http://www.zcommunications.org/paul-kagame-our-kind-of-guy-by-edward-herman-1
Back
in 1995, a senior Clinton administration official, commenting on Indonesian
President Suharto, then on a state visit to Washington, referred to him as “our
kind of guy.”[
Rwanda's President Paul Kagame clearly is another “our kind of
guy”: Like Suharto, Kagame is a double-genocidist, and one who ended any social
democratic threat in Rwanda, firmly aligned Rwanda with the West as a U.S.
client, and opened the door to foreign investment. Later, and far more
lucratively, Kagame helped carve out resource-extraction and investment
opportunities for his own associates and the U.S. and other Western investors
in neighboring Zaire, the massive, resource-rich Central African country
renamed the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) in 1997 during the First Congo
War (ca. July 1996 - July 1998).
For many years Kagame has been portrayed in the Western mainstream
media as the savior of Rwanda, having allegedly terminated the genocide
committed against his own minority ethnic group, the Tutsi, by the Hutu
majority (April - July 1994).[4] He and his supporters have long justified the
Rwanda Patriotic Front's military invasions of Zaire - the DRC as a
simple pursuit of the Hutu genocidaires who had fled Rwanda during the
war within, and Kagame's conquest of, the country. This apologetic, long
considered fraudulent by many marginalized dissidents, has finally come into
question even within the establishment with the leak[5] and then wide circulation of a draft UN report prepared for the
High Commissioner for Human Rights (i.e., "Report of the
Mapping Exercise documenting the most serious violations of human rights and
international humanitarian law committed within the territory of the Democratic
Republic of the Congo between March 1993 and June 2003," June, 2010). Not only does this report catalogue the massive
atrocities committed in the DRC over a ten-year period, it attributes the
responsibility for the most serious of these atrocities to the RPF. "There
is no denying that ethnic massacres were committed and that the victims were
mostly Hutus from Burundi, Rwanda, and Zaire," the draft report quotes the
findings of a 1997 UN inquiry (para. 510). Factoring-in the "scale of the
crimes and the large number of victims" as well as the "systematic
nature of the attacks listed against the Hutu…[p]articularly in North Kivu and
South Kivu…suggests premeditation and a precise methodology" (para. 514).
The draft report's section on the "Crime of genocide" concludes:
"The systematic and widespread attacks…which targeted very large numbers
of Rwanda Hutu refugees and members of the Hutu civilian population, resulting
in their death, reveal a number of damning elements that, if they were proven
before a competent court, could be classified crimes of genocide" (para.
517).[6] As Luc Cote, a former investigator and head of
the legal office at the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR),
observed: "For me it was amazing. I saw a pattern in the Congo that I'd
seen in Rwanda. It was the same thing. There are dozens and dozens of
incidents, where you have the same pattern. It was systematically done."[7]
Actually, this was not the first time the UN had pointed to Kagame’s
genocidal operations in Rwanda and the DRC. Even before the 1997 inquiry
(quoted above), the surviving written summary of Robert Gersony's oral
presentation at the UN in October 1994 reports "systematic and sustained
killing and persecution of the Hutu civilian populations by the [RPF]" in
southern Rwanda from April through August of that year, and "Large-scale
indiscriminate killings of men, women, [and] children, including the sick and
the elderly…." The Gersony report estimated between 5,000 and 10,000 Hutu
deaths each month from April on. "It appeared that the vast majority of
men, women, and children killed in those actions were targeted through the pure
chance of being caught by the [RPF]." ("Summary of UNHCR Presentation
Before Commission of Experts," October 11, 1994.) Importantly, the members
of this UN Commission agreed at this time to treat Gersony's testimony and
evidence as "confidential," and ordered that it should "only be
made available to members of the Commission"—who promptly suppressed its
findings.[8] (See the letter written on UN High
Commissioner for Refugees stationary by Francois Fouinat, addressed to Ms. B.
Molina-Abram of the Commission of Experts on Rwanda, October 11, 1994.)
