Résumé
By soliciting African leaders' views on the crisis in
 Rwanda I was able to establish areas of consensus on policy and
 express our support for their efforts. There was broad
 agreement that Rwanda is a human rights catastrophe of the
 first magnitude; that there is a need for an enhanced UN
 presence with a new mission, centered on assuring unimpeded
 access to humanitarian assistance and civilian protection; that
 there should be a UN human rights inquiry as a means, in part,
 of halting the spiral of retribution; and that a ceasefire is
 critically important although it is unlikely to end all the
 killings. My stop in Burundi allowed me to encourage the
 interim leadership in their efforts to maintain calm. I
 believe Rwanda is a test of our commitment to universal
 principles of human rights.
 
Citation
UNCLASSIFIED
 
 417
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 uni,edstuMPASFIC
 nto S a
 Washington, D. C. 20520
 
 May 9, 1994
 INFORMATION MEMORANCO
 CONFIDENTIAL
 TO:
 
 The Acting Secretary
 
 THROUGH: C - Mr. Wirth
 FROM:
 
 HA - John Shattuckj5T
 
 SUBJECT: My Trip to East and Central Africa
 SUMMARY
 By soliciting African leaders' views on the crisis in
 Rwanda I was able to establish areas of consensus on policy and
 express our support for their efforts. There was broad
 agreement that Rwanda is a human rights catastrophe of the
 first magnitude; that there is a need for an enhanced UN
 presence with a new mission, centered on assuring unimpeded
 access to humanitarian assistance and civilian protection; that
 there should be a UN human rights inquiry as a means, in part,
 of halting the spiral of retribution; and that a ceasefire is
 critically important although it is unlikely to end all the
 killings. My stop in Burundi allowed me to encourage the
 interim leadership in their efforts to maintain calm. I
 believe Rwanda is a test of our commitment to universal
 principles of human rights.
 DISCUSSION
 My trip to East and Central Africa was an opportunity to
 outline privately and publicly our major goals in addressing
 the human rights catastrophe in Rwanda, and to convey U.S.
 support to Rwanda's neighbors. The African leaders with whom I
 consulted were feeling somewhat abandoned by the UN and the
 West in the wake of the UNAMIR drawdown. By soliciting their
 views on the crisis in Rwanda on a trip designated as a
 presidential mission, I was able to establish broad areas of
 consensus on policy and prepare the way for the steps we are
 now considering taking.
 There are important areas of agreement among those with
 whom I met:
 CONFIDENTIAL
 UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF STATE
 REVIEW AUTHORITY: PAUL W HILBURN
 DATE/CASE ID: 26 JUL 2006 200103014
 
 UNCLASSIFIED
 
 UNCLASSIFIED
 CONFIDENTIAL
 - 2 • Human Riahts Catastrophe: Rwanda is a human rights
 crisis of the greatest magnitude. OAU Secretary General Salim
 Salim spoke of how agonizing Rwanda has been to him personally,
 adding that the government shows no remorse. Tanzanian PM
 Malacela described the, massacres as shameful to Africa and said
 the government cannot deny responsibility. President Museveni
 of Uganda simply described the killings as genocide. A recent
 ICRC document said of Rwanda, "Never before in its 131-year
 history...has the ICRC seen at first hand such unmitigated
 hatred leading to the extermination of a significant part of
 the civilian population."
 • Expansion and New Mission for UNAMIR: There is a need
 for an enhanced UN presence and a new mission for UNAMIR to
 provide unimpeded access to humanitarian assistance and
 protection and/or evacuation to affected civilians. Other
 possible objectives for such a presence could include human
 rights monitoring (as in Cambodia or El Salvador), ceasefire
 monitoring, and encouragement of dialogue between the warring
 parties.
 . 0 Human Rights Inquiry: An international' human rights
 inquiry into the responsibility for the massacres must be
 initiated. President Museveni saw such an investigation as a
 way of breaking the spiral of retaliation by providing a legal
 and impartial mechanism to evaluate the facts. At minimum, he
 said, those guilty should be denied public office. OAU
 Secretary General Salim described such an effort as a way to
 "assuage the feelings" of the victims by showing international
 concern. He stressed the universality of human rights when he
 said Rwanda is not just an African problem but a universal
 one. Human Rights High Commissioner Ayala-Lasso's trip to
 Rwanda this week, while not meant to launch an investigation as
 such, will send a strong international message. I have spoken
 with Ayala Lasso multiple times over the last weeks; I think
 the USG can take quiet satisfaction for having encouraged his
 decision to travel to Rwanda, despite his own and
 Boutros-Ghali's initial reservations. In addition to
 stimulating the Ayala-Lasso mission, we are working closely
 with other governments to ensure an emergency session on Rwanda
 of the UN Human Rights Commission by the middle of this month.
 • Ceasefire: While a ceasefire between Rwandan government
 forces and the Rwandan Patriotic Front is of critical
 importance, it is still unlikely to end all the killings. It
 would, however, change the dynamic so that further steps Might
 be taken to curtail the dimensions of the human rights
 catastrophe. Both sides have agreed, in principle, to a
 CONFIDENTIAL
 
 UNCLASSIFIED
 
 UNCLASSIFIED
 
 CONFIDENTIAL
 - 3 ceasefire. The best hope of achieving it in the next few days
 lies with General Dallaire who can convene high-ranking
 military leaders of both sides to discuss details. I spoke
 with Dallaire's staff by phone to encourage such a role and
 also talked to both RPF and government figures to encourage
 compliance.
 • Burundi. My brief stop in Burundi was meant to
 encourage the interim leadership to continue their efforts to
 promote calm. All expressed their appreciation for American
 support, both in the democratization process and during the
 crisis of the last several months. The interim President and
 Prime Minister agreed that an expanded UN humanitarian and.,
 refugee-protection mission for Rwanda is essential, but
 cautioned against the destabilizing effect in Burundi of an
 "intervention force" in Rwanda.
 I have come back persuaded that Rwanda is a test of our
 commitment to universal principles of human rights. I strongly
 believe the international community must demonstrate the same
 concern for Rwanda as we show in Bosnia lest we weaken
 universal standards.
 
 CONFIDENTIAL
 
 UNCLASSIFIED