the Washington Post,
New York Times and Time magazine. Roger Winter and US Rep.
Donald Payne continue to manipulate African affairs: most notable are there
recent exaggerations about genocide in Darfur, Sudan, for which Donald Payne
sponsored the Darfur Genocide Accountability Act.
Second: the
language of the above October 1990 timeline entry underscores the equally
discrepant point that the RPF was “mostly made up of Tutsis.” According to the
genocide mythology, the cataclysm in Rwanda was a tribal struggle between Hutus
and Tutsis, with some involvement of France.
Who were the
non-Tutsi elements of the ”mostly” Tutsi RPF? What is the implication? They
were Hutus? How could Hutus be fighting alongside Tutsis if Hutus were exterminating
all Tutsis based on
an organized, premeditated plan? The term “moderate Hutu” invites a similar
conundrum: what is a “moderate Hutu” in the international legal framework of
genocide?
Jean-Marie
Higiro says it best: “Academics and journalists divide Hutus into two
categories: moderates and extremists following the myths of Hollywood. They
never suggest that there were Hutu who did not belong to either category. There
were those who were terrified by both sides and who just fled for their lives.
Academics and journalists never do the same [segregating] for Tutsis and of
course never for the RPF even though the RPF was a conglomerate of Tutsi
supremacists, Republicans and monarchists. These supremacists are highly placed
in the current government. Tito Rutaremara, one of the ideologues of the RPF is
one of them, and General Ibingira, the butcher of Kibeho [is another] of them.”
The very definition of genocide would be called into
question if it turned out that there were political, economic or class—as
opposed to ethnic—motives
behind the hundreds of thousands (or 1.2 million) of deaths that have been
unequivocally attributed to Hutu genocidaires. A deeper examination of “genocide” in
Rwanda raises just such inconvenient questions. The determination of what
constitutes genocide is not so cut and dry as Hutus versus Tutsis, or lists of
targeted Tutsis versus no lists, no matter the terror now invoked in one’s soul
on hearing the word Interahamwe.
After the
October 1990 entry, the timeline in the companion book omits any reference to
the RPF until February 1993, as if the supposed ‘heroic’ Tutsi rebels were
patiently sitting out the war from the Ugandan sidelines. But massacres
occurred in northern Rwanda after the October 1990 invasion and after the 1991 ceasefire
and they were committed by the RPF. Tens of thousands of refugees fled the
border districts in fear of ongoing RPF atrocities.
(This author
remembers well the traumatized tourist who disembarked from the bed of a small
pick-up truck that crossed the border from Rwanda to Uganda in 1991. I was in
Kasindi, in southwest Uganda. The Rwandan man sitting next to this western
woman was shot by an RPF sniper as the truck drove down the road; the truck was
then stopped, searched by the RPF, and the dead man taken.)
From 1990 on,
RPF terror cells began infiltrating Kigali, the capital, and all other areas of
Rwanda, and with them came atrocities that were frequently blamed on the
Habyarimana government, including assassinations, massacres and disappearances.
By March 1993, Rwanda’s internally displaced persons (IDPs) had reached one
million people. The RPF practiced a scorched earth policy: they did not want to
have to administer a territory or deal with local populations. The RPF
displaced people, shelled the IDP camps, and marched on. They killed some
captives, buried them in mass graves or burned corpses, and used survivors as
porters to transport ammunition, dig trenches or cook their meals.
According to
one Rwandan now in the US: prior to 1994, most Tutsis who had a job in Rwanda
collected contributions for the RPF political and military program; people were
afraid to refuse to pay the compulsory tax levied by a ruthless military
institution, the RPF.
The
Habyarimana government responded to terror with repression in kind, but the
international human rights “community” had already taken sides in the war: the
Hutu government of Habyarimana was accused of “genocide” against Tutsis as
early as 1993; the RPF atrocities were ignored or explained away.
“There were
many RPF killings in Rwanda between 1990 and 1994,” says Jean-Marie Higiro,
“but these were not investigated; they were automatically attributed to
Habyarimana’s [MRND] party by the international community. Even so, we know
that the RPF used that kind of strategy to tarnish the image of their
opponents.” [24]
Jean-Marie
Higiro also cites the Tutsi newspaper Impuruza, the publication edited
by Professor Alexandre Kimenyi, with accusing the Habyarimana government of
committing genocide against the Tutsis, and this was prior to 1993.
February
1993: The RPF again invades Rwanda. Hutu extremists cite the invasion as
proof the Tutsis aim to eliminate them, and begin calling for preemptive
measures.
To begin with,
the RPF never left Rwanda, and they never stopped killing. Following the
reasonable questions by journalist Robin Philpot, how would US citizens respond
if Canadian guerrillas—arguing that their parents were born or once lived
in the US—invaded from Toronto? Would we call Americans who complained
“extremists”? What if a few Islamic militants purportedly invading the US took
out the World Trade Center? Would the US government call for preemptive
measures? Would we call the invaders a “rebel army”? Extremists? Would we call
them terrorists?
“Is it normal
in the search for justice to condemn one side in a war for human rights
violations,” writes Robin Philpot, “and not even question the morality of the
aggressors, those who violated the principles of all the charters of rights
humanity has ever drafted? Is it right to shout about how a government violates
rights and turn a blind eye to the launching of an aggressive war?” [25]
Like the film,
the Hotel Rwanda Companion Book offers a gross and distorted
simplification of events in Rwanda.
Hotel Pentagon
Trained by the
US Army at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, USA, the RPF soldier and now President of
Rwanda, Paul Kagame, is a regular visitor at the Pentagon, and he was not the
only officer in Rwanda with ties to the US military.
Under the
Pentagon’s International Military Education Training Program (IMET), some
$769,000 trained 35 Rwandan officers at US military schools from 1980 to 1992,
and $120,000 was earmarked for Rwanda for both 1994 and 1995. Further military
assistance was provided by the US to 1994, while the bulk of the arms and
logistical support came from US client states (France, South Africa, Egypt,
Uganda and Zaire). The Pentagon has also trained large numbers of Rwandan
soldiers the Extended-IMET (E-IMET) and Joint Command Exchange and Training
(JCET) programs. One of those trained was Bangladeshi Colonel Moen, the Chief
Operations Officer for UNAMIR, another graduate of the U.S. Army Command and
General Staff College in Leavenworth, Kansas (USA). [26]
From 1993
onwards the RPF continued to stick its bloody foot in the door of Rwanda, and
the international community continued to tighten the screws on the Habyarimana
government. Ever vigilant and inflammatory in advertising the governments’
human rights abuses—whether manufactured, exaggerated or real—the
human rights community continued to close its eyes to RPF atrocities, terrorist
infiltrations and bloodied land grabbing.
Backed by
powerful factions from the United States, England and Belgium, the RPF
maneuvered and manipulated its way to the very seat of power, in Kigali itself,
where—under the Arusha Peace Accords negotiated in Arusha Tanzania in
1993—a battalion of RPF soldiers was based at a strategic site within the
city center. The RPF immediately fortified its defenses under the watch of Lt.
General Roméo Dallaire—now universally regarded as a hero—the
Canadian Force Commander for the United Nations Assistance Mission for Rwanda
(UNAMIR).
The Hotel
Rwanda Companion Book offers only the following tidy summary which, as
popular mythology now holds, credits the RPF with the imperative of ‘stopping
the genocide’ against Tutsis.
Mid-July
1994: The Tutsi RPF forces capture Kigali and the genocide is over. Over
a period of 100 days, almost 1,000,000 Rwandans were murdered.