Among the many other UN reports on the DRC, the second in the
series by the UN Panel of Experts on the “Illegal Exploitation of Natural
Resources and Other Forms of Wealth of the Democratic Republic of Congo” (S/2002/1146, October, 2002) also stands out. The UN Panel
estimated that by September 2002, some 3.5 million excess deaths had occurred
in the five eastern provinces as “a direct result of the occupation of the DRC
by Rwanda and Uganda” (para. 96). This report also rejected the Kagame regime's
rationale that its armed forces' continued presence in the eastern DRC was
needed to defend Rwanda against hostile Hutu forces terrorizing the border
region and threatening to invade it; instead, the "real long-term purpose
is…to 'secure property'," the UN countered (para. 66).[9] But though this 2002 report was not ordered suppressed the way
the 1994 Gersony report was, it was nevertheless ignored in the Western media,
despite the fact that 3.5 million deaths greatly exceeds the highest toll
attributed to the "Rwanda genocide” of 1994.
This suppression was surely a result of the fact that Kagame is a
U.S. client, whose deadly efforts in the DRC were actually in line with the
U.S. policy of opening up the country to U.S. and other Western mining and
business interests. In fact, in answering questions on this leaked report, U.S.
Assistant Secretary of State Philip Crowley admitted that “We do have a
relationship with Rwanda apart from the tragic history of genocide and other
issues in the 1990s. Rwanda has played a constructive role in the region
recently. It has played an important role in a variety of UN missions. It is in
our interest to help to professionalize military forces. And we work hard on
that in various parts of the world. So we have engaged Rwanda.”[10] Crowley and company hadn’t gotten around to studying that draft
UN report at the time. But then, on the other hand, there were those earlier UN
reports of Kagame’s mass killings of civilians in both Rwanda and the DRC,
which led to no discernible U.S. or UN response (except, as noted,
suppression). Could it be that these were the acceptable responses of those
“professionalized military forces,” as they have been to the performance of the
professionalized forces of Suharto and the U.S.-trained Latin American troops
fresh out of the School of the Americas? Could it be that these horrors were
also “dividends” and a new "gleam of light”—in Africa?
It is interesting to note that the first New York Times
article on the draft UN report, by Howard French, refers to the difficulty
encountered in getting this new report out—it was in fact leaked first to Le
Monde in France by insiders who were concerned that its really critical
parts might be excised before its release. The UN had already felt it necessary
to show the draft to the Kagame government for comments,[11] and that government’s denunciation of this “outrageous” document
was spelled out in a full paragraph in the NYT article. As French explained it,
there were “difficulties over seven months” in getting the report released over
the objections of a government “which has long enjoyed the strong diplomatic
support from the United States and Britain.”[12]
Perhaps the UN insiders and media were emboldened to act by the
remarkable 93 percent vote total obtained by Kagame in the August 9, 2010
presidential election, where he seems to have gotten massive support from the
Hutus whose relatives and ethnic compatriots he was busily slaughtering on such
a large scale in the DRC. This election got enough publicity to put Rwanda back
on the media stage, if only briefly, with even the U.S. administration
expressing mild “concerns” over "what
appear to be attempts by the government of Rwanda to limit freedom of
expression" (Philip Crowley, August 9),[13] and
urging voluntary reforms. Suppose credible evidence was found by the UN that
Venezuela's Hugo Chavez had massacred thousands of refugee women, children,
elderly, and wounded in a neighboring country. Can you imagine the UN asking
Chavez to comment on a draft report on his activities, and granting him seven
months before someone leaked it to a major newspaper?
We may note also that this possible DRC genocide is discussed by
Howard French and the rest of the mainstream media within the partially
exonerating context of “The Genocide” of 1994, where Kagame was allegedly the
savior who ended a Hutu-engineered mass killing. As French writes, following
the established Western party-line, “In 1994, more than 800,000 people,
predominantly members of the ethnic Tutsi group in Rwanda,, were slaughtered by
the Hutu.”[14] In this and other current mainstream reports
there was, first, the primary genocide of the Tutsi by the Hutu, which it now
appears may have been followed by a secondary genocide in response by the Tutsi
against the Hutu.
