Fiche du document numéro 19482

Num
19482
Date
Friday September 1995
Amj
Auteur
Fichier
Taille
607966
Titre
Early Warning and Conflict Management Genocide in Rwanda
Sous titre
This report constitutes study II of the Evaluation of Emergency Assistance to Rwanda
Type
Rapport
Langue
EN
Citation
EARLY WARNING AND CONFLICT MANAGEMENT
GENOCIDE IN RWANDA

This report constitutes study II of the
Evaluation of Emergency Assistance to Rwanda

By
Howard Adelman
York University
Toronto, Canada

Astri Suhrke
Chr.Michelsen Institute
Bergen, Norway

With Contribution by
Brice Jones
London school of Economics, U.K

CHR.MICHELSEN INSTITUTE
Development studies and Human Rights
Fontoftvegen 38
N-5036 Fontoft-Bergen,Norway
Phone.+47 55 574000,Fax +47 55 574166

ii

TABLE OF CONTENTS
Acknowledgement
Introduction
Chapter 1: The Festering Refugee Problem
Chapter 2: Civil War Civil Violence, and International Response
(1 Oct; 1990 - 4 August 1993)
From Invasion to Negotiations
The Arusha Period
Chapter 3: Implementing and Subverting the Peace Agreement
(4 August 1993 - 6 April 1994
Implementation Subversion
Structural Disjuncture: the UN and the OAU
Chapter 4: Crisis and Withdrawal
(6 April 1994 - 21 April 1994)
Crisis
Withdrawal
Chapter 5: Retroactive Conflict Management
(29 April 1994 - August 1994)
UNAMIR II
Operation Turquoise
Chapter 6:Refugees 1994 May 1995 Internally Displaced Persons
Refugees Camps: Humanitarian and Security Issues
Searching for Solutions
Internally Displaced: Kibeho
Chapter 7: Conclusions
Chapter 8: Recommendations
Bibliography
Appendix I: Agencies and organizations contacted

iii

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We would like to acknowledge a number of individuals without whose assistance this
report could not have been completed. First the members of the inter-governmental
committees supervising the study were always supportive and understanding without
trying to influence the outcome. Secondly, we wish to thank the other teams involved
in the study. It was recognized from the beginning that the teams had overlapping
areas to cover and we found that the teams openly and willingly shared information
and materials. We are particularly grateful to the leaders of study III, with whom we
had the greatest overlap. Thirdly, this study has depended on the contributions of
numerous persons and agencies. Several academics and scholars in effect became
members of an expanded team: their research is listed in the bibliography and
acknowledged in the text. A much larger group of academics and other observers
gave valuable comments and some read parts of the draft report. A large number of
officials in Africa, Europe and North America gave of their valuable time, taken from
already subjecting schedules, to provide information, analysis, interpretations and
explanations, and patiently subjecting themselves to being questioned. Many shared
documentation to ensure factual accuracy. Their agencies and organizations are
listed in Appendix I.
Workshops to test out ideas and receive critical feedback were held at the Centre for
Refugee Studies, York University in Toronto, and the New School for Social
Research in New York. An international conference on Conflict Resolution in Africa
organized by the Chr. Michelsen Institute in Bergen helped to crystallize some of the
conclusions.
We would also like to thank the Chr. Michelsen Institute and the Center for Refugee
Studies at York, University in Toronto, Canada for providing institutional and
intellectual support: The graduate and post-graduate students at the Center for
Refugee Studies made a singularly valuable contribution by assisting with data
collection and index preparations.
Finally, and not least of all, we would like to thank our spouses and children who had
to put up with an intense travelling schedule, and our absence even when physically
present as we struggled to dispassionately dissect a human catastrophe.

Bergen and Toronto
September 1995
A.S., H.A.

1

INTRODUCTION
ANALYTICAL FRAMEWORK
Subject Matter

This report examines the effectiveness of international monitoring and management
of the Rwanda conflict which culminated in genocide of half a million to one million
persons in the second quarter of 1994. The report has two distinct yet closely related
foci: (i) the existence and effectiveness of early warning mechanisms anticipating
escalations in violent conflict and mass murder; ii) the mature and appropriateness of
the responses of significant international actors towards the evolving conflict. Since
the 1990 invasion marked the opening of the conflict cycle which culminated in
genocide, the study begins with the factors leading up to the invasion of October
1990 and ends in early 1995. Within this time frame, different phases of the conflict
are identified and studied in varying degrees of depth. In the period after August
1994, consideration is only given to conflict management issues concerning internally
displaced persons and refugees.
Process
Data collection for the study commenced at the beginning of 1994 and has been
carried out by Howard Adelman (York University, Toronto) and Astri Suhrke (Chr.
Michelsen Institute; Bergen), with the assistance of research associates working on
assigned topics. These included: Agnes Callamard, Peik Johansson, Bruce Jones,
Kate Halverson, Steven Livingston, Ogenga Otunnu, Gerard Prunier, Turid Lægreid
and Amare Tekle. The research is based on secondary resources (books and articles
by academics and journalists, media studies, reports, etc.) as well as considerable
primary data collected through interviews and document searches in the UN system
(New York and Geneva), the NGO community, and visits to relevant national capitals
in Europe and North America (Paris, Rome, Brussels, London, Washington, and
Ottawa), and in Africa (Nairobi, Kigali, Kampala, and Dar es Salaam). Documents
have limitations: a great deal of communication and key parts of the decision-making
in this case were not recorded. So do interviews: personal recollections of
participants. ways pose difficulties with respect even to basic facts; there is a need for
caution, given the propensity to rewrite history in the reconstruction of memory. This
difficulty was compounded by the traumatic mature of events in Rwanda and
controversies about international responses and responsibilities. With these
constraints, we have tried to provide-coherence in reconciling the various
perspectives on the crisis.
Although the research responsibility was initially divided according to issues Adelman taking primary responsibility for early warning and Suhrke for conflict
management - the final product is the responsibility of both dialectic of reaching a
consensus on virtually all issues was a discipline in itself.
Premises
This study falls outside of the bounds of evaluation in a conventional sense. To
address the questions posed by the terms of reference required two tasks: sorting out
the cause and effect relationships of complex historical developments, and assessing
their consequences not only in relation to formally stated goals but equally in relation
to higher standards of conflict management and international norms. In these

2

respects, the study follows the tradition of critical policy analysis. There is a
recognition of competing goals of unintended, unforeseen or indirect consequences,
yet a presumption of some choice and consequent responsibility on the actors
concerned.
The report is based on some general premises concerning the interpretation of a
complex social conflict. The first premise is that historical actors, in comparison to the
critical analysts of those acts, interpret events and their significance from very
different perspectives. Though both base their assessments on inadequate
information and communication, to assess the development of a conflict "from within,"
while it is evolving, differs significantly from ex-post facto analysis. The analyst is in
some respects better positioned to understand and interpret what occurred. In
retrospect, the equivalent of early warning data may be interpreted differently and
"more correctly" in light of what actually happened; signals that at the time were
ambiguous may now seem compelling, and additional information may be available.
The analyst may be constrained by lack of access to information sources, but can
view the issues from several perspectives. Herein also lies the danger of
misrepresenting the ability of historical actors to correctly interpret signals within their
own situational context. A related distinction lies in the set of filters that "screen"
incoming information; the range of action that policy-makers consider "realistic" will
influence the attention paid to information, how they interpret it, and to whom it is
communicated. In a feedback mechanism, this in turn influences the formulation of
policy options.
Early warning is the collection, analysis and communication of the relevant evidence
and conclusions to policy-makers to enable them to make strategic choices. Unlike
traditional intelligence, which also collects and analyses information and
communicates the results, the object of early warning is not primarily security for
one's self or one's country, but the security, of another; in early warning, the security
is not self-directed. The other party or parties are not presumed to be adversaries, as
is the case with intelligence analysis..
Human rights monitoring also involves the collection of information, analysis of that
information and communicating the results. But the prime audience is the public,
even though human rights reports are addressed to leaders. For human rights reports
do not facilitate the decision-making of those leaders, but rather serve as a superego,
a haunting conscience for people in power. Like early warning, it is other rather than
self-directed.
Early warning can be concerned with military conflicts, military coups, impending
humanitarian disasters, such as starvation and flows of refugees, slaughters, and, at
the extreme, genocide. In the Rwanda case, all of these were involved at different
stages.
The spontaneous slaughter of one group by another, usually as a result of interethnic strife, is not generally referred to as a genocide. Genocide must be the result
of deliberate policies of the political elite intent on wiping out the other group. Thus,
understanding the political process that leads to the genocide is critical. The decision
of a political elite to foster or permit a genocide to occur may be the result of their
implicit consent rather than explicit orders. In the Rwandan case, no such subtle

3

distinctions between implicit and explicit policies are necessary. The genocide was
active promoted by political and military leaders, and there were concrete plans to kill
at least all the Tutsi in Kigali. Once killing commenced , it is unclear whether the
leader continued to manage the genocide until the end, or once the frenzy of killing
started - and given the organization in place - it simply moved on in a tornado of mad
murder.
There need be no debate on whether use of the term genocide is appropriate, though
the applicability of the term to describe the previous relatively small slaughters (32,
000) was a central issue of debate at that time. In law, genocide need not lead to the
mass murder of anyone; it is the "intent to destroy, in whole or in part," a particular
group that counts (1948 Genocide Convention).However, in the public mind, the term
" genocide" is only used when substantial proportions of a group are slaughtered.
Again, though the legal definition will important in analysing early warning, and will be
referred to when "genocide" is used by others in that sense, the term will be used in
this report to refer only to the eventual result.
According to what standards do we assess the anticipation of violent conflict? The
terms of reference for the report ask for a determination of whether there were
relevant structures for collecting and analysing signals, and if so, whether these
functioned in an efficient, accurate and timely manner. But what are the relevant
structures? Who has - or should have - responsibility for collecting and analysing the
information and translating that analysis into options for action? We presumed that
the responsibility for collecting and analysing information flows from the responsibility
for action. That is, actors who played a role in the Rwandan conflict had an obligation
commensurate with their responsibilities to obtain and assess data about the evolving
violence. In each case, the overriding consideration must be whether the systems
caught and processed available information that at the time reasonably could be said
to indicate that an event - an invasion, an escalation of the conflict, genocide - was a
possibility, likely, or already underway.
As for conflict management, the general criteria identified by the terms of reference
are "containment and de-escalation." We see these as being derived from an ethical
standard which holds that the international community should have attempted to
reduce violence in Rwanda in general, and prevent genocide in particular. Given this
premise, a specific response has to be assessed not only in relation to its formal
goals (e.g. of UNAMIR I); the question must also be asked- whether the formal
mandate was appropriate in relation to a higher standard of conflict reduction extant
in the international community.
A number of general recognized international norms for assessing conduct
appropriate to conflict reduction are relevant in the Rwanda case. The obligation
exists for the parties in the conflict to attempt to settle their differences by peaceful
means, utilizing where possible the appropriate international organization to which
they are members. In refugee matters, countries of origin are obliged to allow their
nationals the right to be repatriated2. States are not to permit invasions of other
states from their territories3. There is an obligation not to intervene in the internal
affairs of sovereign states except in cases of genocide. These norms are not always
compatible, either in principle or in practice, nor were they in the Rwanda case. For
instance, norms affirming the right of refugees to return, and norms against using

4

military force from outside the country to enforce that right seemed to be at odds in
practice. No similar incompatibility existed between the general strictures against
intervention, on the one hand, and the explicit legal right and associated moral
obligation to intervene to stop the mass slaughter of civilians according to the Geneva
Genocide Convention.
If the first task of evaluation is to identify appropriate standards, a second is to assign
causative responsibility for decisions and their consequences. Different degrees of
responsibility may be assigned to different actors, responsibility which may vary over
time. In the Rwandan case, that meant, in the host instance, the Rwandan parties to
the conflict. It also meant, however, that the regional and European states most
closely involved in the development of the conflict triggered by the October 1990
invasion (especially Uganda and France as the principal associates of the major
Rwandan protagonists) bore significant responsibility. Thirdly, regional actors
(especially Tanzania and the OAU) were moved by self interest and formal
obligations, and, in fact, played an active and sustained mediating role in the re-1994
period. Fourthly, there were actors (other states, the Catholic Church, NGOs) who
chose to become involved or various reasons; they also had commitments and
responsibilities which varied with the extent of their involvement. Fifth, the UN and its
agencies became involved in a major way as the crisis in Rwanda threatened
regional peace and security. Finally, the media assumed important responsibilities,
particularly in the development of public awareness and public policy.
As for responsibility in the sense of a normative responsibility to act, the premise of
this report is that the principal though not exclusive responsibility for anticipating and
managing conflict lies with the parties themselves and their principal associates. In
particular, insofar as the principals are responsible for the development of the conflict,
they have both a political/moral obligation and some actual capacity for regulating it.
Beyond that, international organizations have formal obligations to assist in conflict
management. In cases of genocide, those obligations are much greater and apply to
the members as well as the organizations.
It must not be forgotten that the ones most responsible were the perpetrators of the
crimes. They have been identified as extremists. In this context, extremists are
presumed to have possessed two essential characteristics. First, their actions were
determined by an ideological view of the world - in their case, the definition of
Rwanda as a Hutu nation. Second, they regarded others who did not fit into this
definition and who threatened its realization as legitimate targets for murder.
Information gathering, analysis and communication, as well as the actions based on
this, must not only be assessed according to norms and attributed to agents based
on their respective responsibilities. These assessments must take into consideration
the limitations at work. For example, a system cannot be faulted for a failure at early
warning if the information available was small, inconsequential, of doubtful value, or
ambiguous. Further, not all conditions within Rwanda that led up to and accounted for
genocide were equally amenable to change. While there are various theories about
how and why the genocide occurred, most distinguish between structural factors and
situational variables. Structural factors, such as demographic density and the
shortage of land, can create a context conducive to social violence, but policy can
only alter that context in the long run and only with uncertain outcomes. Situational