While it is alleged
that “almost 1,000,000 Rwandans were murdered” in those 100 days, a claim that
is certainly exaggerated, it is also true that the RPF slaughtered, bombed,
massacred, assassinated or tortured hundreds of thousands of
people—including Hutu and Tutsi soldiers, politicians and government
officials, and innocent civilians.
“All UN
compounds were sheltering thousands of fearful Rwandans,” wrote the former
UNAMIR commander, Lt. General Roméo Dallaire, “How could I possibly keep them
safe?” Dallaire’s admission subsequent to the previous statement is very
insightful, especially given his pro-RPF position: “We protected these citizens
from certain death at the hands of the extremists or the RPF…” In this
[previous] quote, Dallaire openly confirms the RPF’s role in killing, and his
book repeatedly describes firefights he witnessed between the RPF and various
government factions. [27]
There were no
firefights shown in Hotel Rwanda, there was none of the ongoing warfare
that rocked Kigali before and after 06 April 2004: there were only ruthless,
savage, Hutu killers and rapists, and the dead bodies that—by inference
and innuendo—the Hutus slaughtered with machetes, pangas, axes and hoes.
The RPF
employed state-of-the-art information control and psychological operations
tactics practiced by the US military: international reporters were embedded; access
to battle zones was restricted; evidence of RPF massacres was erased, or
massacres were blamed on Hutu extremists, Interahamwe militias or the government Forces Armee
Rwandaise. British
journalist Nick Gordon reported crematoriums where the RPF incinerated bodies.
After the
April 6, 1994 double presidential assassination the western
press—including Joshua Hammer (Newsweek), and Raymond Bonner,
James C. McKinley Jr. and Donatella Lorch (New York Times)—went
out of their way to cite ‘professionalism’ and ‘discipline’ and ‘remarkable
self-control’ exercised by the invading rebel RPF forces. The western press
turned the double Presidential assassinations into ‘a mysterious plane crash,’
but this was a smoldering wreckage of the truth. [28]
“In
conjunction with the military build-up by the RPF and its
allies—including the infiltration into Kigali, the capital city, of up to
10,000 RPF soldiers,” writes ICTR barrister Chris Black, “western journalists
and western intelligence services masquerading as “human rights” organizations
began a concerted propaganda campaign against the [Habyarimana] Government and
through it the Hutu people, accusing it of various human rights abuses, none of
which were substantiated.” [29]
UN High
Commission for Refugees investigator Robert Gersony reported in September 1994
on the RPF’s killing of more than 30,000 ethnic Hutus—in a period of two
months—and gave a detailed account of locations, dates and nature of
crimes, as well as the methods used to kill and to make the bodies disappear.
Gersony also identified RPF leaders responsible for the killings. The
classified UN report has never been released.
Interested
moviegoers might want to hack through the perception management of Hotel
Rwanda to get to United Artists parent company Metro Goldwyn Meyer. [30]
MGM directors,
unsurprisingly, given what the film does not tell you about the true US role in
Rwanda, include current United Technologies director and US General (Ret.)
Alexander Haig. United Technologies is in the business of war and “I’m in
charge here!” Al Haig served as secretary of state under a Hollywood actor named
Ronald Reagan.
The other
producers of Hotel Rwanda include an unknown company called Kigali Releasing
Ltd., and another called the Industrial Development Corporation of South Africa
Ltd. The latter is a major shareholder of, and mining partner with, Iscor Ltd.,
one of the companies named by the UN Panel of Experts Report (2002) for the
illegal exploitation of resources from the Congo. [70].
US military
involvement in Rwanda has included ‘counterinsurgency’ training, ‘psychological
operations’ and tactical Special Forces: Special Operations Command oversees
Navy Seals, Army Rangers and Delta Force: elite units deployed as special
operatives in covert operations. [31]
The hotel in
the film is not the real Hotel des Mille Collines. The Tutsi RPF rebels did not
enter Kigali, Rwanda’s capital city, and save the day, they were in Kigali all
along. The RPF gained a foothold in Kigali through their constant deceptions
and manipulations of the “peace process,” and with the support of their
international backers, especially the United States. The RPF ‘rebels’ were
better trained, better equipped, better organized than any an all other
combatants in Rwanda and, notably, numerous sources claim that the RPF had the
capacity to stop the killings. Sources also report that the Forces Armees
Rwandais—the
Rwandan government army—didn’t have the resources to fight both the RPF
and the Interahamwe.
Professors
Christian Davenport (U. Maryland) and Allan Stam (Dartmouth) published research
in 2004 that showed that the killings began with a small, dedicated cadre of
Hutu militiamen, but quickly cascaded in an ever-widening circle, with Hutu and
Tutsi playing the roles of both attackers and victims. Their team of
researchers also found that only 250,000 people were killed, not the 800,000
plus advanced by the RPF, and that for every Tutsi killed two Hutus were
killed. The research unleashed a firestorm: the media jumped on them for
denying genocide.
“Our research
suggests that many of the victims, possibly even a majority, were
Hutus—there weren’t enough Tutsis in Rwanda at the time to account for
all the reported deaths… When you add it all up it looks a lot more like
politically motivated mass killing than genocide. A wide diversity of
individuals, both Hutu and Tutsi, systematically used the mass killing to
settle political, economic and personal scores.” [32]
“When you look
at the motivations of the Interahamwe leadership and young people in the Interahamwe they were motivated by money,” notes
former ORINFOR director Jean-Marie Higiro. Some Hutu businessmen were giving
out loans, contributing to political parties of both the Rwandan government and
the RPF rebels. “These guys wanted to do business: people were motivated by
different interests.”
“Many Hutu and
Tutsi businessmen prospered under the Habyarimana regime,” Jean-Marie Higiro
notes. “They received government contracts and loans from government banks and
suddenly became rich. During this period of uncertainty they contributed money
to the RPF, MRND, and opposition parties—always speculating on the
winner. That is why, after the war, very few Hutu businessmen who had
contributed to the RPF reopened their business immediately. That is why some
Tutsi businessmen who contributed to the RPF made an excellent calculation.
After the war they reaped off the benefits.” [33]
Some facts in
the film are true. To begin with, in every sense of the terms “human rights”
and “humanitarianism,” the western powers betrayed the people of Rwanda. The
whites were rapidly evacuated, the blacks abandoned, including the many African
staffers of international agencies. The French armed the Hutu side, and they
evacuated key Hutu elite at the first opportunity, but the United States, U.K.
and Belgium armed the Tutsis. There was a Rwandan man named Paul Rusesabagina
and he would, one day, be working at the Hotel des Mille Collines, but he was
the manager of the Hotel des Diplomats. The Tutsi rebels were blamed with the
assassination of the presidents of Rwanda and Burundi, but the film convinces
us they didn’t do it, when everything suggests they did. And it is certainly
true that hundreds of thousands of Rwandans died.
Hotel
Rwanda is a work of fiction. As a cultural artifact produced by an affluent
entertainment
industry in the West, and for affluent western consumers, but focused on a
distant and exoticized culture about which the affluent western consumers know
very little, or nothing at all, it serves to consolidate the ideological
pillars of disinformation that came before it, and upon which it was built.
According to
many and varied knowledgeable sources, including hotel insiders: Rwanda was not
abandoned by the
western powers: Belgium, France, Canada, England and the United States were all
militarily involved in the 1994 conflict. Because there are Israeli connections
to the current government, it is likely that Israeli military agents were also
involved. These were no bystanders to genocide, as Samantha Power and the Atlantic
Monthly and others would like us to think, but active participants in a
ruthless international
military conflagration. Note that amongst Atlantic Monthly’s primary
advertisers [read: sponsors] is Lockheed Martin [aerospace and defense]
Corporation.