But this context is based on a monumental establishment lie about
the first genocide, and in fact the great difficulty in publicizing the mass
murder in the DRC has an obvious common source with that lie: namely, as Kagame
is a servant of the U.S. and other Western imperial powers, reports of his
crimes are ignored by Western officials and avoided in the mainstream media.
The truth, which Howard French and his associates cannot admit, is that the
real 1994 genocide was also mainly the work of Paul Kagame, with the
assistance of Bill Clinton, the British and Belgians, the UN, and the
mainstream media.[15]
Paul Kagame relies on the myth of his savior role to maintain his
domination of Rwanda,[16] although this merely supplements his primary
dependence on force. But he has made “genocide denial” a crime, with the
standard model of the "Rwandan genocide" taken as the truth, so that
those contesting his power can be treated as “genocide deniers” or
“divisionists” and prosecuted for crimes against the Rwandan state. On this
basis, Peter Erlinder, a U.S. lawyer and lead defense counsel at the ICTR, was
arrested when he arrived in Rwanda in late May to represent Victoire Ingabire
Umuhoza, a Hutu opposition political candidate, who had also been arrested and
barred from running for political office. Although Erlinder was released on
bail in mid-June, his arrest and the systematic crackdown on opposition parties
and candidates prior to the August election has been awkward for defenders of
the savior and standard model.[17]
As to the mythical character of that model, consider the
following:
* The “triggering event” in the first genocide
is generally accepted to have been the April 6, 1994 shooting down of the jet
carrying Juvenal Habyarimana, the Hutu president of Rwanda, and Cyprien
Ntaryamira, the Hutu president of Burundi. There is overwhelming evidence that
this shootdown was organized by Paul Kagame. This was the conclusion of Michael
Hourigan, an investigator who researched the subject for the ICTR in 1996.[18] But his report on this to ICTR prosecutor Louise Arbour was set
aside, after consultation with U.S. officials, and the ICTR failed to engage in
any further investigation of the “triggering event” over the next 13 years. Why
would the ICTR, a creature of the U.S.-dominated Security Council, drop this
subject unless credible evidence pointed to the U.S.-supported Kagame and the
RPF?
* An even more extensive investigation of the
“triggering event” by French Judge Jean-Louis Bruguière concluded that Kagame needed
the "physical elimination" of Habyarimana in order to seize
state-power within Rwanda before the national elections called for by the 1993
Arusha Accords, elections that Kagame almost certainly would have lost, given
that his minority Tutsi were greatly outnumbered by the majority Hutu.[19] Bruguière also noted that the RPF alone in Rwanda in 1994 were a
well-organized military force, and ready to strike. And the politically weak
but militarily strong Kagame-led RPF did strike, resuming its assault on
the government of Rwanda within two hours of the Habyarimana assassination.
This suggests advance knowledge as well as planning and an organization ready
to act, whereas the Hutu planners in the establishment’s mythical version of
these events seem to have been disorganized, overmatched, and quickly
overpowered. In less than 100 days, Kagame and the RPF controlled Rwanda. On
the assumption that the shoot-down was central to the larger plan of Hutu Power
and genocide, this would have required a miracle of Hutu incompetence; but it
would be entirely understandable if it was carried out by Kagame's force as
part of their plan to seize state-power.