5

variables that had a triggering or accelerating effect, such as arming militias or the
downsizing of UNAMIR, were subject to more immediate control through internal as
well as external influences.
The same distinction between situational and structural variables is also applicable to
those charged with interpreting and responding to the crisis. A realistic assessment of
the international response to the Rwandan catastrophe must recognize the structural
restraints of the existing international system based largely on competitive nationstates. Current capacity at the state, regional (OAU) and international (UN) level to
identify and respond to conflicts of the kind that occurred in Rwanda constitute
structural constraints on action. The broader foreign policy interests of the major
powers provided the context within which specific policies towards Rwanda were
formulated, both prior to and during the 1994 violence, and represented structural
constraints of a different kind. Nevertheless, within these limitations, options were
available and these constitute the focus of this report. Structural. problems (e.g. on
the UN level) will be dealt with only insofar as they affected the Rwanda case4 .The
conclusions and associated recommendations are situation specific. As such they are
not necessarily relevant for warning or management of the conflict in Rwanda as it is
currently evolving, but rather to a set of circumstances and actions that have generic
applicability.
Time Frame for Analysis
As recognized in the terms of reference, the period preceding the genocide is
relevant for an understanding of the signals emitted about the evolving conflict, and
efforts to contain it through diplomacy and military force. This report is organized
around five phases of the conflict; these are similar to those suggested in the terms of
reference, but adjusted after closer examination of the historical material.
Phase I covers the refugee problem in Uganda prior to October 1990. The chapter
examines how the refugee issues became a source of renewed violence, given the
failure of the Rwandan government to permit the return, the unwillingness of Uganda
to accord full rights of settlement, and whether there were early warnings of the
invasion itself.
Phase II includes the period from the October 1990 invasion until the signing of the
Arusha Peace Agreement in August 1993. This period was characterized by an
interlinked process of civil war, civil violence and preventive diplomacy. The
organized violence against unarmed civilians in this phase constituted a kind of early
warning to the effect that worse might be in store. Simultaneously, the intense
diplomatic activity resulted in a peace agreement between the government of
Rwanda (GoR) and the rebel Rwanda Patriotic Front (RPF). The political
democratisation within Rwanda during this period was related to the dynamic of
conflict and its management.
Phase III focuses on the planning, authorization, and deployment of UNAMIR from
mid-1993 until 6 April 1994, and its activities in early warning and conflict
management against the backdrop of the progressive unravelling of the Arusha
peace accords.
Phase IV covers the two weeks from 6 April until 21 April 1994. The immediate
aftermath of the death of Rwanda's president in a suspicious plane crash - when it
soon became evident that large-scale and targeted killings were underway - marks a
distinct phase in terms of the international response. The report focuses on the

6

information available that genocide was imminent and had, in fact, begun, and the
corresponding responses, particularly as they relate to the question about the role
UNAMIR should play. The dynamic interaction of the management of the genocide
and the management of the conflict - or rather, the failure to distinguish the two - is a
central concern. The analysis focuses on the decision-making process in the UN over
the future of UNAMIR, efforts by UNAMIR to carry out relevant parts of its mandate in
the new situation, and the eventual decision by the Security Council to draw down the
force, leaving only a symbolic military presence.
Phase V focuses on the subsequent decision to reverse withdrawal and re-engage
the UN to protect civilians. The study assesses the efficacy of this process and its
general impact on both the conflict on the ground and the violence against civilians.
In this phase another effort at retroactive conflict management was undertaken, i.e.
the UN-authorized French Operation Turquoise. This section of the report relies on
historic rather than anthropological analysis which would require micro-level
assessments in the field.
Phase VI examines the issue of the security of the internally displaced within Rwanda
and the establishment of militarised refugee communities in neighbouring countries.
This affected the security of the refugees and led to a massacre of several thousand
persons at the Kibeho camp inside Rwanda. There were also wider implications in
terms of conflict management. Social and political elements of the defeated regime
who were responsible for the genocide regrouped to consolidate their power in exile.
Thus, one element in a renewed cycle of conflict was formed.

CHAPTER 1
PHASE 1 - THE FESTERING REFUGEE PROBLEM
The invasion that triggered the disaster in Rwanda was itself the culmination of
previous strife of a type frequently seen in Africa: victims or losers in a conflict seek
refuge in a neighbouring country, which then becomes a base for invading the
homeland. In this case, Tutsi, who were the principal victims of political violence in
Rwanda in the decolonisation period (essentially 1959-1963), fled to the surrounding
countries, with large numbers settling in southern Uganda. The conflict which sparked
the original outflow, however, was not resolved but acquired an additional, refugee
dimension.
The norms for regulating problems of this kind of were in place. With reference to
African legal instruments and other international law, the Organization of African
Unity (OAU) and UNHCR had appealed to African states to prevent refugee problems
from generating renewed strife by following accepted principles of state responsibility
towards refugees: The country of origin must allow refugees full and right of return;
failing this, the host state should permit full settlement of refugees who cannot turn
elsewhere. The OAU had attempted to regulate problems associated with militant
refugee communities in its 1969 Convention on Refugee Problems in Africa (1969),
more generally in the African Charter on Human and People's Rights (1981), and
also in the Charter of the OAU itself (1963 All instruments prohibit the use of the
territory of one state for subversive activities against another. The 1969 Convention
specifically addresses this obligation to refugee communities and to the receiving
state by imposing restrictions on both 5

7

The specific refugee problems in the Great Lakes Region had long been recognized
by UNHCR. In the early 1960s, the agency extended its protection to Rwandan
refugees in Uganda, including some 80,000 who were receiving UNHCR assistance.
UNHCR also facilitated joint Rwandan-Ugandan talks to solve the crisis arising when
some 35,000 Rwandan refugees were expelled from southwestern Uganda in 198283.
The refugee problem seemed intractable. In essence, it stemmed from the
unwillingness of the Ugandan government to accord the refugees full rights of
settlement, while the Rwandan government for its part denied them the right of return.
Caught between the two denials, the refugee community predictably generated a
militant movement.
While a signatory to the relevant international instruments governing host country
treatment of refugees, Uganda did not have a clear policy on integration. Municipal
law regulating refugees (The 1964 Control of Aliens Act) was restrictive and
subjective, giving the Minister great discretionary power over the status, movement
and property of refugees (Khiddu-Makubuyu 1993, 1994). The subjective nature of
the law reflected the actual experience of the Rwandan refugee community in
Uganda. Conditions varied according to the political climate and as such, gave little,
security for either the present or the future. Few availed themselves of the opportunity
to acquire Ugandan citizenship. Legal formalities were no guarantee of security, as
illustrated in the 1982-83 "Chasing" when Banyarwanda of both Rwandan and
Ugandan citizenship were attacked. More important, Ugandan citizenship would have
terminated their right to return - and for that reason was the optimal solution mainly
for the Rwandan government. Many refugees nevertheless found sufficient security,
educational opportunities and mobility in Uganda to enable the second generation to
become an "advanced' refugee community. That relative success, in turn, became
part of the problem and exposed them as a target for local grievances in land and
other issues.
The intermittent invitations to return issued by the Rwandan government during the
first Republic (1962-73) had not been believed by the refugees. Citing
overpopulation, the Habyarimana government had consistently and unequivocally
denied the refugees the right of return. This was graphically demonstrated in 1982-83
when refugees chased out of Uganda were stopped at the border by Rwandan
forces, and became stranded under very difficult conditions. Not until 1986 did
President Habyarimana suggest the possibility of return, and then on an individual
and conditional basis.
In the refugee community, the militants of the early 1960s had by the 1980s been
replaced by a second generation. A new political movement was formed in 1984 as
the Rwandan Alliance for National Unity, and evolved into the Rwandese Patriotic
Front which crossed the border in October 1990. Key RPF leaders had earlier been in
the Ugandan National Resistance Army (NRA), and were alongside Museveni when
he ousted the Uganda's President Obote in 1986 and seized power. They continued
to hold senior positions in the Ugandan army6. A series of events within Uganda and
Rwanda in 1989-90, however, apparently convinced the RPF leadership that the time
to move had come, and that the Habyarimana regime could be replaced by a political

8

system where the RPF would have its proper place and enable the refugees to return
(Otunnu 1995).
Possibly sensing the drift of events, Habyarimana seized the initiative on the refugee
issue (Watson 1991, Erny 1994, Guichaoua 1990. He reiterated a limited offer of
conditional return and in 1989 established a Commission on Rwandan Refugees in
Uganda. A Rwandan-Ugandan interministerial committee on refugees was also
revived and, in cooperation with UNHCR, developed a plan for UNHCR to survey
Rwandan refugee settlements in Uganda in the fall of 1990, so as to assess the
demand for repatriation and prepare the modalities of return. It turned out to be too
little too late.
It has later been suggested that a portion of the refugee population, including its more
prosperous and well-established members, might have been more interested in the
formal right to return, and the right to visit freely, than in permanent repatriation7. The
existence of possibly diverse views within the refugee population was missed,
however, by a preliminary and poorly designed UNHCR survey conducted in mid19908. The survey was at any rate soon overtaken b y events, as the October
invasion radically transformed the situation.
The issue of return must be also be considered in a broader political context. The
demand of the RPF was not simply to return, but to change the political regime in the
homeland. Indeed, the refugee issue appeared as only point number 5 on their 8point political program (Reyntjens 1994, p.200). Nevertheless, had the Habyarimana
regime formally recognized the right of return, this might have given symbolic
satisfaction to many, even in the absence of political reforms. Equally important, it
would have undermined the position of the militants in the RPF.
In retrospect, a window of opportunity to deal with the refugee question can be
discerned around 1989 and early 1990. The issue was clearly significant from a
humanitarian perspective and for conflict management. International law and norms
are well developed in this area, and particularly in Africa, in recognition of the fact that
refugee problems, if left unattended, will create long-term social conflict. That more
pressure was not brought to bear on Uganda and Rwanda to implement their
obligations reflected conditions which were to recur in the Rwandan conflict - limited
regional capacity and limited international interest. The OAU had the right norms in
place, but had no mechanism to enforce them. The same applied to UNHCR.
Western countries, which had significant potential leverage, were preoccupied with
events in Eastern Europe and seemed largely indifferent.
Recognizing that RPFs decision to return from Uganda by armed force constituted a
violations of international law, President Museveni immediately disavowed any
Ugandan responsibility or foreknowledge of the event.9 The official view in Kampala
was that this was a purely internal Rwandan affair, which consequently did not
warrant international response. There is strong evidence, however, that Museveni
indeed knew about the RPFs offensive and at least did nothing to prevent it10
Museveni clearly stood to gain from a successful return. He would be rid of a
troublesome refugee issue and, at best, have close friends and erstwhile clients in a
position of power in a neighbouring state.