The hotel was
not under a state of siege early on as the movie suggests—an elegant
wedding took place there during the fray, and it married the sister of the
Tutsi businessman Kamana Claver, who had contracts with the Hutu government. According to one guest,
powerful Hutus and Tutsis regularly came and went. When the water to the hotel
was shut off, forcing the ‘refugees’ to drink the water from the swimming pool,
it was not shut off by the Hutu genocidaires, as implied in the film, but by the
Tutsi RPF army, who cut power to the city.
General
Bizimungu appears in the very first scenes of the film, prior to the double
presidential assassination: yet when the plane was shot down on April 6, 1994,
General Bizimungu was still a Colonel, and he was far from Kigali. According to
one hotel guest, who remains unnamed for fear of retribution, Paul
Rusesabagina, the film’s hero, in no way wielded the kind of influence as
depicted throughout the film:
“Paul was a
very simple man like me in front of the Interahamwe. If he succeeded to save some Tutsi
from his home he was most probably helped by some influential Interahamwe friend, say Georges Rutaganda. He was
as vulnerable as I was and could not oppose any action against the will of the
militia and much less of the army. He lies when he feints to call General
Bizimungu for help, because the Hotel des Mille Collines was under the
jurisdiction of Colonel Renzaho. Bizimungu lived at the northern war front
lines, and he only came to Kigali four days after the plane was shot down and I
never saw him at the hotel.” [34]
“There
is overwhelming evidence,” wrote Rutigita Macumu appeared in an opinion piece
titled “Paul Rusesabagina Not a Hero!” in Rwanda’s The New Times
state-owned newspaper on November 5, 2005, “that Paul Rusesabagina did not
particularly go out of his way to bring the people, who were being hunted, to
the Mille Collines Hotel haven, to protect them once they were in the hotel, to
procure them food or even water when they were unable to pay for them, or to
devise any uncommon means to fend off the killer gangs outside the hotel. It is
highly apparent that he only fulfilled his duty, as directed by his Sabena
bosses, to run the hotel well and cater for all its occupants.” [35]
Georges
Rutaganda, the devil beer salesman and erstwhile murderer of Tutsis in Hotel
Rwanda, writes that Paul Rusesabagina was no disinterested, apolitical
hotel manager, but an important activist member of a national political party.
On 12 April 1994, Rusesabagina shifted to the Hôtel des Mille Collines where he
acted as its new director because the other had been evacuated by foreign
troops.
Hotel
Rwanda depicts Rusesabagina at the Hotel des Mille Collines prior to the
double presidential assassinations of 6 April 2004. Rutaganda claims to have
visited the hotel and seen guests from both Hutu and Tutsi ethnic groups,
including: Rubangura Vedaste; Mutalikanwa Félicien; Dr. Gasasira Jean Baptiste;
Kamana Claver; Kajuga Wicklif; Rwigema Celestin; Kamilindi Thomas; and others.
Rutaganda
claims that very few UNAMIR soldiers were around, and they were incidental to
security: the Hutu Gendarmes of the FAR army were manning a roadblock at the
main entrance. He also claims that the “refugees” in the UN convoy that were
turned back at a roadblock “were the real elite cream of Tutsi ethnic tribe.
Had one been really spurred by bad intentions this would have been a great
occasion to decapitate the Tutsi ethnic group. Families of former ministers, of
doctors, of lawyers, of big business men, of highly educated men, of
professors, etc, were among them.”
If
the ‘genocide’ were so organized and calculated, and quick to strike, then
Rutaganda has a very interesting point: how did it happen that the elite of the
Tutsi tribe were protected and evacuated by UNAMIR troops and Hutu Gendarmes?
Of course, all Hutus are killers, and no one will believe a genocidaire: Georges Rutaganda was sentenced to
life in prison by the ICTR.
Can
George Rutaganda’s claims be corroborated?
“Georges
Rutaganda cooperated with the UN to save all those people.” ICTR investigator
Phil Taylor offers a compelling portrait of the supposed devil himself: Rutaganda didn’t incite hate
crimes, he called for calm and respect for the Red Cross; Rutaganda was never
accused of the rape and sexual slavery depicted in the film; and Rutaganda
never traded in machetes. Indeed, Human Rights Watch in January 1994 identified
an English businessman who had imported tens of thousands of machetes into
Rwanda. [36]
And
rape was off the agenda at the ICTR until Hillary Clinton showed up in Arusha
and pledged $600,000 to be paid after the first ICTR rape conviction: that’s
when they decided to pin rape on Georges Rutaganda, and that’s where the Tutsi
women collected in the fictitious Rutaganda compound in Hotel Rwanda
come from.
The film
offers a fictitious UN Colonel Oliver (Nick Nolte) as a substitute for the
Canadian Lt. Gen. Roméo Dallaire, whose is absent from the film. (It is
believed that Dallaire asked too much money from the filmmakers for the use of
his name or character.) Roméo Dallaire allegedly worked not as an impartial
United Nations commander, but as an agent for the invading RPF army. Dallaire
reportedly approached Hutu military commanders to convince them to follow the
winds of change and embrace the RPF program. Dallaire was rarely present at the
hotel, according to witnesses, but his substitute (Nick Nolte) is always there.
Dallaire
mentions in his book how he passed by the Hotel des Mille Collines, but in his
own meticulously detailed recounting of the daily events and travels around
Kigali from 06 April to 10 April, 1994, for example, Dallaire stops at the
Hotel des Mille Collines only once. [37]
According to
Chris Black, a lead counsel at the International Criminal Tribunal on Rwanda
(ICTR) since 2000, UN documents brought into testimony at the ICTR in October
2005 clearly establish that UNAMIR’s Lt. Gen. Roméo Dallaire:
Contrary to
the caring, humanitarian character of Colonel Oliver—as presented by Nick
Nolte in the film—in real-life General Dallaire allegedly arranged for
the closure of the western approach to the Kigali runway at the request of the
RPF. This made it easier for the RPF and others to track the presidential plane
as it came in from the east. The Belgian contingent of the UN force was in
control of the airport area and the area from which the missiles were fired,
and a Belgian military unit (the “peacekeepers” killed later) were the only
people caught by the Hutu army coming out of the firing area after the plane
was shot down, after the army threw up a cordon to try to catch the culprits.
“All of
Dallaire’s actions only make sense in this light,” lawyer Chris Black explains.
“Dallaire admits in his book that he was close to Paul Kagame and admired him.
He helped Kagame by covering up the RPF build-up for an offensive in violation
of the Arusha Accords, while at the same time helping with the anti-government
propaganda of the RPF. The Belgian’s actively engaged on the side of the RPF
and once the plane was shot down they attacked FAR army and gendarme positions alongside the RPF. We have
radio intercepts of the RPF talking about their help from the Belgians and others.
By saying Dallaire was an RPF agent I am of course really saying he worked for
the Americans under the orders of Ottawa.” [38]
Lt. General
Roméo Dallaire was no peacekeeper: he was an active military strategist—a
war-maker.