* Kagame was trained at Fort Leavenworth,
Kansas, and has received steady U.S. material and diplomatic support from the
time he assumed command of the RPF shortly after the RPF's invasion of Rwanda
from Uganda in October 1990,[20] a serious act of aggression that was somehow
not taken seriously in the Security Council, up to and beyond the RPF's final
assault on the Rwandan state that began on April 6, 1994. During that April
assault, when the “genocide” was presumably well underway, the remnants of the
Rwandan government urged the UN to provide more troops to contain the violence,
but Paul Kagame didn’t want more UN troops as he was sure of a military
victory, and—surprise!—the United States was also against such a troop
addition. In consequence, the Security Council greatly reduced the number of UN troops in Rwanda—a bit hard to reconcile
with the standard account that the locus of primary responsibility for the 100
days of killings resides with "Hutu Power" (and killers) and their
genocidal plan. The apology in 1998 by Bill Clinton on behalf of the
"international community" for "not
act[ing] quickly enough after the killing began"[21] was unconscionable hypocrisy. Rather than failing
at some non-existent humanitarian objective, the Clinton administration
facilitated Kagame's conquest of Rwanda in 1994, so Clinton shares Kagame’s
criminality for the violence in Rwanda and for the violence that the RPF
extended so ferociously into the DRC for so many years.
* As regards evidence on the killings, there is
no doubt that many Tutsi were killed, although mostly in sporadic bursts and
localized vengeance killings, not as the result of a systematically planned
operation of Hutu commanders. Only the Kagame forces seem to have killed on a
systematic and planned basis. And their killings were played down by the UN and
United States. Not only was the 1994 Gersony report on Hutu killings by the RPF
suppressed by the UN, an internal memorandum to the U.S. Secretary of State in
September 1994 that reported the killing of "10,000 or more Hutu civilians
per month" by Tutsi forces also never saw the light of day, except for its
unearthing by Peter Erlinder and its use as evidence at the ICTR.[22] When the U.S. academics Christian Davenport and Allan Stam, who
were initially employed by the ICTR to document all deaths in Rwanda during
1994, concluded that the "majority of victims are likely Hutu and not
Tutsi," they were promptly fired. "The killings in the zone
controlled by the FAR [i.e., the Armed Forces of Rwanda] seemed to escalate as
the [RPF] moved into the country and acquired more territory," they write,
summarizing what they consider the "most shocking result" of their
research. "When the [RPF] advanced, large-scale killings escalated. When
the [RPF] stopped, large-scale killings largely decreased."[23]
Would it not have been incredible for Kagame’s
Tutsi forces, the only well-organized killing force within Rwanda in 1994,
whose surges on the battlefield were systematically accompanied by spikes in
deaths, and who were able to conquer Rwanda in 100 days, to have been unable to
prevent Tutsi deaths from exceeding the Hutu deaths by a large margin, as the
standard model of the "Rwandan genocide" holds? Indeed, it is
incredible, and should be considered a propaganda myth.
* This myth is also incompatible with basic
population numbers. As we first reported elsewhere,[24] and will now repeat here (see Table 1, below), the official 1991
census of Rwanda determined the country's ethnic breakdown to be 91.1% Hutu,
8.4% Tutsi, 0.4% Twa, and 0.1% "other." Thus out of Rwanda's 1991
population of 7,099,844 persons, Rwanda's minority Tutsi population was
596,387, compared to a majority Hutu population of 6,467,958. Additionally, as
Davenport and Stam point out in their Miller-McCune article, the Tutsi
survivors organization IBUKA claimed that "about 300,000 Tutsi survived
the 1994 slaughter"—a number which means that "out of the 800,000 to
1 million believed to have been killed then, more than half were Hutu."[25] In fact, it is highly likely that far more than half of those
killed in Rwanda during the April-July 1994 period were Hutu; and of course after
the RPF seized state power in July, Hutu deaths inside both Rwanda and later
the DRC continued unabated for another decade-and-a-half.
Concluding Note
There is great continuity in U.S. policy in the Third World, and
it is not pleasant. Thus a Bill Clinton official could find the mass killer
Suharto “our kind of guy” in 1995, and Suharto received steady U.S. support for
33 years, through the administrations of Johnson, Nixon, Ford, Carter, Reagan,
and Clinton, until his downfall during the Asian currency crisis in 1998. In a
more recent time frame, extending from 1990 to today, Paul Kagame, an even more
ferocious mass killer, has gotten support from the first George Bush, Bill
Clinton, the second George Bush, and now Barack Obama (whose Deputy Secretary
of State hadn't gotten around to looking at the draft UN Report on Kagame’s
mass killings in the DRC). It is interesting, also, to see the media treat this
latest “our kind of guy” so kindly, with the liberal New Yorker’s Philip
Gourevitch even comparing Kagame to Abe Lincoln (in his 1998 book We wish to
inform you that tomorrow we will be killed with our families), and Stephen
Kinzer publishing a hagiography of this deadly agent of U.S. power (A
Thousand Hills: Rwanda’s Rebirth and the Man Who Dreamed It [2008]).