9

Quite possibly, Habyarimana could have anticipated the invasion on the basis of a
series of indicators11. he visible movement towards the border of Tutsi soldiers and
officers in the Ugandan army; an abortive invasion that had been attempted in 1989;
the sudden slaughter in refugee areas of 1,200 cattle to make provisions of smoked
meat in July 1990; the fact that the training of Rwandan military refugees on ranches
in the Mbarrara border was raised at the same time in the Ugandan parliament;
furtive fund-raising among Tutsi throughout the region; and endless reports in
Uganda about military mobilization by Tutsi in the NRA.
This intelligence was available to Habyarimana, and it was certainly available to
diplomats and other observers in the region. However, no alarm bells went off until
after the fact12
CHAPTER 2 CIVIL WAR, CIVIL VIOLENCE, AND THE INTERNATIONAL
RESPONSE (1 October 1990 to 4 August 1993)
The RPF invasion on the night of 1 October 1990, set off a series of responses,
including regional and international military intervention, major shifts in the internal
politics of Rwanda, and high-level diplomacy. During this phase, diplomacy vied with
military assistance, human rights concerns, and development aid in a disconcerting
tension which allowed opponents of the peace process to develop strength even as
the latter moved forward. The war periodically resumed, and so did the reprisal
killings of civilians in an early indication of what was to come. This "second track " of
violence - civil violence war as distinct from civil war - ran parallel to the peace
negotiations as the extremists organized and consolidated.
2.1 From Invasion to Negotiations (October 1990 to June 1992)
Track 1: Civil War and the Response
Both France and Zaire sent troops to aid the government Rwanda at the time of the
invasion. Belgian units were also flown in, but only to protect their nationals, and they
were soon withdrawn. With the French backstopping the Rwandan army in Kigali and
"advising" on the handling of heavy artillery, and with Zairean elite paratroopers
fighting alongside Rwandan troops, the RPF invasion was soon halted. The RPF
regrouped in preparation for a long struggle.
The invasion triggered an extraordinary diplomatic activity which demonstrated the
vitality of international mediator structures (Jones 1995). Just two weeks after the
invasion, Tanzania called a regional meeting of Heads of State between Rwanda,
Uganda and Tanzania to discuss the situation. Realizing that a renewed conflict in
Rwanda would at the very least cause a large inflow of refugees, Tanzania remained
actively involved and became host as well as "facilitator" for the consequent peace
talks. The OAU Secretariat was also active in recognition of the organization's
principle that African states had a primary responsibility to solve regional conflicts. As
a Tanzanian, the Secretary-General, Salim A. Salim, coordinated closely with
Tanzanian mediation efforts. Soon other levels were informed or engaged - the
(informal) Summit of Great Lakes Region Heads of State, the European Union, and
more peripherally the UN. Also, the governments of Belgium, France and the United
States at various times helped to move the process forward. The Belgian government
was visibly involved within days of the invasion, when a troika of top ministers - the

10

Prime Minister, the Foreign Minister and the Minister of Defense - toured the region to
promote reconciliation and presented the case to the European Union for support.
A positive sounding communiqué was issued from the first summit in Tanzania,
marking an exemplary transition from war to diplomacy only two weeks after the
invasion. Yet, the initial success of regional diplomacy was short-lived. A formal
cease-fire signed at N'Sele on 29 March 1991 lasted only to mid-April, when fighting
resumed. The initial deployment of the OAU Neutral Military Observer Group
(NMOG), as provided for in the N'Sele agreement, was a failure. The only states to
contribute troops were Zaire, Burundi, and Uganda. Since none of them were
considered neutral by one or the other Rwandan party, the force became inoperative.
The Rwandan government insisted on prior clearance for every movement of the
military observers, a demand which greatly diminished their ability to monitor ceasefire violations. A second cease-fire agreement (26 October 1991 at Gbadolite, Zaire)
called for a revised NMOG, stipulating that it should be headed by a commander from
more distant and impartial Nigeria
The limits of regional diplomacy were revealed when the second cease-fire also
broke down in early 1992. It required a push from the major powers - United States
and France to move the conflicting parties to the negotiation table. The E.U, Canada,
Switzerland, the Catholic Church and others weighed in. This eventually resulted in
the launching of the Arusha talks on a comprehensive peace settlement in the
summer of 1992.
Both Uganda and later France pursued a dual policy of supporting their respective
Rwandan partner, yet encouraging negotiations. In keeping with international
precepts, Uganda formally denied it was supporting a rebel army - a claim upheld
even after the RP F seized power in 1994. Yet, Uganda served as a rear base for the
Front, enabling it to regroup, recruit and mobilize among the refugee community, and
evidently to funnel weapons and supply to the RPF controlled area inside Rwanda. At
the same time, once the invasion was a fact but did not bring RPF a speedy victory,
Uganda cooperated to get negotiations started. At the regional summit in midOctober 1990, Museveni agreed to work with Tanzanian president Ali Hassan Mwinyi
to persuade the RPF to accept a cease-fire. He further promised to explore the
possibility for an intepositional African force to be deployed between the combatants
once the cease-fire took hold.
France's Dual Policy:
During the invasion and its immediate aftermath, French policy was decided at the
level of the President. The first response was to send "a few boys... to help... old man
Habyarimana," as the head of the Africa Unit in the Presidential palace said at the
time (Prunier 1995). France had previously done the same for other allies in
Francophone Africa and had paratroopers stationed in the region for that purpose. In
Rwanda's case, the determination to assist was sharpened by the fact that the rebels
had come from and, in some respects were part of Anglophone Africa. The social
origins and platform of the RPF also made the Front leaders anathema in some
French conservative and army circles an earned them the pejorative label "Khmer
Noir," a term projecting the horrors of Cambodia's Khmer Rouge onto an African
context.

11

As the military weakness of the government was revealed, however, the Africa Unit in
the Elysée Palace and the Military Assistance Office in the Ministry of Cooperation
embarked on a policy to rapidly build up the Forces Armées Rwandaise (FAR). 13
With French technical and military assistance, including credits for arms purchases,
Rwanda's tiny army tripled from 1990 to 1991, and by the time of the peace
agreement mid-1993) was at least 30,000. The French military assistance unit in
Kigali (DAMI) provided training and operational guidance. Numerically the French
were not a major presence (370 troops, augmented to about 700 during the 1993
RPF offensive, and some 150 coopérants militaries ), but they provided critical
support and strategic leadership. There is also evidence to suggest that contrary to
customary practice and the text of the 1975 military assistance agreement under
which the Force Noroît was dispatched to Rwanda, French soldiers at times
participated directly in the war14 This was consistently denied by the French
government.
The role played by the Elysée Palace and the Ministry of Cooperation was
increasingly questioned by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, which around mid-1991
recognized a compeIIing logic of negotiation in a situation it characterized as follows:
the RPF might win militarily but not politically, while the government could not win
militarily, though might command the numbers to win politically (Callamard 1995).
According to this logic, France could best salvage its interests in Rwanda by
promoting a negotiated settlement on favourable terms to the Habyarimana regime.
In October 1991, the director of the Africa bureau in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs
attempted to bring representatives from then Rwandan government and the Front
together in Paris.15 The efforts did not bear fruit until late spring 1992, when the two
parties agreed in Paris on 8 June to open formal peace talks.
By giving military assistance to the Habyarimana regime in time of war, France
followed customary alliance politics, rather than the neutral international practice of
not supplying arms to belligerents during war, as observed in this case by Belgium. At
the time there was no international arms embargo on Rwanda. The three formal
cease-fire agreements signed in 1991-92 prohibited the "infiltration of war material to
the area occupied by each party," 16 but all had been violated by one or the other
Rwandan party and hence lost much of their contractual force. Until the signing of the
Arusha agreement, therefore, France could argue - as indeed it did - that it exercised
the common right of sovereign states to give military aid to a friendly government
facing a rebel force. French authorities did not end arms sales or credit assistance for
Rwandan weapons purchases from third countries, but refused to comment on
reports of particular shipments.
From this point onwards, and especially as the situation deteriorated in 1994, French
policy was shaped by the competitive interplay among domestic institutional actors
with different interests and perspectives. The result was a dual policy which
supported negotiations but simultaneously built up the Rwandan armed forces and
embraced the regime politically. The result was to move negotiations forward at the
inter-state level, while at the same time providing political space and resources which
indirectly helped the Hutu extremists to develop and consolidate their position.

12

The Beginning of Democratization
The RPF invasion had a substantial transformative impact on Rwandan politics by
giving significant momentum to a process of democratization which had started
previously, but so cautiously it was hardly noticed. Responding to demands for
democratization expressed at the Franco-African summit in La Baule in 1990 and
elsewhere, Habyarimana had started to liberalize in 1989-90. The RPF brought the
process decisively forward by making radical demands for power-sharing backed by
military force. Also foreign donors emphasized that democratization with a multiparty
system was necessary to end the war and additionally desirable in itself. Noticing the
pressures and sensing that the regime was yielding, the domestic opposition became
more insistent. Habyarimana responded first by forming a token coalition
government. As pressures visibly mounted throughout the spring of 1992, he agreed
to a second coalition that had significant representation from the newly formed
opposition parties.
The formation of the second coalition government had enormous and contradictory
consequences. The timing for democratization was in some respects not auspicious the country was at war, the economy was deteriorating, and ethnicity was reemerging as a polarizing dimension. In part, multipartisme became a cloak for
particularist interests, encouraged ethnic mobilization and fed political fiefdoms that
usurped the civil administration, as a disillusioned former minister wrote from exile
(Gasana 1995:231-2). Ultimately more significant was the effect on Hutu extremism.
The combined pressures for peace negotiations and democratization were a doublebored attack on the existing power holders. When political forces later polarized, one
extreme fringe translated this into an absolute struggle with only final solutions. In
1991 and early 1992, however, the most visible domestic political forces were the two
suggested by Gasana: a "presidential tendency" that was conservative, inclined to
defend Hutu supremacy and relying on a strong party, the militia, the army, and
Habyarimana to preserve its power; and a second "moderate tendency" seeking to
replace the Second Republic by non-violent means and institute a vaguely formulated
plural political system.
The formation of a coalition government clearly had a salutary effect on the peace
negotiations which were formally initiated in the spring and summer of 1992. The first
act of the Foreign Minister of the new coalition - a moderate opposition member - was
to call for political talks with the RPF. This call was picked up by inter-state diplomatic
mechanisms and, after intercession from the United States, France and the Vatican,
lead to the Arusha talks in the summer of 1992. Having included his domestic
opponents, Habyarimana permitted them to lead the negotiations at Arusha.
2.2 The Arusha Period (June 1992 to 4 August 1993)
Track I: Diplomatic and Military Activity
The Arusha process - as it came to be called after the resort in Tanzania where the
peace talks were formally launched on 12 July 1992 - was pursued at a very high
level in the region, drawing in heads of states and foreign ministers. The core
negotiations on a future peace agreement had participant-observer delegations from
five African states (Burundi, Zaire, Senegal, Uganda and the Tanzanian "facilitation"
team), four Western countries (France, Belgium, Germany and the United States),
and intergovernmental organizations (the UN, OAU and UNHCR). Britain, Canada,

13

the Netherlands and the European Union, important members of the Western donor
community in the region, closely monitored the process from their local embassies.
Nigeria was represented at the Arusha-linked Joint Political Military Committee (see
below).
Formally acting as a "facilitator," the Tanzanian government undertook a sustained
and skilful mediating effort that was critical in bringing about the final agreement 18
The OAU, having provided a military observer group to monitor successive ceasefires, also maintained a high level presence at the negotiations, with either a senior
political officer or Secretary-General Salim himself representing the Organization. For
Salim, the Arusha process was a challenge to demonstrate that the OAU could make
a critical contribution to conflict resolution in Africa. To this end, Salim had just
revived the organization's Conflict Resolution Mechanism and expected that the unit
would be formally approved at the Cairo Summit in 1993.
The Arusha process represented a multipronged strategy of conflict resolution. A
preliminary phase was designed to obtain a cease-fire. The earlier N'Sele and
Gbadolite cease-fire agreements were amended to form the basis of the Arusha
cease-fire, announced on 12 July 1992. All cease-fires were violated, but the process
enabled continuous communication and lead to the establishment of a monitoring
machinery. In particular, the Arusha Process implemented a mechanism agreed to in
earlier negotiations: a Joint Political-Military Commission JPMC) which ran parallel to
the Arusha talks and provided a steam valve in which all parties could discuss
violations of the cease-fire without derailing the broader negotiations. The
negotiations on substantive issues of the conflict, which started in mid-1992, covered
the rule of law, the establishment of transitional institutions, the repatriation of
refugees and resettlement of the internally displaced, and the integration of the two
sides' armed forces into one integrated national army.
The central problem lays elsewhere. Given the starting point of an authoritarian
regime it was evident that any progress in the talks would require significant
concessions on the part of the government. The existing power-holders had already
tasted loss when reluctantly agreeing to a coalition government. This was nothing,
however, in comparison with the radical changed detailed in the final Arusha accords.
In effect, the Accords represented a veritable coup d'Etat for the RPF and the internal
opposition, as a close observer later noted (Reyntjens 1994).
The Accords moved Rwanda from a presidential to a parliamentary system of politics,
with most of the power of the Presidency transferred to a Council of Ministers.
Habyarimana - who was to occupy the presidency during the transition period prior to
elections - was left with a ceremonial position. During the transition period, seats in
the Council of Ministers of a Broad-based Transitional government (BBTG) were
divided between the government and the internal opposition parties as well as the
RPF. The ruling party (MRND) was left with only 5 out of 19 portfolios, and most were
politically insignificant. The regime also would lose power in local administration and
the judicial branch. The distributor of portfolios agreed to at Arusha accentuated the
dramatic nature of the change. Ideologically and politically, the BBTG represented a
frontal attack on the power base erected by the Habyarimana regime during 20 years
of rule - a denial of authoritarian rule, of "Hutu power," and especially Northwesternbased regime power which was the regional constituency and political backbone of