The Political Economy of Genocide
Prior to the
cataclysm of 1994, the RPF set up its political base in Belgium. When Belgian
“peacekeepers” are murdered by “Hutus” in Hotel Rwanda—the blue
helmets are scattered on the ground in front of our horrified UN hero, Colonel
Oliver (Nick Nolte)—the false inference is that the genocidaires’ calculated killing of the Belgians
would provoke a UNAMIR withdrawal from Rwanda. This is a central pillar of the
genocide theory: with the Belgian ‘peacekeepers’ out of the way, the Hutu
killing machine had free reign to shift into high gear. In reality, the Belgians were immediately killed because
they were the political accomplices of a ruthless bunch of terrorists, the
invading RPF army.
Substantial
evidence entered into public record in the ICTR’s so-called ‘Military I’ and
‘Military II’ trials (both began in 2005) contradicts the fundamental premise
above—and the central theory of the ICTR prosecution—by showing
that Hutu officers charged by the ICTR with complicity in the Belgians’ murder
actually risked their lives trying to save the Belgian soldiers. The UN Force
Commission—set up immediately after the attack on the Belgians by UN
Force Commander General Dallaire—concluded the same. Eyewitness testimony
by a UN Military Observer also states that there were not ten Belgian soldiers
killed, but thirteen. “This is a point of some interest in Belgium,” writes
Chris Black, “where the government claims to have lost only ten men.” [39]
So
who were
those three Belgian soldiers and what was their mission? Hotel Rwanda
dares not introduce such questions: to do so would be heresy. But the United
States knows, and the RPF knows and the legal ‘experts’ at the ICTR all know
that the genocide theory would crumble under the admission of the truth.
According to
ICTR lawyers, UN documents show that Lt. General Roméo Dallaire was aware, at
least from December 1993, and probably before, that the RPF, with the support
of the Ugandan Army, was daily violating the Arusha Accords by sending into
Rwanda men, materiel, and light and heavy weapons. That is how the US, Belgians
and Canadians assisted the RPF/A in preparing for the final solution in
Rwanda—total military victory over the Hutus. [40]
“The RPF
engaged in assassinations of officials, politicians and civilians, and
attempted to cast the blame on the government,” writes Chris Black. “Dallaire
assisted in this campaign by suppressing facts concerning these crimes and
openly siding with the RPF propaganda statements.” [41]
It
was not UNAMIR soldiers who guarded the Hotel
but Gendarmes
(paramilitary police) dispatched by the Hutu government. This fact flies in the
face of the “genocide” mythology. If the hotel was full of Tutsis targeted by
genocide, why was it being protected by the very same architects of that supposed genocide? The Hotel
was not filled only with Tutsis (refugees from genocide): it was full of
powerful Tutsis and Hutus (with Tutsis in the majority) with political and
economic connections to powerful factions both inside and outside of Rwanda.
Questions
about the composition of the ‘mostly Tutsi’ RPF invaders provoke questions
about the ethnic composition of the Interahamwe militias and commercial relationships
that transcended ethnicity. Such details are overlooked in the western
reductionism on Rwanda—because they contradict the official and
burgeoning Rwanda holocaust industry and the US State Department fictions. The
following ethnic inconsistencies are very revealing:
These facts,
if true, provide compelling evidence that it was not a coordinated genocide
that occurred in Rwanda in 1994, but a civil war, and a western proxy war, with
deep political, economic and military motivations behind the atrocities. Acts
of genocide certainly occurred, as did crimes against humanity, but “acts” of
genocide do not constitute genocide as defined by the international legal
frameworks on genocide. An entire ethnic group could be wiped out, say the last
100 Penan nomads in Sarawak, for example, but if they are incidentally
eliminated in the calculated and racist process of logging their
forests—which is exactly what has happened to the Penan—it is not
necessarily “genocide”. Equally troublesome, the US might have annihilated
every last Japanese citizen in 1945, but few today would characterize the atomic
bombings in Hiroshima and Nagasaki as genocidal in nature or intent.
The calculated
nature upheld as the basis for genocide in Rwanda has always revolved around the supposed “lists”
created by Hutu genocidaires:
lists of Tutsis who were subsequently eliminated because, first and foremost,
they were Tutsis; such “lists” were purportedly created by the Hutu genocide
machine.
“Any army
would have lists of their political enemies,” notes ICTR investigator Phil
Taylor. “This is not unusual.” The Rwandan government likely had its lists, the
RPF had their own lists, and both went about assassinating their enemies.
Phil Taylor notes
that the prosecution at the ICTR has not produced any lists—of any
kind—as evidence subsequently used for Rwanda genocide convictions.
In the
aftermath of the World Trade towers attack the intelligence armies of the
United States generated an extensive list of “enemies of the state”—a
list they maintain today—most of whom were/are of Islamic ethnicity. Do
the existence of these lists constitute genocidal intent?
“There is a
stunning lack of documentary evidence of a government plan to commit genocide,”
write lawyer Chris Black. “There are no orders, minutes of meetings, notes,
cables, faxes, radio intercepts or any other type of documentation that such a
plan ever existed. In fact, the documentary evidence establishes just the
opposite.” [42]
US Pentagon
lawyers imported to the ICTR from the Judge Advocacy General (JAG) Corps have
heavily skewed the ICTR in favor of the US-supported RPF. Also, the ICTR has
not returned a single verdict against RPF Tutsi soldiers or Tutsi leadership;
former ICTR prosecutor Carla Del Ponte was removed for her attempts to
prosecute Tutsis. [43]
“The ICTR
risks being a part of the problem rather than the solution,” wrote Filip
Reyntjens, Belgian historian and expert witness on genocide in Rwanda, in 2004.
“I cannot any longer be involved in this process.”
[44]
The
International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR), the sister of the Hague
Tribunal, consolidates the popular mythology on genocide in Rwanda by playing
its role as an international judicial body which, by default, must be beyond
reproach or bias. While demonizing the Hutu leadership and justifying the RPF
dictatorship now in control of Rwanda, writes Chris Black, it also serves as a
means of presenting a completely false history of the events in Rwanda, and
covering up the murder of the two Hutu heads of state and the massacres of
hundreds of thousands of innocent people by the RPF and its allies. [45]
In
Hotel Rwanda, the genocidal Hutus blame the Tutsi RPF rebels for shooting down the plane that killed the two
presidents, and because the film demonizes every Hutu, the viewer is convinced
that the Hutu’s are lying, deflecting attention from their own nasty deeds.
However, evidence suggests that an RPF terror cell in Kigali shot down the
Presidential airplane. Also on the plane was a Forces Armee Rwandais general, a pivotal target for the RPF.
Former UN Secretary General Boutros Boutros-Ghali offered journalist Robin
Philpot the claim that the Central Intelligence Agency was almost certainly
involved.
“As early as
1997,” writes a Spanish legal team that in 2005 filed suit against Paul Kagame
and his RPF cadre, “a team of investigators appointed by the ICTR—Michael
Hourigan, Alphonse Breau and James Lyons—released reports, then held as
classified, which revealed that the attack was masterminded by high-ranking RPF
military and not by Hutu extremists as had been believed until then. These
disclosures were corroborated in 2004 by the remarkable testimony of Abdul
Ruzibiza, a member of the RPF commando unit which perpetrated the attack on the
presidential plane.”[46]
"I
am an eye witness to what took place when the SA-16 was fired because I was
present", writes Ruzibiza in his recently released book, Rwanda:
L'histoire Secrete (The Secret History of Rwanda). Ruzibiza alleges
that after the missile attack on the plane, soldiers of the RPF who had been
readied in advance were assembled to immediately launch attacks that culminated
in the fall of Kigali on July 4, 1994. [47]
There
is also the definitive statement by Paul Mugabe, a Former Intelligence Officer
of the RPA, titled: Declaration on the Shooting Down of the Aircraft
Carrying Rwandan President Juvenal Habyarimana and Burundi President Cyprien
Ntaryamira on April 6, 1994.