This leaked UN report and the negative publicity generated by Kagame’s sham election in August 2010 may open up the mainstream a bit to a more honest examination of this U.S.-supported mass killer. But that is no sure thing, given the value of his service to U.S. power in Africa, and given the U.S. establishment’s deep commitment to a narrative that for many years has protected and even sanctified the “man who dreamed.”
This leaked UN report and the negative publicity generated by Kagame’s sham election in August 2010 may open up the mainstream a bit to a more honest examination of this U.S.-supported mass killer. But that is no sure thing, given the value of his service to U.S. power in Africa, and given the U.S. establishment’s deep commitment to a narrative that for many years has protected and even sanctified the “man who dreamed.”
[ Edward S. Herman and David Peterson are
co-authors of The Politics of Genocide, published in 2010
by Monthly Review Press. ]
---- APPENDIX ----
Table
1. Rwanda's national population as of 1991,
broken-down by its two largest ethnic groups [a]
broken-down by its two largest ethnic groups [a]
Prefecture
|
Hutu
|
Tutsi
|
Totals
[b]
|
Butare
|
618,172
(82.0%)
|
130,419
(17.3%)
|
753,868
|
Byumba
|
761,966
(98.2%)
|
11,639
(1.5%)
|
775,933
|
Cyangugu
|
489,238
(88.7%)
|
57,914
(10.5%)
|
551,565
|
Gikongoro
|
401,997
(86.3%)
|
59,624
(12.8%)
|
465,814
|
Gisenyi
|
708,572
(96.8%)
|
21,228
(2.9%)
|
731,996
|
Gitara
|
764,920
(90.2%)
|
78,018
(9.2%)
|
848,027
|
Kibungo
|
596,999
(92.0%)
|
49,966
(7.7%)
|
648,912
|
Kibuye
|
398,131
(84.8%)
|
69,485
(14.8%)
|
469,494
|
Kigali
|
822,314
(90.8%)
|
79,696
(8.8%)
|
905,632
|
Kigali
City [c]
|
180,550
(81.4%)
|
39,703
(17.9%)
|
221,806
|
Ruhengeri
|
760,661
(99.2%)
|
3,834
(0.5%)
|
766,795
|
TOTALS |
6,467,958 (91.1%) |
596,387 (8.4%) |
7,099,844 |
Urban
|
313,586
(83.9%)
|
57,186
(15.3%)
|
373,762
|
Rural
|
6,154,365
(91.5%)
|
558,265
(8.3%)
|
6,726,082
|
[a] Adapted from Table 4.2,
"Répartition (en %) de la population
de nationalité rwandaise selon l'ethnie, la préfecture ou le milieu de
résidence," in Recensement
general de la population et de l'habitat au 15 aout 1991, Service National de
Recensement, Republique Rwandaise, p. 124. Table 4.2 reported the national
population of Rwanda, ca. 1991, by ethnicity and expressed as percentages
(i.e., here the percentages inside the parentheses). Based on Rwanda's total
population (7,099,844) at the time, we've simply calculated the related approximate
totals in the second and third columns for Hutu and Tutsi (e.g., 7,099,844 x
8.4% = 596,387 for the total Tutsi population of Rwanda at the time of the 1991
census). Note that these numbers are to be regarded as approximate totals.
[b] Note that although we've omitted separate columns for the Twa and Other ethnic groups that were listed in Table 4.2 (1991), our Totals column here includes the totals for Twa and Other.