14

the regime. The terms of the Agreement signalled a pluralist state and a civil society,
and the idea of a people united by a common Rwandan nationality - not divided by
narrow ethnic lines into Hutu versus Tutsi19
Most significantly, the hard-liners who surrounded Habyarimana - senior ministers in
the MRND party, senior military figures in the armed forces and the Presidential
Guard, and members of the newly formed Coalition pour la defence de la république
(CDR) - were denied power in the transitional institutions. In spite of advice to the
RPF from Western states that it would be a better tactic to co-opt the extremists than
exclude them, the CDR was not included in the power-sharing formula of the BBTG
nor allocated seats in the transitional Assembly. The ruling party had demanded that
the CDR be represented; the RPF, correctly noting that the CDR was both extreme
and a non-party, absolutely opposed this and prevailed. The extremists responded by
open threatening to bring about "an apocalypse" when these sections of the Accords
were negotiated, as their spokesman, Col. Bagosora, declared during one session.
The losses sustained by Habyarimana and his allies in the protocol on political
structure were paralleled, and thus sharpened, by equivalent losses in the military
sector. Hoping to secure at least continued control over the armed forces, the
government opened the bid during discussions at Arusha on the integration of the
armed forces by offering the RPF a mere 15% share of the joint armed command.
The latter rejected this outright, and the government was eventually forced to acre t a
much modified scheme which split positions 50-50 not only at the high command
level but all the way down to field commanders, and narrowly favoured the
government in a 60-40 distribution of troops. Observing the trend, a western diplomat
cabled home that the agreement had moved negotiations ahead of the consensus
and asked repudiation by forces in Kigali. He was to prove correct.
Related military issues were also hard to accept for the army. Over 20,000
government troops would be demobilized, more than twice the figure for the RPF20.
While the government units had demonstrated little enthusiasm for fighting, especially
during the 1993-RPF offensive, demobilization seemed even less attractive. Another
controversial point was the provision for stationing of an RPF battalion in Kigali during
the transition period. For the government forces this was a visible expression of
defeat.
That the Arusha agreement produced such profound changes which were registered
as defeats by the government and especially by hard-liners in Kigali can be
attributed largely to the balance of power between the Rwandan parties. The RPF
negotiating team was extraordinarily strong, with discipline, preparedness, and
commitment in stark contrast to the fractionalized, ill-disciplined, and ineffective
government team. Reflecting the divisions at home, the Kigali delegation was
composed of some Habyarimana allies, but lead by the opposition party members,
and obstructed by recognized members of extremist factions which also were at
Arusha. Equality if not more important, negotiations on the military issues were
conducted at a time when the military position of the government deteriorated
sharply. In February I993, the RPF had launched a major offensive to break
government stonewalling over the BBTG protocol and to protest the massacre of 300
Tutsis in Bugogwe. The offensive shocked Kigali and threw the government forces
into disarray. Rebel troops fought to within 23 miles of the capital despite the fact that

15

France sent a small contingent of paratroopers to reinforce government troops. The
Front's victories clearly showed their upper hand on the battlefield; this calculation
may have also moved the RPF to undertake the offensive on the eve of the
scheduled talks on military matters.
In retrospect, it has been customary to refer to the Arusha process as preventive
diplomacy and judge it against the catastrophic violence which followed. Held against
this standard, it is clear that the process failed. But the main objective at Arusha was
not to prevent a clearly perceived future calamity21. More conventionally, the aim was
to end a war and to construct a post-war peace agreement in the absence of total
victory or defeat. This required a formula for power-sharing and agreement on the
future political process, demobilization and integration of the respective armies, and
return of refugees (including displaced persons). Similar agreements had recently
been negotiated to end wars in Central America (El Salvador and Nicaragua), in
Southern Africa (Mozambique and Angola) and in Southeast Asia (Cambodia).
These, if any, were the models. The closer the Arusha process came to end the war
and to define the protocols that would structure future politics, the closer most
participants believed - they had come to achieve peace. In this calculus, the primary
criterion for success was to obtain the signatures of both parties on a reasonable
peace agreement.
The final agreement dealt comprehensively with all the issues related to ending the
war and opening up of the political system. As such, it was a "perfect" agreement, as
some observers noted at the time. However, there was one Mica The weakness: The
Arusha process did not deal with the losers in the agreement. Excluded from the
transitional institutions, the extremists as represented by CDR were not neutralized
by other means, and remained in a position to wreck the entire edifice.
In retrospect, the exclusion of the extremists became a major issue in evaluations of
the strength and weakness of the Arusha Accords. Whether the alternative, South
Africa style solution would have worked in the end remains conjectural, and opinions
were divided at the time. Most observers at Arusha concluded it was unwise to
exclude a major force in Rwandan politics, as this faction would have no stake in the
successful implementation of the Accords. Other diplomats in Kigali shared the RPF
assessment that the extremists were not interested in sharing power but bent on
destroying the new political order that was drawn up. Those who held this
interpretation looked to a speedy implementation of the agreement as a means to
control its violent opponents.
The part with most immediate leverage on the RPF was Uganda's President
Museveni. Apparently he tried but failed to sway , is erstwhile allies on both the CDR
issue and the military protocol. During the course of the civil war and negotiations,
Museveni had lost some of his influence over the RPF. The Front's. repeated
successes on the battlefield gave them a stronger basis for autonomous action. A
second factor was Museveni's decision to formally distance himself from any
involvement in the civil war, and, in particular, deny that arms were crossing the
border in violation of international norms. During the Front's February offensive,
Museveni wrote to the Security Council inviting the UN to deploy observers along the
Uganda-Rwanda border to verify that Uganda did not aid the offensive. 22 This

16

request, which resulted in the establishment of the UN Observer Mission UgandaRwanda (UNOMUR)
Track II: Civil Violence and Human Rights Conditionality
Behind the Arusha process, the extremists in Kigali had a different vision of the peace
process. As the Arusha process lay the groundwork for a virtual political revolution in
Rwanda - the framework of a "new order" as it was said in Arusha - the extremists
planned their own bloody, reactionary vision of change. In retrospect, that has
become clear. But at the time, what did donor countries and the international
community more generally know about the extremists?
Early Warnings
The political scene in Kigali in 1992-93 was admittedly complex, and a flurry of
rumours and propaganda further complicated the picture. Key questions remain
unclear even today, including the relationship between Habyarimana and the
extremists. Was he a master or a victim of the hard-liners, and if he moved from one
role to another, when did this happen? n? Furthermore, outside analysts had to
decipher the civil society, that suddenly flourished. The print media multiplied across
the political spectrum, as did NGOs and various political movements.
Yet, there was considerable and wing evidence of Hutu extremism, and human
rights violations were documented. Much information was generate human rights
organizations and concerned activists; intelligence sources produce some, and, in
Kigali, the small foreign diplomatic corps observed the scene, reported home, and for
the most part shared information with each other. An informal grouping of the
ambassadors from the United States, Belgium, Germany, France and the Vatican also known as The Five Musketeers - met frequently.
It was well known at the time that the combined peace and democratization process
faced strong opposition. Already in July 1991, a French intelligence assessment
identified three critical circles of power in relation to the peace process, starting with
the inner circle formed by the President's in-laws and associates, an outer circle of
relatively more moderate members of the military and the cabinet, and, lastly, an
amorphous grouping of younger officers and intellectuals willing to entertain change.
Since the objective of the fast circle was to retain power, any form of imposed
negotiation would provoke their resistance, it was concluded. The analysis found its
way to other donor states and was soon amplified by pointed statements and actions
by the hard-liners.
Later signs pointed to the consolidation of the power of the first political grouping - the
Hutu supremacists -through the formation of what amounted to parastatal
organizations. The CDR was formed in March 1992, bringing together military and
political extremists from circles inside and connected to the Presidential Palace. The
party militias (the interahamwe and impuzamugambi) were also formed at this time
with direct support from the CDR, the ruling government par, and the Presidential
Guard. Both operated openly, and diplomats in Kigali readily recognized both as
instruments of the ruling party. Yet, their precise function was open to various
interpretations. Some observers accepted at face value that the militias were formed

17

to defend the country against the invading RPF-troops according to the doctrine of
village self-defense.
By late 1992 and especially in early 1993, a much more comprehensive body of
evidence was available and frequently discussed in the diplomatic community in
Kigali. There were increasingly frequent killings of Tutsi and more information about
death squads as well as the existence of a Network Zero around the President which
reportedly was plotting to exterminate regime opponents and circulated death lists.
The report of the International Commission of Inquiry on human rights violations in
early 1993 was widely circulated (FIDH 1993). The Belgian government, for one, took
it so seriously that it temporarily recalled its ambassador from Kigali. The report
documented the involvement of the government in what was described as systematic
killings directed against the Tutsi, and estimated that about 2,000 persons had been
murdered in the 1990-92 period. Briefing reporters on its finding, the Commission
used the term "genocide" to describe the killings. This claim was retracted in their
official report published in March because of fear that such a designation would be
considered hysterical. 23 It was, however, upheld in a report by the UN Commission
on Human Rights a few months later (see below).
There were other telling pieces of evidence. At least two revealing government
documents were leaked to the diplomatic community and circulated in Kigali. One
was an internal report from a senior military officers' commission entitled "Definition
and Identification of the Enemy" (21 September 1992). The report listed as enemies
not only those Tutsis inside and outside Rwanda which supported the RPF, but also
members of mixed marriages and moderate Hutus who opposed the hard-liners
within the government. The other was a letter from the (opposition member) Prime
Minister to the Defense Minister, dated 25 March 1993. The Prime Minister gave
details of illegal distribution of weapons to civilians and called for immediate action to
stop it.
By this time, links between the civil violence and the peace process became more
explicit. At every important juncture and setback for the government, Tutsis were
murdered. Clearly discernible in retrospect (see Figure 1: A Pattern of Violence), the
coincidence between killings of Tutsi and the rhythm of negotiations in Arusha was
also recognized at the time by several Kigali-based diplomats and variously
interpreted. "We read the killings as a political negotiating tactic," one analyst later
said. Others saw the violence more radically as an attempt to derail the entire peace
process.
Simultaneously, diplomats in Kigali noticed that the extremist opposition to the
Arusha talks was gaining strength. During the talks on power-sharing, Habyarimana
was oscillating between moderates in his own delegation and the hard-liners at
home. The talks were halted in September, but when they resumed the Foreign
Minister, Boniface Ngulinzira,was negotiating without the authority of the President,
as an observer delegation noted at the time. Habyarimana soon made the point
publicly by calling the accords merely "a piece of paper" in his famous 15 November
speech. At Arusha, as noted, the CDR representative predicted "an apocalypse"
when the power-sharing protocol was final zed, The message was given added
significance since it was delivered by Col. Bagosora who was widely believed to be

18

behind the work of the death squads, including the Kibuye massacres in August
1992.
The presence of hate propaganda in Rwanda was also noted as an indicator of
increasing tension and mounting Hutu power." However, interpretations of the
message differed. As with the notorious Radio et Television Libre Milles Colines
(RTLM) - founded soon after the signing of the peace agreement - the hate media in
this period was so explicit and literal that some diplomats, both Western and African,
afterwards said they tended to dismiss it. Similar reactions were entertained even by
the RPF, as a leading Front member later recalled. "What they said was so stupid;
we did not take it seriously enough."
The Conditionality Question
Acknowledging the widespread evidence of a deteriorating situation, donor countries
made some efforts to correct it. While the United States did not stress, and France
did not include, human rights issues in their policy towards Rwanda, 24 other donors
did. Belgium formally incorporated human rights criteria in its foreign aid policy after
the Socialists came to power in 1992. Canada, another major donor, had done so all
along. The representatives of Switzerland and the Vatican also spent considerable
time and efforts raising issues of human rights, and made repeated demarches to the
president and the Minister of Justice (when there was one. More generally, diplomats
from states concerned with democratization put their faith in political reforms:
promoting multipartism and good governance would help address human rights
issues, including the critical issue of legal impunity.