Paul
Mugabe alleges that two weeks before the crash of the Presidential aircraft,
[then] Major General Kagame sent [then] Lt. Colonel James Kabarebe to bring the
SA-7 surface-to-air missiles to the RPA detachment in Kigali, and to give final
instructions for attacking Rwandese Army forces (FAR) and shooting down the
plane. Two RPF leaders, Colonels Kanyarengwe Alexis and Lizinde Theoneste, who
had earlier served in the Habyarimana Government, gave information and
instructions as to where the missiles should be placed. (Col. Lizinde
Theoneste, who later defected, was subsequently assassinated in 1998 by RPF
operatives in Nairobi, Kenya, in order to ensure the secrecy of the missile
operation.) Two weeks before the double presidential assassination, 12
artillery systems were brought from Uganda, and arrived at RPA headquarters.
Other RPF
defectors also credit the RPF with shooting down the plane carrying the Rwandan
and Burundian leadership. Long-time RPF officer Lt. Aloys Ruyenzi
claims that the assassination plan was hatched at an RPF meeting on 31 March
1994:
“The Chairman of the meeting was
Major General Paul Kagame, and the following officers were present: Colonel
Kayumba Nyamwasa; Colonel Théoneste Lizinde; Lt. Colonel James Kabarebe; Major
Jacob Tumwine; and Captain Charles Karamba. I heard Paul Kagame asking Colonel
Lizinde to report about his investigations and I have seen Colonel Lizinde
giving to Paul Kagame a map of the selected place for the plane shooting etc.”
[48]
Lt. Aloys
Ruyenzi also accuses General Paul Kagame and (now) General James Kabarebe of
overseeing the massacres of Hutu and Tutsi civilians, both in the field and at
crematoriums set up to dispose of the evidence. Ruyenzi is just one defector
with a compelling story. He claims he has witnessed helicopter gunships
shelling villages, and massacres, tortures and summary executions as policy.
Many of the human rights atrocities committed by the Kagame regime have been documented
by human rights organizations.
“Gen. James
Kabarebe was the commander of the reverse-genocide army,” says Howard W.
French, referring to the military campaign where hundreds of thousands of Hutu
refugees were hunted down and slaughtered by the Tutsi RPA and their western
allies in Congo. [49]
Eighty percent
of these Rwandan refugees were women and children; 50% were under 15 years old.
[50]
This genocidal
reign of terror to hunt down and massacre non-combatant Hutu men, women and
children was spearheaded by the Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF) and Ugandan
People’s Defense Forces (UPDF), who were running the show for Laurent Kabila’s
Allied Front for the Democratic Liberation of Congo (AFDL)—and it was
backed by government and private factions from the United States, the U.K.,
Canada and Belgium.
One eyewitness
to the skeletons piling up pinpoints mass graves that were later sanitized in
advance of the United Nations mission to investigate the RPF/UPDF/AFDL
massacres of hundreds of thousands of unarmed Hutu civilians. [51]
The contra-genocide against Hutus continues today:
at this writing the forces are aligned to exterminate the remaining 40,000
Hutus in Congo: they are all written off as genocidaires who fled Rwanda in 1994, even though
most surviving FDLR were too young to have participated in genocide. [52]
Sabena
officials were not surprised and horrified to be getting a call from some hotel
manager in Rwanda, as depicted in the film: one week prior to the October 1990
invasion of Rwanda by the RPF, Sabena Airlines rerouted its airline crews
(pilots, hostesses) away from the Hotel des Mille Collines and off to Burundi
for their overnights. This was no random decision: it was a calculated policy
action meant to insure the safety of company employees in the face of a coming
war. Sabena was well informed. A Belgian firm born out of the post-Leopold
aviation era in Congo, Sabena was later used to ship diamonds, and probably
coltan (columbium-tantalite), out of Kigali by the RPF elites, whose base, again,
was in Brussels. It is believed that Sabena’s eventual “bankruptcy” was
intended to cover their tracks and shield principals from any possible future
legal actions stemming from their pillage in the Congo.
What
about the elusive American diamond magnate Maurice Tempelsman and his
connection to Bill and Hillary Clinton and the diamonds coming out of Kigali?
“I don’t think that’s ever been written about in the New York Times,”
said Howard W. French. [53]
Howard
W. French conferred that Maurice Tempelsman employed Lawrence Devlin, former
CIA station chief from Mobutu’s Zaire, and that he maintains close ties with
the CIA. Tempelsman is also on the board of directors of the Harvard AIDS
Institute and the Africa-America Institute (Donald Payne is also deeply
involved, as is Gayle Smith, formerly Bill Clinton’s National Security Council
advisor on African Affairs). Maurice Tempelsman was Jacqueline Kennedy
Onassis’s lover, he was reported to be Madeleine Albright’s lover, and he was
one of the 99 people who accompanied Bill Clinton on his 1998 Africa victory
tour. Tempelsman is one of the many untouchables behind the quagmire in Central Africa.
[54]
Why has the
United States blocked all attempts to investigate the shooting down of the
plane and the double presidential assassination that sparked the cataclysm on
April 6, 1994? Why hasn’t the United Nations pursued an inquiry?
"It
is a very mysterious scandal,” wrote author Robin Philpot. “Four reports have
been made on Rwanda: the French Parliament Report, the Belgian Senate Report,
Kofi Annan's UN report, and the Organization of African Unity report. All four
say absolutely nothing about the shooting down of the Rwandan President's
plane. That just goes to show the power of the intelligence services that can
force people to be quiet.”
Philpot
continues: “The only partial exception is the seven year investigation
conducted by the French anti-terrorist judge Jean-Louis Bruguière. That
investigation has implicated current Rwandan President Paul Kagame and the
Rwandan Patriotic Front for having planned, ordered and carried out the April 6
assassination.” [55]
Says
ICTR lawyer Chris Black: “President Mobutu’s chief of intelligence, Honore
Ngambo, in his book published in France a few months ago [Western Crimes in
Central Africa, 2005] relates the meeting between Habyarimana and Mobutu
two days before Habyaramana was murdered. The Hutu President told Mobutu that
he had been warned by Herman Cohen—the US African Affairs man—that
unless he ceded all power to the RPF his body would be dragged through the
streets and his government tried before an international tribunal. Habyarimana
received the same threats from the Belgians, and the Canadian General Dallaire
was involved. Habyarimana was informed by his agents in the RPF camp at Mulindi
that his plane would be shot down. He didn’t know the exact date.” [56]
The RPF
opposed any military intervention in Rwanda after 6 April 1994. The RPF knew
the military situation of the Rwandan army (morale and ammunition) and it did
not want any military intervention to snatch its victory from it. The RPF’s
official sponsors in Washington, London and Brussels told whoever would listen
that any international force would be met with RPF military resistance. The RPF
was the only force that had the capacity to stop the killing, but they didn’t.
ICTR lawyer
Chris Black verifies that UN documents entered in the ICTR record establish
that the Gendarmerie
did all it could with the resources it had to restore calm, but could not, and
that the FAR army could not both fight the RPF and restore calm among the
civilians.
This following
statement comes from an unnamed survivor who was in Kigali in April, 1994,
where he lost his entire family to the killings: some of his family were Hutus,
some Tutsis, and he began by stating he does not support the ideologies that
align themselves along ethnic fault lines. The interview took place in Bukavu,
DRC, in August 2005:
“Many Hutus
lost family members on the border with Uganda after the RPA invaded in 1990.