[c] Note that Kigali City's total is separate from the total for Kigali Prefecture.
[b] Note that although we've omitted separate columns for the Twa and Other ethnic groups that were listed in Table 4.2 (1991), our Totals column here includes the totals for Twa and Other.
[c] Note that Kigali City's total is separate from the total for Kigali Prefecture.
---- Endnotes ----
[1] David E. Sanger,
"Real Politics: Why Suharto Is In and Castro Is Out," New York Times, October 31, 1995. As
Sanger described the Clinton administration's embrace of Suharto: "When
[Suharto] arrived at the White House on Friday [October 27] for a 'private'
visit with the President, the Cabinet room was jammed with top officials ready
to welcome him. Vice President Gore was there, along with Secretary of State
Warren Christopher; the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. John
Shalikashvili; Commerce Secretary Ronald H. Brown; the United States trade
representative, Mickey Kantor; the national security adviser, Anthony Lake, and
many others. 'There wasn't an empty chair in the room', one participant said.
'No one used to treat the Indonesians like this, and it said a lot about how
our priorities in the world have changed'….[Indonesia is] the ultimate emerging
market: some 13,000 islands, a population of 193 million and an economy growing
at more than 7 percent a year. The country remains wildly corrupt and Mr. Suharto's family controls leading
businesses that competitors in Jakarta would be unwise to challenge. But Mr. Suharto, unlike the Chinese, has been
savvy in keeping Washington happy. He has deregulated the economy, opened
Indonesia to foreign investors and kept the Japanese, Indonesia's largest
supplier of foreign aid, from grabbing more than a quarter of the market for
goods imported into the country….'He's our
kind of guy', a senior Administration official who deals often on Asian
policy, said…."
[2] On Robert McNamara,
see Noam Chomsky, Year
501: The Conquest Continues
(Boston: South End Press, 1993), p. 126. "Particularly valuable,"
Chomsky notes, with direct relevance to the story of Paul Kagame's rise,
"was the program bringing Indonesian military personnel to the United
States for training at universities, where they learned the lessons they put so
use so well. These were 'very significant factors in determining the favorable
orientation of the new Indonesian political elite' (the army), McNamara
argued" (p. 126).
[3] James Reston, "A
Gleam of Light in Asia," New York
Times, June 19, 1966.
[4] The most widely cited
account of what we regard as the standard model of the "Rwandan
genocide" is Allison Des Forges et al., "Leave None to Tell the Story": Genocide in Rwanda
(New York: Human Rights Watch, 1999).
[5] The existence of this
draft UN document was first reported in France by Christophe Châtelot, "L'acte
d'accusation de dix ans de crimes au Congo RDC," Le Monde, August 26, 2010.
[6] See "Report of the
Mapping Exercise documenting the most serious violations of human rights and
international humanitarian law committed within the territory of the Democratic
Republic of the Congo between March 1993 and June 2003," UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, June, 2010.
Here we emphasize that although this report was leaked to the media and then
circulated widely, we do not know whether it will be revised before its
eventual official publication (scheduled for October 1, 2010), and how dramatic
the revisions will be.
[7] Judi Rever, "Congo butchery
resembled Rwandan genocide: UN lawyer," Agence France
Presse, August 27, 2010.
[8] See the treatment of
Robert Gersony's oral presentation before the UN High Commissioner for
Refugees, as well as the written order by the Commission of Experts on Rwanda to
suppress Gersony's findings, in Christopher Black, "The Rwandan Patriotic Front's Bloody Record and the History
of UN Cover-Ups", MRZine, September 12, 2010.
[9] Mahmoud Kassem et al.,
Report of the Panel of Experts on the Illegal Exploitation of Natural Resources
and Other Forms of Wealth of the Democratic Republic of Congo (S/2002/1146), UN Security Council, October, 2002.
[10] U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Philip J.
Crowley, "Daily Press
Briefing,"
U.S. Department of State, August 30, 2010.
[11] See Philip Gourevitch,
"Rwanda Pushes
Back Against UN Genocide Charges," New Yorker Blog, August 27, 2010.