There was some progress towards democratization and a few human rights cases
were attended to. The regime's progressive move towards multipartism was in partly
due to Western persuasion and pressure. High-profile pressure by foreign diplomats
and quiet work by ICRC helped to bring the release of nearly 11000 persons who
were detained when the RPF invaded in 1990.
In principle, most Western donors made economic aid conditional upon the
observance of human rights. In practice, however, no donor reduced aid with specific
reference to human rights violations even though these were recognized as severe.
For instance, the Belgian government took steps considered extreme in the language
of diplomacy when the international human rights commission published its
incriminating report in March 1993. The Belgian ambassador in Kigali was "recalled
for consultations,," and the Rwandan ambassador in Brussels was told that Belgium
would reconsider its economic and military aid unless steps were taken to rectify the
situation. However, Habyarimana made conciliatory statements and Belgian aid
continued.

Why was human rights conditionality - an arrow in the quiver available to
the international community - not imposed? Conditionality on economic
policy was all along precisely defined and consistently promoted. The
principal demands for structural adjustment and fiscal reform were
formulated by the World Bank, and supported by major donors. Evident

19

efforts by the Rwandan government to comply in the area of economic
reform possibly reduced the incentives for donors to push hard on human
rights issues. There were also other concerns. With a traditional! efficient
local administration and functioning infrastructure, Rwanda's ability to
absorb aid had partly accounted for large assistance flows in previous
years. In the early 1990s, it was still a country where foreign aid
bureaucracies could reasonably disburse money. Project feasibility helps
to explain the continued inflow from two traditional donors, France and
Belgium25.

FIGURE I: A PATTERN OF VIOLENCE

Track I

Track II

Events in 1990
1 October: RPF invasion
45 October. A "false attack" on Kigali

October 1-15: 6-7000 persons detained
ca. half in Kigali

October: Ca. 300 Tutsi killed in Kibilira (in
Gisenyi prefecture, NW)
October-November: Numerous Tutsi-Hima in the Mutara range (N) disappear
Events in 1991
January: RPF raid on Late January-early February: "Hundreds" of Tutsi Ruhengeri prison (Bagogwe
clan) killed in NW region Events in 1992 March 14: Habyarimana agrees to coalition
Mid-March:
Massacres in Bugesera (NW) 60-300
govt., to negotiate peace with RPF
Tutsi (Bagogwe clan) killed, 10,000
and to setttle refugee problem displaced
April 16: Coalition government formed April 25-May 6: Ca. 22 killed in assassinations and grenade
attacks and ca 100 injured in Kigali and 3 provincial towns
August 10-17: First round at Arusha August 15-17: Ca. 300 Tusi killed in Kibuye (N) Agreement on
Protocol on rule of law, political pluralism and respect for human rights.
Sept-October: Negotiations on power sharing at October 30: CDR demonstrations in
Arusha. GoR split and talks halted
Kigali turn violent
November 15: Habyarimana calls Arusha accords
November 15:Opposition demonstrations
"a piece of paper"
in Kigali for Arusha turn violent
December: Arusha talks continue, GoR still
December 25-31: Bombs explode in Kigali and
split on power sharing issue
Butara; three Tutsi killed in Kibilira, dozens of opposition members
threatened/injured/homes burnt
Events in 1993
January 10: Arusha Agreement on power sharing
January 20-26: Ca. 300 Tutsi killed in Gisenyi
February 8: RPF launches offensive
February: 25-50 Tutsi reported killed in north and central
regions
Source: FIDH 1993, Human Rights Watch (1993, 1994), Reyntjens 1994.

20

NETWORK COVERAGE BY TOPICS
Coverage in Minutes

Aggregate coverage of ABC, CBS and NBC Nightly Newscasts
Source: Steven Livingston, "Too little Too late: American Television Coverage of the Rwanda Crisis of 1994"

21

There was a more fundamental reason. International pressure to democratize and
institute "good governance" developed a special rationale in Rwanda: just as the
Arusha process was a solution to civil war, so democratization came to be seen as a
solution to the growing problem of civil violence. Support for democratization and the
related peace process implied continuous economic and diplomatic engagement in
Rwanda. From this perspective, it would be counterproductive to tie economic aid to
improvement on human rights, as Western human rights organizations called for in
1992-93.26 Hence, donors became hostage to their own policies.
As the economic situation deteriorated in 1993, and renewed war plus drought
increased the number of internally displaced people to around 1 million, the
international community pledged large amounts of humanitarian aid. Simultaneously,
some donors shifted project aid into relief assistance. The issue of conditionality
thereby became more remote. The call for ledges for international humanitarian
assistance went out in the UN system in March, around the time when the
international NGO Commission published its report detailing official involvement in
massive human rights abuses. The UN Department of Humanitarian Affairs put the
question on the table by asking in an internal memo how the human rights issue
should be handled at the upcoming Round Table appeal. No one provided an
answer, and the issue was put aside.
Given the problematic nature of sanctions, donors instead looked to "positive
conditionality," in European Union s, to promote democratization and human rights.
Aid was allocated to strengthen particular sectors. Thus Canada ugh ICHRDD), the
United States and Belgium supported projects to improve administration in the
Ministry of stain with advisors, seminars, and training, and to strengthen civil society
by supporting local human rights organizations and encouraging a free press.
Despite these efforts, the quality of governance declined markedly. In the Ministry of
Justice, for instance, the assignment of foreign advisors could not make up for the
fact that for most of 1993 there simply was no Minister of Justice at all. The one who
was finally appointed towards the end of the year had a shady reputation that was
subsequently confirmed27 Under the impact of multipartism and fiercely conflictual
politics in late 1993 over the implementation of the Arusha agreement, administrative
agencies turned into political fiefdoms of a more extreme kind than before. There was
no accountability and project implementation had become impossible, USAID
concluded, suspending. its program in 1994. Germany did the same, citing insecurity
in the countryside and the erosion of administrative efficiency. Also the European
Union put most of its 4-year aid allocation to Rwanda on hold.
By suspending aid with reference to bookkeeping and project feasibility rather than
the human rights criteria, donors sent the message that human rights conditionality
was preached but not practised. The same applied to the infamous Radio Mille
Collines. Unable to agree among themselves on the significance of the radio and how
to silence it, the donors limited themselves to yet another demarche to Habyarimana.
The latter responded as usual by promising to look into it, and there the matter
rested. 28 Half-hearted conditionality of this kind probably succeeded only in eroding
the credibility of diplomatic suasion.

22

By late 1993, the limits of diplomacy were becoming obvious, yet the prevailing sense
among concerned members of the diplomatic corps was that the only alternative was
to soldier on. developed ,n a earnest window and wile of o p the donors for dealing
with the extremists had existed around 1992, before their strength developed in
earnest and while donors still had commitments to development aid that could be
adjusted as needed. Although information about the extremists at that time was less
alarming, human rights violations were significant indicators of trouble, as well as
important in and of themselves.
The UN Human Right Machinery
During this period, the UN was peripherally involved in the conflict management
process in Rwanda, but humanitarian agencies, as noted, provided significant aid.
The UN also had a formal mandate to monitor and pronounce upon human rights
violations in member states. This it did in Rwanda, but in a very limited fashion
compared to the vigorous and thorough monitoring carried out by NGOs.
The UN Commission on Human Rights discussed Rwanda in both 1992 and 1993
under its "1503-procedure," the confidentiality clause used to initiate discussion on
countries where serious problems are noticed.29 Customarily, the 1503 procedure is
a warning signal which alerts the Commission to the fact that human rights conditions
within a country merit particular attention.
As the discussion was protected by the confidentiality clause, little is known of what
transpired when the Commission's Committee of Five examined Rwanda in 1992,
and again in 1993. The first year, only a pro government spokesman appeared, a
local judge known to Western diplomats for his grossly inadequate handling of cases
brought against government officials. By the time of the second meeting, Rwanda
had a coalition government and a member of the opposition MDR party was in the
delegation, the then Minister of Primary and Secondary Education, Agathe
Uwilingiyamana. Mrs. Uwilingiyamana - who was the first high-level official to be
murdered after 6 April - admitted to human rights problems and said the government
would try to rectify the situation30.
Rwanda was also discussed in several thematic reports presented to the Commission
as a whole in 1992 and 1993.31 In early 1993, human rights groups in Rwanda asked
the Special Rapporteur on extra judicial executions, Mr. B.W. Ndiaye, to participate in
an international commission of inquiry into human rights violations in the country.
While declining on procedural grounds, Ndiaye was sufficiently concerned to visit
Rwanda. His ten day visit produced a report in August 1993 (E/CN.4.1994/7 ,which
was presented to the Commission early in 1994, i.e. shortly before the genocide tool
place. The report was given only routine consideration in the Commission. As a
political body composed of UN members, the Commission rarely discusses particular
countries except those singled out for attention by a Special Rapporteur. Not being
singled out, Rwanda was folded into a report which the Commission discussed
thematically rather than according to country cases.
Because the Ndiaye report raises the question of genocide, the failure of the Human
Rights Commission to give it more than routine recognition has later been criticized.

23

One explanation lies in the nature of the report. Ndiaye does support the substance
of the allegations of the NGO Commission (FIDH 1993), in particular concerning
official involvement in the massacres of civilians (para. 28). It further notes that the
question of whether the massacres may be termed genocide "has often been raised"
(para. 78). After a brief discussion - totalling 4 out of the report's 86 paragraphs Ndiaye offers an "initial reply": since Tutsi have been the victims in the overwhelming
majority of cases, and have been targeted solely qua Tutsi, the Genocide
Convention's Art. II, (a) and (b) would apply32.
A diplomat in Kigali who read the report and who was nearly killed by the Hutu
extremists said it hardly prepared him mentally for the massive slaughter that was to
come. Rather, the Ndiaye report was read as a technical, legal analysis, not an alert
that raised the spectre of the killings of half a million people. The magnitude
associated with genocide in popular opinion was absent 33 Moreover, the report
presented the violence in the context of "business-as-usual": the country has already
experienced many massacres of an ethnic character. Such acts of violence recur
periodically, and the persons responsible, who in most cases are known to everyone,
go unpunished. The Special Rapporteur became aware that this situation was part
and parcel of everyday life for many Rwandese people, and that ethnic violence had
become a practice which, if not accepted, was at least life rooted in Rwandese folk
memory" (para. 46).

Judgments of complicity must be informed by agent-outcome relationships with
respect to distance in time, causality and information. The failure by the international
community to make effective demands on its relationship with a regime whose
involvement in massacres was generally suspected and carefully documented in two
1993 reports - one from a joint NGO mission and the other by a Special Rapporteur
of the UN Commission on Human Rights - was an act of omission that carries at least
some moral co-responsibility for subsequent events in Rwanda. Acts of commission
carry heavier responsibility.
By its deepening military and broad diplomatic support for the regime, French policy
constituted acts of commission. Aid was justified with reference to the ongoing war
with the RPF, although the nature of the conflict meant that France was helping to
build up the military apparatus of a regime which committed human rights violations
at the time, and subsequently became deeply implicated in the genocide. Information
about the human rights situation was generally available; given its close relations with
Rwanda, France had more possibilities than most to obtain intelligence on the
extremists. French military aid also strengthened the latter more directly in that some
weapons provided to the FAR were diverted to the militias, and militia members were
believed to be among the army recruits French cooperants militaries were training
(Prunier 1995). There is also some evidence from diplomats in Kigali that French
officers trained interahamwe units directly34.
The political and ethical implications of this policy have been articulated by French
critics (e.g. Bayart 1994, Brauman 1994, Verschave 1994). Even from the criteria of
Realpolitik it seems questionable. As the noted scholar Jean-Francois Bay art asked,