This is where Hutu hatred of Tutsis started. The Tutsi continued to perpetrate
crimes to weaken the government of Habyarimana even while the government was
being forced to negotiate with the RPF. Each Tutsi family had sent one or two
boys to the RPF army in Uganda. We knew these boys – they used to say,
‘O.K. goodbye. We are going to Uganda.’ “
“Hutus saw
this. The Tutsis [RPF] were pushing the hatred higher and higher every day.
Even Hutus knew that all Tutsis had to attend meetings at the end of the month
to raise money for the RPF. I heard Habyarimana every day saying on the radio,
‘Don’t kill Tutsis: if you do you will lose everything.’ Even as the Arusha
Peace Accords were going on [1993] the RPF were starting to kill the
intellectuals, the Hutu leaders, in Rwanda.”
“They [RPF]
were putting bombs in public places, in markets and gare routieres [roundabouts], and in night
clubs—I almost died in one night club attack. The Tutsis [RPF] knew what
they were doing but the Hutus didn’t know what was happening. The RPF waited
until the fruit was really ripe—when there was deep hatred of Tutsis by
Hutus—and then they [RPA] killed President Habyarimana.”
“They killed
Habyarimana because they knew he was the only one who could stop the Hutus from
killing Tutsis. That is why, every day, I say that: the genocide was not
planned by Hutus, it was planned by Tutsis: it was planned by the RPF. Even after the Interahamwe killed my wife, even after all the
horrible things that have happened to me, I believe the Tutsis created the
genocide. And for me it was a war between brothers: the Hutus had an army and
the Tutsis had an army and there was fighting at every level.” [57]
Heartless Darkness
Notably, the
source for the Hotel Rwanda Companion Book timeline chapter is the
Central Intelligence Agency World Factbook 2004 (the previous chapter is
filled with the standard deceptions, and it appears without attribution). [58]
It is not
surprising then that the roles of the US and other outside Western powers and
multinational corporations are hidden. The most egregious omissions revolve
around the Democratic Republic of Congo: the ongoing destruction and
depopulation of Congo receives remarkably little press coverage in contrast to
the Darfur region of neighboring Sudan, despite the obvious evidence that the
scale and nature of atrocities against innocent civilians in Congo has been far
worse, over a longer period of time, and with profound but unnecessary human
suffering.
After
consolidating power in Rwanda in 1994, and following on massive crimes against
humanity there, the RPF shelled and dismantled refugee camps in eastern Congo
(then Zaire) in the summer of 1996, in further massive and egregious violations
of international law and the Geneva Convention. The new RPF government has never wavered in its efficacious crusade of
calling attention to an ongoing genocide against the Tutsis—the Jews of Africa—who
were “abandoned by the United States and Europe” to ostensibly suffer the fate
of genocide, but this is an affront to the Jewish people and, in particular, to
the Holocaust victims and survivors of World War II.
The pretext of
ongoing ‘genocide’ against the Tutsis has been used by the RPF over and over to
justify the most egregious and hostile violations of international law and
human rights. Continuing to implement what is now clearly a well-coordinated
and premeditated plan, and with complete logistical and tactical military
support from the Pentagon and its outsourced private military
companies—including Halliburton, Ronco, and Military Professional
Resources Incorporated—the RPF followed its Rwanda victory by invading
the sovereign territory of Congo (Zaire), its huge western neighbor. [59]
Drawing on its
previous military alliance, training and rear bases in Uganda, the RPF allied
with Yoweri Museveni and the Ugandan Peoples Defense Forces (UPDF) to march
across the Congo, unseat Habyarimana’s close friend, Congo’s (Zaire’s)
President Mobutu Sese Seko, and conquer the vast, mineral rich Congo.
“The
international community has refused to bring effective pressure to bear on
Rwanda to create conditions of security,” wrote Rwanda scholar David Newbury,
in 1996. [60]
Marginalized
groups like the Rally for the Return of Refugees and Democracy in Rwanda have repeatedly echoed this obvious
truth. “The continuous prevalence of impunity has encouraged the leaders of the
RPF/RPA to perpetrate crimes against humanity, war crimes and acts of genocide
in Rwanda and DRC without fear of prosecution. It has consolidated the power
and the wealth of criminal elements within the RPF-led dictatorial regime.”
[61]
And so it
continues today. Paul Kagame and James Kabarebe and the Tutsi RPF-dominated
government of Rwanda continue to destabilize the Great Lakes Region of Africa,
with infiltration of terror cells throughout the neighboring Congo, just as
they did in Rwanda (1985-1994). They are appeased or courted, the saintly
victims of genocide, and they enjoy total impunity and all the benefits of an
elite club.
Similarly, the
Human Rights Watch press alert of July 1, 2005, for example, targeting the
Congolese government, is a veiled defense of Rwandan-US interests in DRC: it is
written by Alison Des Forges, from Kigali. [62]
Both
the Hotel Rwanda film and companion book neatly encapsulate the entire
mythology of genocide in Rwanda and the invented heroism of now president Paul
Kagame and the Rwanda Patriotic Front (RPF). The true and deeper facts that
receive little attention, if any at all, are: {1} the RPF’s illegal invasion of Rwanda
from Uganda in 1990; {2}
its record of war crimes committed from 1990-1994; {3} the RPF double assassination of the
Hutu presidents of Burundi and Rwanda on April 6, 1994; {4} the RPF’s massive contre-genocide of hundreds of thousands of
Hutu refugees in Congo (Zaire), of refugees returning to Rwanda from Congo, and
of Hutus in Rwanda itself; {5} the
RPF’s repeated invasions and continuing looting and devastation of the Congo,
with the involvement and sanction of RPF officials at the highest level, that
continues today; and {6}
the collaborating roles of Western institutions, individuals and corporations,
and the economic and political benefits that accrue to them, at the expense of
Africa and her people.
What
has motivated Paul Rusesabagina? It is interesting to note that Rusesabagina
has been widely lauded and financially rewarded for his story, the rights to
his story, and for his alignment with US government and military officials in
service to various political and military agendas. In 2000 he was awarded the
Immortal Chaplain’s prize, and received the award with a handshake from US
Republican Senator Bob Dole. [63]
“As
for Paul Rusesabagina,” wrote Rutigita Macumu, in Rwanda’s The New Times
newspaper, “he will go down in the annals of history as a man who sold the soul
of the Rwandan Genocide to amass medals, including, among others, the Amnesty
International's Enduring Spirit, the Immortal Chaplain Foundation's Prize for
Humanity, the Tigar Center's Human Rights Award, the National Civil Rights Museum's
Freedom Award, and now the prestigious Presidential Model of Freedom Award from
the sitting American president, George W. Bush.” [64]
In
2004, Paul Rusesabagina traveled with a Pentagon escort and his namesake actor
Don Cheadle to Darfur, Sudan, to draw attention to the popularized, officially
accredited ‘genocide’ occurring there. [65]
Rwandan
Defense Forces were dispatched to Darfur where, along with the African Union
and some US military, they serve as US proxy warriors: these are troops
responsible for some of the most egregious acts of genocide and crimes against
humanity committed in Rwanda and Congo. [66]
Hotel
Rwanda is merely the latest production in a protracted campaign of
psychological warfare. It is a dangerous work of agitation propaganda because
it wets the wide and naive eyes and touches the open and caring hearts of
Western viewers. It is deceptive and when viewers depart the cinema with
popcorn and chocolate stuck between their teeth they leave thinking they know
something about what happened in Rwanda. We as viewers enjoy the idea that we
are being educated, when instead we are being indoctrinated, and the insidious
effects of the indoctrination are unappreciated. Hotel Rwanda
exemplifies the careless, simplistic reductionism that is universally manifest
in the West’s representations of Africa.
