Citation
always something of a Tutsi mouthpiece, suggested the creation of
 four Ministries entirely within Rwandan hands, Finance, Education,
 Public Works, and the Interior — virtual self-government. In February
 1957 the Conseil called for a speedy transfer of power and the
 promotion of a trained elite to staff new Ministries.4 For the counter-
 elite this surge of nationalist feeling seemed nothing but an expression
 of the Tutsi will to continue their oppressive rule. Their language was
 now strident: ‘To those who want to abandon this country we say: No!
 Three million times no!" wrote an anonymous Abbé in Presse Africaine.
 ‘In the name of three million Bahutu delivered up to fear.'°
 
 On 24 March 1957 Kayibanda, head of TRAFIPRO, Calliope
 Mulindahabi, Bishop Perraudin's secretary, and Aloys Munyangaju, a
 clerk in a Belgian company, in consultation with other Hutu leaders
 and under the guidance of Ernotte and Dejemeppe, published the
 Bahutu manifesto from Kabgayi. At the same time the Bishops of
 Burundi and Rwanda published a joint pastoral pointing out once
 more the Church's right to speak on matters of social justice and to
 call attention to abuses.6
 
 The manifesto contained little that was new, and the Hutu had to
 wait a year for its impact to be felt fully. It suggested that the malaise
 in the country was attributable to the evils of Indirect Rule, the
 
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