Rwanda genocide: Nation marks 25 years since mass slaughter
Commemorations have begun in Rwanda to mark the 25th anniversary of the genocide that killed about a tenth of the population.
The country will mourn for 100 days, the time it took in 1994 for 800,000 Rwandans to be massacred.
Most were minority Tutsis, killed by ethnic Hutu extremists.
President
Paul Kagame, who led the rebel force that ended the genocide, lit a
remembrance flame at the memorial in the capital, Kigali.
The
commemoration activities began with the flame-lighting ceremony at the
memorial, where about 250,000 victims are said to be buried. The flame
will burn for 100 days.
The 61-year-old president, who has led the
country since the end of the genocide, is scheduled to make a speech at
the Kigali Convention Centre.
President Paul Kagame has lit the flame of Remembrance assisted by a generation of 25 years at the @Kigali_Memorial. The flame will burn for the next 100 days for the 25th commemoration of the 1994 Genocide Against the Tutsi. #Kwibuk25pic.twitter.com/SVKOsSvjyu
He will then lead a vigil at the Amahoro National
Stadium, which was used by United Nations officials to try to protect
Tutsis during the killings.
Who is attending?
A
number of foreign leaders are expected to be at some of the events.
They are mainly African, although Prime Minister Charles Michel will
represent the former colonial ruler, Belgium. Image caption
Paul Kagame (C) welcomes Ethiopia's PM Abiy Ahmed to the memorial events
French President Emmanuel Macron will not be there. This week he appointed a panel of experts to investigate France's role in the genocide.
France
was a close ally of the Hutu-led government prior to the massacres and
has been accused of ignoring warning signs and training the militias who
carried out the attacks.
France will be represented by Herve Berville, a Rwandan-born MP.
Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni will also not be there. He has been accused of backing Rwandan rebels who oppose Mr Kagame.
Carrying the scars
The BBC's Flora Drury in Kigali
At
midday, Rwanda falls silent to remember the hundreds of thousands of
men, women and children who lost their lives over 100 days in 1994.
But
for survivors, the memories never fade. It might be a quarter of a
century but it doesn't feel like it. They still carry the scars,
literally and figuratively, of those days.
They are still forced
to explain to their children why they don't have grandparents or aunts
and uncles. They still dream of the horrors they witnessed.
So
while today is important to remind the country and the world of what was
lost 25 years ago - and the peace that has been achieved in the years
since - it is clear that survivors need little reminding.
How did the genocide unfold?
On 6 April 1994, a plane carrying then-President Juvenal Habyarimana - a Hutu - was shot down, killing all on board.
Media captionBBC News reports show how the story of the genocide emergedHutu extremists blamed the Tutsi rebel group, the Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF). It denied the accusation.
In
a well-organised campaign of slaughter, militias were given hit lists
of Tutsi victims. Many were killed with machetes in acts of appalling
brutality.
One of the militias was the ruling party's youth wing,
the Interahamwe, which set up road blocks to find Tutsis, incited hatred
via radio broadcasts and carried out house to house searches.
Little
was done internationally to stop the killings. The UN and Belgium had
forces in Rwanda but the UN mission was not given a mandate to act. The
Belgians and most UN peacekeepers pulled out.
The RPF, backed by
Uganda, started gaining ground and marched on Kigali. Some two million
Hutus fled, mainly to the Democratic Republic of Congo,
The RPF was accused of killing thousands of Hutus as it took power, although it denies this.
Dozens
of Hutus were convicted for their role in the killings by the
International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda, based in Tanzania, and
hundreds of thousands more faced trial in community courts in Rwanda.
How is Rwanda now?
The genocide has cast a long shadow over regeneration and talk of ethnicity remains illegal.
But
the country has recovered economically, with President Kagame's
policies encouraging rapid growth and technological advancement.
He won a third term in office in the most recent election in 2017 with 98.63% of the vote.
Growth remains good - 7.2% in 2018 according to the African Development Bank.
But Mr Kagame's critics say he is too authoritarian and does not tolerate dissent. bbcnews.com,facebook.com,instagram.com,twitter.com,askfm.om,waplog.com
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