Phil
Taylor, former investigator for the International Criminal Tribunal on Rwanda
(ICTR) says it aptly. “For anyone who followed closely the 1994 crisis in
Rwanda the highly touted film Hotel Rwanda is merely propaganda
statements interrupted by bouts of acting.” [67]
The racism and
segregation that played out in the Rwanda cataclysm of 1994, where there were
very different conditions and outcomes between whites and blacks, continues to
be played out today. The telling and re-telling of the Rwanda ‘genocide’ story
by its very nature revolves around a system of institutionalized segregation.
Powerful whites in powerful ‘gatekeeper’ positions in the West hold a virtual
monopoly over the information. Alongside of them are the select voices of
non-whites who validate the predominant discourse. These ‘experts’ include
Alison des Forges; Roméo Dallaire; Philip Gourevitch; Victoria Brittain;
Samantha Power; Mahmood Mamdani; and many, many others.
“They believe
Alison des Forges because she is white and they don’t believe me because I am
black and I don’t speak English so well,” says Jean-Marie Higiro. “She is the
expert, even though she was an observer and I was a participant.”
We
can’t intimately know the hardships of Paul Rusesabagina, or the trauma of Roméo
Dallaire, or the sorrows of Jean-Marie Higiro, or the suffering of the other
survivors of the cataclysm in Rwanda, and we must search our own souls on their
behalf: the struggle of good versus evil reigns within us all. Indeed, there is
a certain arrogance behind this writing, because neither was I a participant in
Rwanda. But any hesitation I have in challenging the ‘right and proper tale’ is
overwhelmed by the obscenity of the obvious injustice and the machinations of
empire behind it.
If
truth is the first casualty in war, then those of us who are lucky observers
must endlessly work to resurrect it. In Central Africa, today, truth mingles
with the souls of the dead, forsaken amidst the unheard cries of some seven
million—mostly innocent people—whose life on this earth ground to a
gruesome, meaningless conclusion.
keith harmon
snow
First
published: 04 July 2005;
Text Modified:
05 November 2005;
Final Version:
04 December 2005;
Updated Final:
10 January 2006.
NOTES:
[1] Samantha Power, “Remember
the Blood Frenzy of Rwanda,” Los Angeles Times, April 4, 2004.
[2] Village genocide
courts, or Gacaca tribunals,
began operating in Rwanda in March 2005. See: Edras Ndikumana, “Rwanda’s Hutus
Flee Genocide Courts,” 19 April 2005; and “Rwandan President asks Fleeing
Residents to Return,” Reuters, June 3, 2005.
[3] Samantha Power, A
Problem from Hell: America in the Age of Genocide, HarperCollins, 2002.
[4] Private
interview: Howard W. French, Northampton MA, USA, March 30, 2005.
[5] Howard W. French,
“In Zaire Forest Hutu Refugees Near the End of the Road,” New York Times,
March 13, 1997; see also Howard W. French, Africa: A Continent for the
Taking: The Tragedy and Hope of Africa.
[6] Private interview:
Howard W. French, Northampton MA, USA, March 30, 2005.
[7] Lt. General Roméo
A. Dallaire, Shake Hands with the Devil: The Failure of Humanity in Rwanda,
Arrow Books, 2003.
[8] Rene¢ Lemarchand noted in
his authoritative text Rwanda and Burundi (Pall Mall Press, 1970) that
“the term Inyenzi is currently
used within and outside Rwanda to refer to small-scale Tutsi-led guerilla units
trained and organized outside Rwanda and varying in size from about six to ten
men.”
[9] Mouvement Republicain National pour la Démocratie et le
Développement or National Republican Movement for Democracy and Development (MRND).
[10] The Iceberg
of the Conflict in Africa of the Great Lakes Region: Lawsuit Against Those
Responsible for the Concealed Crimes Against Humanity, International Forum for
Truth and Justice in the Great Lakes Region of Africa, <www.veritasrwanaforum.org>.
[11] Private
communication: Charles Onana, Paris, France, February 2004.
[12] The Book published
in November 2001 entitled, Les Secrets Du Génocide Rwandais, Enquête Sur les
Mystères D’un Président [The Secrets of the Rwandan Genocide,
Investigations on the Mysteries of a President], was the subject of
President Kagame’s initial law suit that was heard in the 17th chamber of the
French High court against Cameroonian Journalist Charles Onana.
[13] See: http://www.immortalchaplains.org/Prize/Ceremony2000/Rusesabagina/rusesabagina.htm
>.
[14] See: http://www.usip.org/peacewatch/1998/1298/profile.html
[15] On James Rubin: see
Wayne Madsen, Genocide and Covert Operations in Africa, 1993-1999,
Mellen Press, 1999.
[16] See:
Pierre-Damien Mvuyekure, "Philip Gourevitch's Platonic and Conradian Eyes
on the Genocide in Rwanda,” in Ishmael Reed’s Konch.
[17] Private
interview: Howard W. French, Northampton MA, USA, March 30, 2005.
[18] Robin Philpot, Rwanda:
Colonialism Dies Hard, the English translation of Ça ne s’est pas passé comme ça à
Kigali (That’s Not How It Happened in Kigali), published in English on-line by the Taylor Report,
< http://www.taylor-report.com/Rwanda_1994/
>.
[19] Terry George,
Ed., Hotel Rwanda – The Official Companion Book, Newmarket Press,
2005.
[20] The Iceberg
of the Conflict in Africa of the Great Lakes Region: Lawsuit Against Those
Responsible for the Concealed Crimes Against Humanity, International Forum for
Truth and Justice in the Great Lakes Region of Africa, <www.veritasrwanaforum.org>.
[21] A paper
scheduled for publication, Spring 2006, by Jean-Marie Vianney Higiro.
[22] Some of them
are: Alliance edited by Alliance National Unity (RANU), an organization
that later changed its name into Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF); Congo Nil,
edited in Belgium by Francois Rutanga; Impuruza, edited by Alexander
Kimenyi in the United States; Inkotanyi, edited by the RPF; Intego,
edited by Jose Kagabo in France; Munyarwanda, edited by the Association
of Concerned Banyarwanda in Canada; Avant Garde; Le Patriote; Huguka;
and Umulinzi.
[23] The term Banyarwanda refers to ethnic Tutsis, and has been most often
used to describe Tutsi refugees in Congo (Zaire).
[24] Mouvement Republicain National pour la Démocratie et le
Développement or National Republican Movement for Democracy and Development (MRND).
[25] Robin Philpot, Rwanda:
Colonialism Dies Hard, the English translation of Ça ne s’est pas passé comme ça à
Kigali (That’s Not How It Happened in Kigali), published in English on-line by the Taylor Report,
< http://www.taylor-report.com/Rwanda_1994/
>.
[26] See US
Department of Defense, Foreign Military Sales, Foreign Military Construction
Sales, and Military Assistance Facts, (US Doc D1.2, F76, 996) 1997; see
also: Lt. Gen. Roméo A. Dallaire, Shake Hands with the Devil: The Failure of
Humanity in Rwanda, Arrow Books, 2003: p. 273.
[27] Lt. Gen. Roméo
A. Dallaire, Shake Hands with the Devil: The Failure of Humanity in Rwanda,
Arrow Books, 2003: pp. 263-265.