24

if French policy aimed to stabilize the situation, how could that be achieved b
supporting a regime which permitted, or even organized, assassinations of political
opponents and mass murder.
CHAPTER 3
IMPLEMENTING AND SUBVERTING THE PEACE AGREEMENT
(August 1993 - 6 April 1994)
The transition from peace negotiations to implementation was accompanied b
mounting tension. One stemmed from the question of which organization should
oversee the process. The OAU had been central during the negotiation phase, but
the UN insisted on taking the lead in implementation, thus causing a structural as well
as a procedural disjuncture . Other fundamental problems related to the domestic
dynamic: the closer the peace agreement came to be . realized, the more desperate
grew the extremists. While the Accords provided for a new government that many
hoped would subdue the militant opponents, the installation of the BBTG was
repeatedly delayed by Rwandan parties who manipulated the transition instruments
for narrow political gains. As the implementation process floundered, unforeseen
external events in neighbouring Burundi heightened ethnic tension and strengthened
the appeal of the extremists, thereby making implementation of a delicate political
compromise even more difficult. The UN mission in Rwanda had been designed to
oversee a smooth transition and was not equipped to handle the situation. Nor was it
strengthened despite increasing recognition that civil war might resume and largescale civil violence erupt
3.1 Implementing the Peace Agreement
To assist implementation, the Arusha Accords provided for the establishment of a
neutral international peacekeeping force to be deployed in Rwanda within 37 days
from the date of signing (i.e. by 10 September). It had been clear since April that the
rather than the OAU would provide that force (see below), and the promptly sent a
technical mission to Rwanda for needs assessment. Three issues arose out of that
mission: the timeliness of deployment, the size of the force, and the precise, mandate
as well as rules of engagement for the force. Their resolution depended in part on the
team's assessment of the situation in Rwanda, and in part on what the UN members
were willing to invest.
The Reconnaissance mission, headed by the designated Force Commander, General
Romeo Dallaire, reported a mixed picture. It was a foregone conclusion that the
operation would be Chapter VI peacekeeping, and the situational prerequisites were
resent: a peace-agreement was signed, and the local parties consented and
cooperated. In the meantime, both sides were observing the cease-fire agreement
which was monitored by both regional (OAU-NMOG) and international (UNOMUR)
observers. To those in the UN who looked for a success to counter the troubled UN
mission in Somalia, "Rwanda seemed like a winner," as one participant later noted.
Yet Dallaire's team also warned of instability and dangers. The schedule for
deploying peacekeepers was unrealistically short, so time was of the essence. A
transitional government required the participation of RPF members as designated,
but the RPF absolutely refused to enter Kigali until the French forces had left, and the
French would not leave until the UN arrived. Thus, the UN force held a key to the
entire transition. Standard UN procedures, however, meant that 2-3 months were

25

needed to assemble and deploy a peacekeeping force of even modest size. Although
the UN Secretariat started assembling the preparatory mission a few weeks before
the Arusha Accords were signed on 4 August, the first battalion did not reach
Rwanda until late November.
Delays in establishing a transitional government would increase the likelihood of
dérapage the Mission was told by several foreign diplomats and the Rwandan parties
to the Agreement35 . It was known that militant forces remained vehemently opposed
to the Accords, and Rwanda's history of ethnic and political strife cast a long shadow.
Recent violence and the growing strength of paramilitary groups added to the
formidable problems of demobilizing some 35,000 soldiers in a society with a
shattered economy, famine, and a large numbers of persons displaced by the war. In
this situation, concluded the UN Secretary-Genera, it was imperative that the
international community demonstrate its commitment to implement the peaceagreement it had helped to mediate. Delays would "seriously jeopardize" the Accords
(S/24688/1993 para. 65).
Some military experts in the Secretariat estimated that, ideally, a mission of this kind
should have 8,000 men. Dallaire gave 4,500 as his preferred option. In the end, the
Secretariat recommended a force only half that size, anticipating that this was the
maximum that the Security Council would approve. Having exercised an anticipatory
veto, the Security Council on October 5 authorized a force level of 2,548 military
personnel without much discussion.
The decisive restraint was financing. Being assessed 31% of the costs of U.N.
peacekeeping, the United States insisted on a minimal force. The Clinton
Administration had just started an executive review of its U.N.policy, and was
sensitive to Congressional concern over the mounting American share of
peacekeeping costs which had increased a stunning 370% from 1992 to 1993.36
Emphasizing the positive aspects of the Rwandan situation, the cost-conscious U.S.
delegation in New York suggested in September that a token mission of some 500
men might suffice. The French mission in New York recommended a small force of
around 1,000 men, noting that the French contingent in Kigali was merely 6-700 men.
The end result of 2,548 was considerably more than a token force and estimated to
cost about 10 million dollars a month. Compared to other UN peacekeeping
operations, it was still a very modest amount.37
The signals from the Rwandan parties concerning force size were conflicting. A
skeptical RPF reinforced calls in the Security Council for a minimalist force. Recalling
earlier French lobbying at the Security Council to have a UN rather than an OA U
force in Rwanda, the RPF suspected that France was using UN peace keeping
operations as a shield to protect Its political allies in Kigali and secure a foothold for
the future. The RPF consequently claimed that a few hundred men would do, while
the government of Rwanda by the same logic wanted several battalions.
Although small, the United Nations Assistance Mission in Rwanda was deployed in a
slow and uncertain manner according to the schedule laid out by the Reconnaissance
Mission38.The special representative of the Secretary-General arrived in late
November, or three and a half months after the Arusha Agreement was signed. The
first UNAMIR battalion entered Kigali shortly thereafter and the French Force Noroit

26

left. Putting together the rest of the mission also proved difficult. The force never
received the equipment required even at the downsized level (including an armoured
unit and helicopters as stipulated)39. UNAMIR's budget was subject to the standard
time-consuming UN process and was not formally approved until April 4, 1994.40 As
a result, the mission suffered from numerous shortcomings in personnel, equipment
and disbursable funds (including petty cash), and even basics such as ammunition.
Repeated field requests to New York to bring the Mission up to authorized strength
were of no avail.
The problem was partly structural, reflecting cumbersome UN procedures for
budgeting and deployment of peacekeeping operations generally. For all but one of
the major powers on the Security Council, Rwanda was of peripheral interest. This
meant that UNAMIR lacked a powerful patron in the Council to help cut through the
bureaucratic- political morass which governed normal procedures for UN
peacekeeping operations. Without this political pressure, UNAMIR sank to the bottom
of the UN security agenda. Nuts and bolts issues as well as more fundamental
mandate questions were neglect. Only the French government had a direct interest
and considerable presence but, with some reason, claimed that precisely this
involvement constrained it to take a low-profile role in the Council deliberations on
UNAMIR so as not to compromise the neutrality required by a UN peacekeeping
force.

3.2 Civil Violence and the Subversion of the Peace Agreement
In early fall 1993, the Rwanda situation did permit some optimism that the peace
agreement would be implemented in an orderly fashion. Yet, underlying tensions
soon surfaced to reinforce earlier warnings that the process was being subverted.
Early in 1994, several of the political parties started to split into factions as they
competed for positions in the transitional government, thereby undoing the formula
for power-sharing so carefully negotiated at Arusha and playing into the-hands ands
of those who opposed the Accords altogether. Repeated failures to form a transitional
government made the diplomatic community in Kigali and states associated with the
Arusha process renew their efforts to break the deadlock. The Tanzanian government
took the lead, but Belgium, Germany, the United States, Canada and the Vatican also
weighed in with strong language and sometimes high-level representations to repair
the process. During February an March, and even right up until the crisis erupted on
April 6, concerted efforts were made to avoid a rupture.
The diplomats who laboured to save the Arusha Accords saw implementation as a
means to control the extremists. With Hutu moderates and the RPF in charge of key
ministries in the planned transitional government - including Interior and Justice - and
a new national army being formed, many expected that the Hutu extremists could be
subdued. Also leading members of the RPF politburo appeared to take this view.
However, the implementation process was fundamentally a race against itself: the
closer the Arusha Accords came to be realized, the more the extremists were
prepared to sink it in violence. The point was formulated unequivocally in a cable
from the UNAMIR force commander to DPKO/ New York on 11 January 1994: A
"very important government official" turned informer had told him that "hostilities may
commence again political deadlock ends. "41 Previously "hostilities" had often been

27

interpreted to mean renewed civil war. By early 1994, the term clearly conveyed the
meaning of civil violence. It was quickly recognized by the SRSG, Jacques-oger
Booh-Book, w o reported to the Secretary-General soon after his in gal
on
23
October that the extremist adversary to the peace process was a powerful,
subversive Third Force -ruthless, well organized, well-equipped and centrally
directed.
Information provided in a UNAMIR cable of 11 January to DPKO/New York was quite
specific. The Rwandan government informant had revealed the extremists plan to
assassinate Politicians at the scheduled ceremony for swearing in of the transitional
government. In the process, they would provoke an encounter with Belgian UNAMIR
soldiers expecting that by killing some, the entire process, they would leave Rwanda.
As the RPF would be instigated to resume war, 1,400 interahamwe who had been
training in camps outside Kigali were staged to sew insecurity throughout the city;
teams of 40 each were organized within Kigali to kill all the Tutsi who had been
registered by the militias. The informer estimated the interahamwe could kill 1,000
persons per 20 minutes.
Assassinations on this scale were no longer of the order of a political tactic but clearly
genocidal. The message dovetailed with a series of other developments which
indicated that the situation was rapidly deteriorating. Both at the time and looking
back, foreign diplomats and UN officials serving in Kigali clearly noted the worsening
trend. The October 1993 massacres in Burundi inflamed passions as Hutus in
Rwanda watched the massacre of some 50-100,000 Hutus across the border, with
the Tutsi-dominated army as the directly or indirectly responsible agent. With the RPF
poised to share both governmental power and half of the national army in Rwanda,
the message of fear of the Tutsis being spread by the Hutu extremists gained new
credibility. Simultaneously, extremist Hutu rhetoric became increasingly vocal and
public.
The infamous radio station Radio Libre Mille Collines (RTL.M), continued to
broadcast hate messages that called on the Rwandan population to rid the country of
Tutsi. African diplomats reported CDR members similarly telling them that in the
future there would be no Tutsi left in Rwanda. Referring to the RPF as the "historical
overlords," the RTLM whipped up fear by claiming the once the RPF army was in
Kigali - as provided for in the Arusha Accords - Tutsi troops would attack the Hutu
population. The vitriolic messages of RTL.M were heard by the diplomatic
community.
In the streets, the violence was real. Assassinations of two high-level politicians in
late February made the CDR organize a four-day rampage in Kigali as interahamwe
mobs (readily recognized by their "uniform" colours) roamed the streets and killed
dozens of people. The mob violence was clearly targeted, and even foreign diplomats
considered "pro-Arusha" were threatened.Tanzanian ambassador was almost killed
on January 5 when a CDR mob attacked his car. The papal nuncio received grizzly
death threats. Force Commander responded to the deteriorating situation by
repeatedly requesting equipment to bring his force u to strength. In January, he
sought guidance from DKO on actions to be taken if the situation worsened. In early
February, he sought clarification of the mandate to permit arms searches. In late
February and again in mid March, he requested reinforcements. 41- Reports of arms

28

being distributed to paramilitary groups in the Kigali area were frequently discussed
by UNAMIR staff and in the diplomatic community. Some went public with their
concern, including the UNAMIR commander of the Kigali sector, Luc Marshal, and
the SRSG, Jacques-Roger Booh-Booh. Noting that violence was about to overtake
the peace process, Booh-Boob coin lamed to the press on 24 January that "weapons
are being distributed from arms caches around Kigali and even inside town."
Some arms shipments could readily be traced. On 22 January 1994, a planeload of
arms from France was confiscated by UNAMIR at the Kigali airport. The delivery was
in clear violation of the cease-fire clauses of the Arusha Accords which prohibited
introduction of arms into the area during the transition period. Formally recognizing
this point, the French government argued that the delivery stemmed from an old
contract and hence was, technically-speaking, legal.
Arms distribution affected the immediate security situation as well as the climate for
implementing the peace accords. It also went to the core of UNAMIR's mandate to
help make Kigali a "weapons secure area" where weapons were strictly controlled.
Failure to react to flagrant and illegal arms distribution would erode UNAMIR's
credibility. Immediately after sending the 11 January cable, Dallarre requested
permission to seek out arms caches which the informant had offered to identify. In the
UN Secretariat, however, the DPKO denied permission. Dallaire made similar
requests to carry out cordon an search operations to seize arms on three occasions
in early February. Each time the DPKO turned own the request. Similar calls from the
Belgian government to permit UNAMIR to interpret its mandate more proactively issued after Belgian Defence Minister Leo Delcroix had visited Rwanda in mid-March
were likewise rejected.
In retrospect, it is hard to fault the UN for failing to anticipate the impact of external
events and notably the October massacres in Burundi. The prescient and cumulative
warning signals from Rwanda itself were more coin Compelling and taken seriously
by many in the field: diplomats redoubled their efforts while UNAMIR tried to respond.
In New York, however, the secretariat was passive or cautious. The most critical
warning from the field - the 11 January cable
were put aside in the
45
DPKO .Requests to bring the force up to strength were not met, let alone
reinforcements. UNAMIR was denied permission to interpret its mandate proactively
and search for arms. When the Secretary-General twice reported to the Security
Council to renew UNAMIR's three-month authorization, he did not mention these
critical elements in the situation. The Secretariat did propose, however, to accelerate
the deployment of the second battalion originally authorized for UNAMIR, and this the
Security Council approved.
New York's response reflected a cautious and politically sensitive interpretation of
UNAMIR's mandate. The latter had been tailored to peacekeeping of a classic
consent-and-cooperation kind. The Mission was to "contribute to the security" of the
Kigali area, monitor the cease-fire, and assist local authorities in demobilizing the two
Rwandan armies and investigating violations of the Accords (Res. 872 (1993)). It is
important to recall that this mandate grew out of, but differed from, what was
envisaged in the Arusha Accords. In the central clauses defining UNAMIR s role in
providing security, in protecting civilians, and in confiscating illegal arms, the Arusha
Accords were significantly broader than the terms in the final UN mandate.46 The