[12] Howard French,
"U.N. Report on
Congo Offers New View of Genocide Era,"
New York Times, August 28, 2010.
[13] U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Philip J.
Crowley, "Daily Press
Briefing,"
U.S. Department of State, August 9, 2010.
[15] See Edward S. Herman
and David Peterson, The Politics of Genocide (New York: Monthly
Review Press, 2010), pp. 51-68. For an electronic copy of this section of our
book, see "Rwanda and the
Democratic Republic of Congo in the Propaganda System," Monthly Review 62,
no. 1, May, 2010.
[16] The myth of the Paul
Kagame-led Rwandan Patriotic Front ending
rather than triggering and participating in—and
even perpetrating—the mass atrocities of 1994 known as the
"Rwandan genocide" was propagated by Alison Des Forges et al. in "Leave
None to Tell the Story": Genocide in Rwanda. "The Rwandan
Patriotic Front ended the 1994 genocide by defeating the civilian and military
authorities responsible for the killing campaign," we read in the chapter
devoted to the RPF. "Its troops encountered little opposition, except
around Kigali, and they routed government forces in operations that began in
early April and ended in July" (p. 692). The entire chapter that Des
Forges et al. devoted specifically to "The Rwandan Patriotic
Front" (pp. 692-735) must be understood as an attempt to propagate this
myth by which the Kagame dictatorship has justified its rule by violence since
1994 and the pillage that followed.
[17] See Edward S. Herman
and David Peterson, , "Peter Erlinder
Jailed by One of the Major Genocidaires of Our Era—Update," MRZine, June 17, 2010.
[18] See Affidavit of
Michael Andrew Hourigan,
International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda, November 27, 2006. For other
sources that discuss the suppression of the Hourigan memorandum, see Robin
Philpot, Rwanda
1994: Colonialism Dies Hard (E-Text
as posted to the Taylor Report Website, 2004), esp. Chap. 6, "It shall be
called a plan crash"; Steven Edwards, "'Explosive' Leak on Rwanda Genocide," National Post,
March 1, 2000; Mark Colvin, "Questions
unanswered 10 years after Rwandan genocide,"
PM, Australian Broadcasting Corporation, March 30, 2004; Mark Doyle, "Rwanda 'plane crash probe halted'," BBC News, February 9, 2007; Nick McKenzie, "UN 'shut down'
Rwanda probe," The Age, February
10, 2007; and Tiphaine Dickson, "Rwanda's Deadliest Secret: Who Shot Down President Habyarimana's
Plane?" Global Research.com, November 24, 2008.
[19] Judge Jean-Louis Bruguière, Request for the
Issuance of International Arrest Warrants,
Tribunal de Grande Instance de Paris, November 17, 2006, p. 12 (as archived by
the Taylor Report website).
[20] Two early reports on
the Paul Kagame-led Rwandan Patriotic Front's 1994 overthrow of the remnants of
the Habyarimana government are worth referencing here: Steve Vogel,
"Student of War Graduates on Battlefields of Rwanda," Washington Post, August 25, 1994; and
Raymond Bonner, "How Minority Tutsi Won the War," New York Times, September 6, 1994.
[22] See George E. Moose,
"Human Rights
Abuses in Rwanda," Information
Memorandum to The Secretary, U.S. Department of State, undated though clearly
drafted between September 17 and 20, 1994. This document was called to our
attention by Peter Erlinder, the director of the Rwanda Documents
Project at William Mitchell College of
Law, St. Paul, Minnesota, ICTR Military-1 Exhibit, DNT 264.
[23] Christian Davenport
and Allan C. Stam, "What Really
Happened in Rwanda?" Miller-McCune, October 6, 2009.
[24] See Edward S. Herman
and David Peterson, "Adam Jones on Rwanda and Genocide: A Reply," MRZine, August
14, 2010, specifically Table 1, "Rwanda's national population as of 1991,
broken-down by its two largest ethnic groups."
No comments:
Post a Comment