[28] See, e.g.: {a} “Donatella Lorch: "Rwanda Rebels: Army of
Exiles Fights for a Home," New York Times, 09 June 1994:10; and
"Rwanda Rebels' Victory Attributed To Discipline," New York Times,
19 July 1994: 6; {b} Raymond Bonner:
"How Minority Tutsi Won the War," New York Times, 06 September
1994:6; and "Rwandan Refugees Flood Zaire as Rebel Forces Gain," New
York Times, 15 July 1994:1; {c}
Joshua Hammer, "Rwanda: Situation Is Desperate," Newsweek, 20
June 1994:44-46; "Darkness Visible," The New Republic, 09 May
1994:9; and "Why Not Rwanda," The New Republic, 16 May 1994:7;
{d} Editorial, "Double Tragedy in
Africa," New York Times, 10 April1994.
[29] Chris Black, “View
From Rwanda: The Dallaire Genocide Fax: A Fabrication,” 01 December 2005,
Sanders Research Associates, < www.sandersresearch.com >.
[30] “Perception
management” is the contemporary term for the formerly used term “propaganda,”
and it too is an industry.
[31] Africa
Research Bulletin, August 1997.
[32] See: the GenoDynamics Project, <www.genodynamics.com>.
[33] Private
communication, Jean-Marie Vianney Higiro, August 2005.
[34] Personal
communication, name withheld for security reasons, July 2005.
[35] Rutigita Macumu,
“Paul Rusesabagina: Not a Hero!” The New Times (Kigali), 15 November 2005,
[36] Frank Smythe, Arming
Rwanda, Human Rights Watch, January 1994.
[37] Lt. General Roméo
Dallaire, Shake Hands With The Devil, Arrow Books, 2003: pp. 268.
[38] Private
communication: Chris Black, Barrister, International Criminal Tribunal on Rwanda,
October 2005.
[39] Chris Black,
“Persecution Not Prosecution,” October 2004, Sanders Research Associates, < www.sandersresearch.com >.
[40] Chris Black, “View
From Rwanda: The Dallaire Genocide Fax: A Fabrication,” 01 December 2005,
Sanders Research Associates, < www.sandersresearch.com >.
[41] Chris Black, “View
From Rwanda: The Dallaire Genocide Fax: A Fabrication,” 01 December 2005,
Sanders Research Associates, < www.sandersresearch.com >.
[42] Chris Black, “View
From Rwanda: The Dallaire Genocide Fax: A Fabrication,” 01 December 2005,
Sanders Research Associates, < www.sandersresearch.com >.
[43] See Ralph G.
Kershaw, “Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda: International Justice According to
Washington,” Covert Action Quarterly, No. 74, Fall 2002.
[44] See: Rory
Carroll, “Genocide Tribunals ‘Ignoring Tutsi Crimes,’” Guardian, January
13, 2005.
[45] Chris Black,
“Persecution Not Prosecution,” October 2004, Sanders Research Associates, < www.sandersresearch.com
>.
[46] The Iceberg
of the Conflict in Africa of the Great Lakes Region: Lawsuit Against those
responsible for the Concealed Crimes Against Humanity, The International Forum
for Truth and Justice in the Great Lakes Region of Africa, <www.veritasrwanaforum.org>.
[47] “Kagame Ordered
Shooting Down of Habyarimana's Plane – Ruzibiza,” Hirondelle News
Agency (Lausanne), 14 November 2005.
[48] Second Lt Aloys Ruyenzi,
Major General Paul Kagame Behind the Shooting Down of Late President
Habyarimana’s Plane: An Eye Witness Testimony, Norway, July 5, 2004.
[49] Private
interview: Howard W. French, Northampton MA, USA, March 30, 2005.
[50] David Newbury,
“Convergent Catastrophes in Central Africa,” November 1996, < www.udayton.edu/~rwanda/articles/newbury96.html
>.
[51] Private
interview: name withheld to protect the witness, Democratic Republic of Congo,
August 2005.
[52] Front for the
Democratic Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR) forces in eastern Congo number 40,000.
See also: keith harmon snow, “OPERATION IRON FIST: UN Launches Largest Ground
Troop Operation in DR Congo Peacekeeping; In South Kivu Hills Rwandan Rebels
Cornered,” July 17, 2005, < http://www.allthingspass.com
>.
[53] Private
interview: Howard W. French, Northampton MA, USA, March 30, 2005.
[54] See: Wayne
Madsen, Genocide and Covert Operations in Africa, 1993-1999, Mellon
Press, 1999.
[55] Robin Philpot,
“Second Thoughts on the Hotel Rwanda: Boutros-Ghali: a CIA Role in the 1994
Assassination of Rwanda's President Habyarimana?,” Counterpunch, 26/27
Feb. 2005, <http://www.counterpunch.org/philpot02262005.html
>.
[56] Private
communication: Chris Black, Barrister, International Criminal Tribunal on
Rwanda (ICTR), October 2005; Herman Cohen is a former US Secretary of State for
African affairs who served under the elder George Bush.
[57] Private
interview, name withheld, Bukavu, Democratic Republic of Congo, 11 July 2005.
[58] For more
information, the book adds, see: < www.cia.gov/factbook/goes/sw.html
>.
[59] On Ronco Company
shipping weapons into Rwanda: see testimony by Kathi Austin, Hearing of the
House International Relations Committee, July 16, 1997.
[60] David Newbury,
“Convergent Catastrophes in Central Africa,” November 1996, <www.udayton.edu/~rwanda/articles/newbury96.html>.
[61] RDR Calls for
the Prosecution of Crimes Against Humanity and Other Violations of the
International Law Committed by the Rwandan [RPF/RDF] Army, Rally for the Return
of Refugees and Democracy in Rwanda, Press Release, 9/2001, September 2001.
[62] Alison Des
Forges, “D.R. Congo: Civilians Killed as Army Factions Clash,” Human Rights
Watch, Press Release, July 1, 2005.
[63] See: http://www.immortalchaplains.org/Prize/Ceremony2000/Rusesabagina/rusesabagina.htm
>.
[64] Rutigita Macumu,
“Paul Rusesabagina: Not a Hero!” The New Times, (Rwanda State Newspaper)
November 15, 2005; see http://www.allafrica.com, November 16, 2005.
[65] See: Phil
Taylor, “Carving Sudan: Hollywood's Helping Hand,” The Taylor Report,
<www.taylor-report.com >,17
February 2005.
[66] “Rwanda Defense
Forces” was the name eventually adopted to rename the formerly named army (Rwanda
Patriotic Army) of the Rwanda Patriotic Front.
[67] Phil Taylor,
“Hotel Rwanda: No Room for the Truth,” Taylor-Report, January 17, 2005,
<http://www.taylor-report.com/articles/index.php?id=11>.
[68] See: Victoria
Brittain, “Excerpt from: A Share in the Genocide,” at: <http://www.immortalchaplains.org/Prize/Ceremony2000/Rusesabagina/rusesabagina.htm>
and Victoria Britain, “Letter From Rwanda,” The Nation Magazine, September 1/8, 2003.
[69] See: The Work
of The International Human Rights Law Clinic at American University: Twelve
Years of Operation, May 2002: p. 4: <http://www.wcl.american.edu/clinical/annual_2002.pdf?rd=1>.
[70] (See:
< http://www.natural-resources.org/minerals/law/docs/pdf/N0262179.pdf>,
page 43; < http://www.idc.co.za/>; and < http://minerals.usgs.gov/minerals/pubs/country/1998/africa98.pdf
>.