29

disjuncture between the mediation phase and the implementation was again
revealed: the signatories to the. regionally brokered peace accords had evidently
assigned an importance to the peace-implementing force which exceeded what the
UN was willing to provide.
In the fall of 1993, the Secretariat and the Security Council had jointly considered
Rwanda a low priority, drafted a classic and minimalist peacekeeping operation, and
hoped for the best. As the situation progressively deteriorated in Rwanda, the
Secretariat and the Security Council - in particular the United States - laboured under
the impact of the Somalia experience. The crisis in Somalia, where US/UN troops
became embroiled in a de facto war with a local faction and took casualties - had
been politically costly both for the US government and for the UN Secretary General.
Not crossing "the Mogadishu-line" became a firm dictum in the Secretariat, as a highlevel official in the DPKO later said. A proactive interpretation of UNAMIR's mandate
to permit confiscation of illegal arms was much too close to the Somalia syndrome for
comfort47.
Having ruled out a proactive and coercive response in Rwanda, the Secretariat and
the Security Council left themselves with only one option in case of a crisis. The
strategy was spelled out in the form of a bargaining tactic: unless the peace
agreement was implemented, the UN would withdraw its peacekeeping force. The
message from the Secretary General to the Rwandan parties in Kigali was spelled
out by the Security Council when it renewed authorization for UNAMIR in January
and again on 5 April.
As the crisis intensified, the range of options to save the peace agreement narrowed.
Economic incentives were attached to the peace process as donors made it clear that
major development funds would not be forthcoming unless a transitional government
were installed. This also gave no results. Threats to withdraw UNAMIR went
unheeded. The only significant alternative of applying coercive diplomacy against the
extremists was rejected.
This is not to say that a stronger or more proactive UNAMIR necessarily would have
altered the course of events leading up to 6 April. The consequences of weakness,
however, were reasonably clear. Slowly and haltingly deployed, UNAMIR failed to
protect strength and decisiveness from the beginning. As the struggle over
implementation intensified, the force was constrained from acting in matters
pertaining to the security of Kigali and thus central to its mission. When the situation
radically changed in April and widespread violence erupted, UNAMIR lacked
everything from sandbags to APCs to protect even its own personnel, and had little
room to manoeuvre.
3.3 The UN and the OAU: Structural Disjuncture
The halting support given to UNAMIR in the field is the more striking since the UN in
fact had aggressively sought to lead the operation rather than letting the OAU move
to the fore. The OAU had also staked a claim to lead the peacekeeping force planned
at Arusha, referring to its role in the mediation process and the African regional forces
to help solve African problems.

30

The issue of who should lead a future peacekeeping operation in Rwanda was
brought to the forefront by RPFs military offensive in February 1993. The offensive
was designed to demonstrate the decisive military superiority of the RPF, as indeed it
did. It also accelerated efforts by France to put a UN force into Rwanda. From a
French perspective, such a force would at best check RPFs advance and provide a
breathing space for the government by positioning itself between the two belligerents,
and also by monitoring the border between Uganda and Rwanda. At the same time, a
UN force would be an answer to increasingly insistent demands from the RPF that
French forces withdraw, as had been stipulated already in the 1991 N'Sele
agreement. With a UN force in Rwanda and a French veto on UN peace-keeping
operations in the Security Council, Paris could still exercise some influence after its
own troops were gone. The head he French delegation- to the UN had started to
lobby the Security Council already in the fall of 1992. By early 1993, French efforts
had become so insistent that it was "a standing joke in the Council," according to one
ambassador present.
Non-aligned members of the Security Council and some European states cautioned
that French efforts might be seen as an attempt by Paris to salvage its influence in
Rwanda and warned against sidelining the OAU. Secretary-General Salim A. Salim
had pursued the idea of turning NMOG into a peacekeeping force since early 1993,
and had obtained agreement at the Dar-es-Salaam summit in March from both
Rwandan parties to expand NMOG and extend its mandate ('Tekle 1995). Later that
month he personally presented the case to Security Council members, twice pursued
the matter in letters to the Secretary-General, and presented a detail proposal to a
special envoy of Boutros-Ghali who visited Addis Ababa. The assumption was,
however, that the UN would provide logistical and financial support. Salim made clear
that African countries were ready to send troops, but could not absorb the financial
costs.
The alignments were clear. France and the GoR wanted a UN force but had not
obtained decisive approval from the Security Council (S/25400 (1993)): The OAU and
the RPF wanted the OAU to take the lead. In between stood Boutros-Ghali. He did
not reveal his hand until April, when he informed Salim that the UN could only assist
a gave OAU-UN force if the UN retained command and control. Any discussion of UN
assistance, moreover, would have to await the outcome of the Arusha talks48.
Despite official deference in New York to regional initiatives in conflict resolution,
OAU's bid for a peacekeeping mission in Rwanda was decisively rebuffed. The
arguments were familiar: OAU lacked the capacity to mount a credible peacekeeping
force (as demonstrated by the NMOG experience), and could not be counted on to
provide a neutral presence (as allegedly demonstrated in Liberia). Capacity is a
function of resources, however, and the underlying reality was that approval from the
Security Council was necessary. That included France, which had engaged itself
strongly in the matter and sponsored the raft resolution for a UN force.
OAU's attempt to undertake a peacekeeping operation in Rwanda raises important
questions. Admittedly, the organization had limited experience in peacekeeping. It
was wholly dependent upon the UN to provide logistics and finance. Yet, the history
of UNAMIR's initial deployment and early operation demonstrated that UN was
unable or unwilling to mount an effective peacekeeping force in an area of marginal

31

interest to the major powers. 49 When crisis broke on 6 April, it was the European
battalion in UNAMIR which withdrew and crippled the future options of the force; the
African battalion stayed. The political instinct among the veto-wielding members of
the Security Council was to abandon the mission. Prima facie, there reason to doubt
that with appropriate support, the OAU would have done worse.

CHAPTER 4 CRISIS AND WITHDRAWAL
(6 April 1994 - 21 April 1994)
4.1 Crisis
On 6 April at approximately 8:30 in the evening Kigali time, the lane carrying
President Habyarimana was shot down as it was returning from Dar-es-Salaam,
where he had committed to finally implementing the BBTG. What followed in the next
24 hours was the almost simultaneous occurrence of a military coup, renewed civil
war, politicide, and commencement of genocide. At this stage, early warning with
respect to forthcoming events was irrelevant. What was required for rational decisionmaking was knowledge about the confusion in the present. Who knew, what did they
know, and to whom did they communicate what was known?
By early morning 8 April Dallaire was starting to piece together a picture: the Prime
Minister and other key moderate and opposition political leaders had been killed; the
well-known extremist, Col. Bagosora, appeared to be incharge of the coup; ten
Belgian UNAMIR soldiers had been overpowered and subsequently murdered a
Rwandan army unit; the M unit in Kigali was breaking out of their quarters and the
main RPF force in the North was preparing to move down through the DMZ; and
civilians were being killed as the militia set up roadblocks. 50 Within 24 hours the
Force Commander knew that a military coup and politicide had taken place. He knew
civilians were being killed, but did not recognize that a genocide was underway. He
considered his main objective to be the safe evacuation of the expatriates and the
effort to prevent the resumption of the civil war while ensuring the safety of his own
troops. with the coup a fait accompli, the immediate options were limited. New York
instructed Dallaire and Booh-Booh to talk with the representatives of "interim
government" and the RPF in order to obtain a cease-fire and restart the Arusha
process. The UNAMIR Force Commander also had a number of immediate tasks.
With inadequate transport, he had to relocate the Ghanaian battalion to Kigali since
the RPF had ordered them out of the DMZ. Escort services were provided for the
evacuation of the expatriates that began to be organized by the morning of 8 April.
He had to deal with French, Belgian, and Italian forces who had arrived, not to assist
him, but to secure the airport while evacuating their nationals. UNAMIR also provided
protection to Rwandan nationals who had fled to the Amahoro stadium and nearby
hospital. In all of this, the force had only one working APC, a demoralized Belgian
battalion and an under-equipped section of a Bangladeshi unit.
Between Friday and Monday, most expatriates had managed to leave. With the
evacuation problem less pressing, the UN started to focus on UNAMIR's role in the
new situation (Lægreid 1995). During the first week (April 7-13), much of the initiative
lay with the Secretariat which received information from its newly established
Situation Center, was in constant telephone contact with the Force Commander in the
field, and was repeatedly asked by the Security Council to provide it with information

32

and options.52 Until 13 April, when Belgium formally told the Security Council of its
decision to withdraw from UNAMIR, the diplomatic situation was fluid, with a range of
actions available to the Secretary-General. There were daily, sometimes twice daily
informal consultations between the Security Council and the Secretariat. The week, in
other words, was a window of opportunity for the Secretariat to define UN policy
towards Rwanda.
The Secretariat proceeded with great caution. After discussing the situation in the
Secretary General's Task Force, DPKO officials suggested to the Security Council
that the most likely alternatives were withdrawal or a Chapter VII enforcement action.
Under-Secretary General Kofi Annan told the Council on 9 April and again on 11 April
that if UNAMIR were to carry on, additional resources and a new mandate were
needed. On 13 April, Assistant Secretary General lgbal Riza raised the question of
humanitarian intervention to protect civilians, but only to dismiss it. Acknowledging
that at the time UNAMIR was actually trying to protect civilians in Kigali, Riza
cautioned that this course of action would require more resources, and that the
Council should consider whether indeed peacekeeping operations should involve
such tasks.
The Security Council commented critically on the failure of the Secretariat to come up
with options outside the classic framework of Chapter VI versus Chapter, or a
Somalia-type engagement versus withdrawal, as the British ambassador said on April
13.53 In the dynamic interaction of the response to the genocide and the
management of the renewed civil war, there was a failure to distinguish the two.
Options to reinforce UNAMIR were always put by the Secretariat in terms of an
enforcement operation, suggesting intervention between the two armies, rather than
maintaining or increasing troop strength to protect civilians. Even two weeks after the
killings commenced, the Secretary-General reported to the Security Council in terms
which showed a preoccupation with the war between the Rwandan army and the
RPF (S/1994/470,20 April 1994). An option to deal with the war on civilians was
never presented to the Security Council, and the latter did not strike new directions
on its own. The decision to withdraw the bulk of UNAMIR on Aril 21 was taken
accordingly in the context of a situation which the Council depicted as civil war with
related "mindless violence," rather than organized genocide accompanied by a
smaller civil war (Res. 912 (1994), 21 April 199454 This was despite the warnings
concerning plans for organized, systematic killings which had been received by
Secretariat in communications from UNAMIR and elsewhere.
When the Secretary-General accounted for the decision to withdraw in a public
statement on 21 April, he also failed to recognize the genocide. Instead of organized
and systematic violence, Boutros-Ghali saw anarchy and spontaneous slaughter. It
was the same, totally distorted picture which much of the Western media and,
particularly The New York Times had reported in April (see 4.3 below), and reflected
the influence of the carefully read newspaper at the UN headquarters in New York.
Given the significant role of the Secretariat at this juncture, the 21 April press release
merits closer attention. It claims that "reliable reports strong1y indicate that the
killings were started by unruly members of the Presidential Guard" [not the
Presidential Guard itself, and certainly not the extremists]. The stress is then on the
initiative of the RPF in resuming the civil war. The RPF battalion was breaking out of

33

its compound in Kigali "despite the best efforts of UNAMIR,". while other RPF units
from the demilitarized zone aware moving towards Kigali. There is no mention of an
organized conspiracy, and when the killing of moderate cabinet ministers throughout
the first night, immediately after the plane was shot down], of the Prime Minister, and
of the ten Belgians are mentioned, those deaths are blamed on "unruly soldiers."
There is no mention of the beginning of the organized murder of Tutsis. The
provisional government is depicted as disintegrating, as if it fell apart on its own;
"Authority collapsed" [it did not, at least not the authority organizing the conspiracy].
Instead of stressing the need to stop the massacre of civilians, Boutros-Ghali
declared that "the most urgent task is the securing of an agreement on a cease fine
in the hopes that this would lead to the resumption of the peace process and reviving
the Arusha Accords." Further, UNAMIR could not be left at risk indefinitely when
there was no possibility of its performing the task for which it was sent. The
implication was that there sole task was to observe the cease tire. The statement
makes no mention of UNAMIR's efforts on the grounds to protect civilians, a subject
which had been discussed in both the Secretariat and the Security Council.
A month later, on 25 May, Boutros Boutros-Ghali publicly confessed: "We are all
responsible for this disaster, not only the super-powers, but also the African
countries, the non-government organizations, the entire international community.
There has been a genocide, and the world is talking about what it should do. It is a
scandal." 55 In light of the historical record, this might appear as an effort to shift the
responsibility around. Earlier misperceptions and inaction not only reduced the impact
of the statement, but possibly also reduced the subsequent and very significant
efforts by Secretariat to reverse direction.
From April 29 and onwards, the Secretariat played a vigorous and innovative role visà-vis the Security Council. Its inability to produce a more differentiated set of
alternatives earlier, and the near-paralysis which characterized the first week, is
therefore puzzling. It is also important since early action conceivably could have
prevented the critical loss of power and credibility brought on by withdrawal.
Evidently several factors were at work. First, information from the past had not been
accumulated, analyzed and structured to prepare policy options either for preemptive
action or for crisis management, so important given the general inability of
bureaucracy to innovate during crisis. With limited previous experience in protecting
civilians, and doctrinal poverty, the Secretariat's response was framed by the
conventional dichotomy of "Chapter VI versus a Chapter
" action. Those charged
with leadership had a distorted view of events: both the Secretariat and the Security
Council drew a picture of Rwanda as a failed state in which rogue troops and
spontaneous mobs were killing Tutsi. The concept of the failed state, of course,
suggested the analogy with Somalia, then uppermost in the consciousness of UN
officials. Bureaucratic caution reinforced the conclusion drawn from that experience:
the UN could not afford another peacekeeping. failure, with failure defined as loss of
UN peacekeepers in the field. Finally, the striking aspect of the first week of crisis
was the physical absence from New York of Boutros-Ghali, who was travelling at a
brisk pace in Europe and the former Soviet Union.56 During the fast moving and
critical first days of crisis, the Secretary-General was unavailable to provide
leadership for action.
4.2 Withdrawal

34

Until the middle of April, there were open divisions in the Security Council on the
issue of UNAMIR's future. The non-aligned states, lead by Nigeria, argued for
strengthening UNAMIR, and on 13 Aril circulated a draft proposal to that effect. By
then, however, it was too late and not backed b offers to contribute. The
Belgian
decision to withdraw their contingent following the murder of the ten Belgian peace
was communicated to the Secretary-General on 12 April and to the Security Council
the next day. It deprived UNAMAMIR of its strongest unit and put the placed the rest
of the force in a precarious position. The Secretary-General made the point bluntly in
a letter to Security-Council members on 13 April. Belgian withdrawal will make it
"extremely difficult for UNAMIR to carry out its task effectively.... In these
circumstances, I have asked my Special Representative and the Force Commander
to prepare plans for the withdrawal of UNAMIR."57 Having decided to withdraw its
own contingent, Brussels lobbied hard to persuade Council members that conditions
in Rwanda necessitated withdrawal of UNAMIR as a whole. The stance was widely
seen as an attempt to legitimize its own withdrawal, but the Belgians were pushing at
an open door58. They were strongly backed by the Americans59, the UK and France,
though less vocal, also favoured withdrawal. No country came forward with troop
contributions, and the Secretariat claimed later that informal canvassing at the time
had negative results. 60 It was obviously not a question of capacity; collectively or
individually several UN members had the means to intervene decisively, as France
and Belgium indicated at the time by their efficient airborne operation to evacuate
expatriates.
The assessments from the field was that even with the Belgian withdrawal, the rest of
the mission of around 1,200 should carry on as long as possible. "My decision to
remain was a matter of moral concern," Dallaire later wrote.61 With the tide running
the other way in New York, however, alternate perspectives from the field were not
forwarded to the Security Council in a forceful manner. Instead, the options were
formulated as full withdrawal versus leaving a token force. In the "stampede to get
out," as one ambassador later noted, the Nigerian draft resolution for strengthening
UNAMIR was not even tabled.
As the Security Council debated options, UNAMIR's position in the field deteriorated.
The Belgian contingent completed its withdrawal on April 20, and while Dallaire
redeployed the Ghanaian battalion from the DMZ to the airport, his force was not
being resupplied and had to work hard to secure even some equipment from the
departing Belgian contingent. UNAMIR was short of water and fuel, and was taking
indirect fire. Continuing negotiations with the RPF and FAR to respect a UNsupervised neutrality of the airport did not succeed, rendering the airport and hence
the exit route insecure. Self-fulfilling prophecy, UNAMIR had been weakened to the
point where withdrawal increasingly seemed the most rational option. The field
mission still refused to concede the point. On the eve of the Security Council's final
decision on 21 April to withdraw, Dallaire's "cabinet" of officers recommended as their
first option to stay on at present strength (i.e. without the Belgian battalion), while
listing downsizing and withdrawal as less desirable alternatives.
The formal decision to withdraw was taken by the Security Council in the context of a
choice between three options formulated by the Secretary-General. In reality, all but
one option had already been ruled out in the informal and officially unrecorded

35

consultations in the Council and its communications with the Secretariat, probably de
facto almost a week earlier. As now presented, the language clearly excluded the
option to increase: the situation in Rwanda could only be changed by "immediate and
massive reinforcement of UNAMIR which would... require several thousand additional
troops and UNAMIR may have to be given enforcement powers under Chapter "
(S/1994/470. para. 13). The alternative of complete withdrawal also seemed difficult.
Given the "dimensions of the violence and mass killings over the last two weeks... the
consequences of complete withdrawal, in terms of human lives lost, could be very
severe indeed" (para. 19). That left the middle alternative of reducing UNAMIR to
about 270 military personnel. These would take on a diplomatic role by promoting a
cease-fire and, when feasible, assist in the resumption of humanitarian relief. On 21
April the Security Council approved this option over the recorded doubt, but with the
votes, of its non-aligned members (S/PV. 3368, 1994).
The two weeks following the downing of the plane carrying President Habyarimana
and associates constituted a critical decision-making phase in the international
response to the conflict. If there were any chances of stopping the genocide before it
fully unfolded, this was the time63. Pulling out meant abandoning the initiative to the
forces on the ground. To re-enter would require additional efforts to capture points of
access. The implications were fully understood by a up of UNAMIR officers who
discussed options in the e middle of the madness that was Kigali on 21 April.
Reducing the force to 270 men, which the Security Council was about to decide,
meant "we can do little" and "we will really not be able to come back," the Deputy
Force Commander scribbled on a notepad.
The Security Council and the Secretariat saw withdrawal as a means to salvage a UN
peacekeeping operation that had been tailored to a situation which no longer existed.
But by largely absenting itself from the conflict, the UN simultaneously lost leverage
to influence its course - on the ground and diplomatically, at the time and on future
directions. External conflict management essentially came to a halt. When the UN
subsequently reversed itself, re-entry proved slow, difficult and fundamentally too
late.
The civilians being killed at the average rate of thousands per day were largely
abandoned to their fate. A symbolic presence at key points in the Kigali area enabled
UNAMIR to provide protection for an estimated 20,000 persons (at the Amahoro
stadium, the Hotel Mille Collines, the Meridien Hotel and the King Faysal Hospital). It
was an impressive performance but a risky and passive mode of protection which
relied on a combination of bluff, inertia and intersecting interests much more than a
projection of force. By their presence, the ICRC and MSF personnel also provided
limited protective "space;" they were later joined by UN agencies and NGOs
providing humanitarian assistance. Their operations functions were dependent upon
and vulnerable to the dynamic of the conflict as determined by the forces on the
ground. Protection and humanitarian assistance came to depend primarily upon the
advance of RPF units, and these came too late to save many.
Given the importance of the Belgian decision to withdraw from Rwanda, the question
has often been posed whether it was wise to have a Belgian unit in UNAMIR.
Although Belgium's colonial past in Rwanda had made some doubt the wisdom of the
decision at the time, no other country came forth to provide. a fully equipped unit, and

36

quick deployment of UMAMIR, it will be recalled, was considered important. In
retrospect, it is probable that it was their European, and not Belgian identity which
made the contingent targeted and vulnerable to extremists tactics. The latter clearly
sought to replicate the American withdrawal from Somalia by capitalizing on Western
states' low threshold for casualties incurred in Africa. They evidently calculated
correctly. By contrast, African troop contributing countries to UNAMIR showed greater
staying power. Ghana did not withdraw its battalion, nor did several African states
that had military observers attached to UNAMIR after the old NMOG was folded into
the larger structure. For all of these, the decision to withdraw was made by the
Security Council.
The small UNAMIR force which remained (540) had as one of its main tasks to
promote a cease-fire in the civil war which had resumed alongside the genocide. For
this "obsession," the UN has been severely criticised (African Rights, 1995: 1121).
The argument is that the UN focused on the least devastating conflict - the civil war rather than the genocide, and, worse, that by seeking to obtain a cease-fire sought to
restrain the advance of the RPF which was the only force on the scene able to stop
the killings of civilians. The factual points are not at issue - the Security Council
consistently demanded a cease-fire, and the UNAMIR mission in Rwanda
continuously sought to negotiate one. How a cease-fire would have effected the level
of killings is more speculative, Partly depending on the time and circumstances. As it
was, except for a brief unilateral cease-fire (April 2, the war continued until the middle
of July, when the government forces were retreating or defeated and the RPF
proclaimed a new government in Kigali. The killing s of civilians came to a halt soon
thereafter. Up until this time, UNAMIR was still in its down-sized form and could only
offer marginal protection to civilians. French forces did not enter the southwest region
until late June. Hence, for almost three months after Apri16, RPF units were the only
significant force seeking to stop the killings as they advanced. The RPF cons
consequently made a cease-fire conditional upon an end to the killings, which the self
appointed "interim government claim ed was beyond their control.
The rationale for demanding a cease-fire may have been politically motivated to halt
the RPF, as the latter claims. 63 It was also a habitual UN response to wars of any
kind. When the decision was made in May to redeploy a larger UN force, a cease-fire
was considered even more important. There is a slight possibility that a cease-fire
might have reduced the killings. Both ICRC delegates and UNAMIR staff have
commented on the apparent dynamic of killings whereby retreating government
forces and Hutu civilians fleeing the advancing RPF armies pounced on Tutsi behind
the lines with extra vengeance. Close UN military observers claim that a cease-fire
would have freed up government troops to rein in the militia. This line of reasoning is
strongly refuted by the RPF and sympathetic NGOs (African Rights, 1995:1068).
4.3 The Media64
Had there been any forewarning in the media? Rwanda is a relatively small country
on the periphery of the industrialized world. As might expected, during the first three
months of 1994 there was virtually no Western media coverage of events in
Rwanda.65 In the early art of the year, the main African story was the UN withdrawal

37

from Somalia, which would prove prescient in itself. Massive media attention then
switched to the violent build-up to the South African elections.
One should not be surprised how relatively little change occurred in the media
coverage after 6 April from the paucity before. There was a blip with the shooting
down of the plane and the reportage on the slaughters - which generally were
portrayed as ancient tribal feuds - but with the withdrawal of the foreign press there
was a precipitous drop in coverage. When the genocide was accelerating, the
western press virtually The to report on Rwanda. The lack of coverage cannot be
blamed simply on the relative disinterest in Rwanda. The real danger, the genuine
confusion on the ground the restricted mobility of the reporters, and the inability to fly
out photos or videos were major handicaps. In addition, American employers had
ordered their reporters out for reasons of safety, but because of costs as well. 66 But
some stayed and accurately reported events, demonstrating all the more the failure of
those that did neither.
There were, by chance, two reporters in Kigali at the time, Katrin van tier Schoot, a
freelance Flemish reporter for Belgian radio, and Lindsey Hi sum, a very experienced
freelance journalist on Africa who normally worked for the BBC, the Guardian, and
The Observer, but was in Kigali on a special assignment for UNICEF. With the
shooting down of the plane carrying Habyarimana, the slaughter of the moderate
Prime Minister and cabinet ministers, the massacre of the ten Belgian peacekeepers,
and the subsequent murder of Tutsis in very large numbers, the number of reporters
sometimes grew to a maximum of 15 (in contrast with the 500 covering South Africa).
Mark Doyle of the BBC reported on the RPF advance and the scale of the civilian
slaughter by mobs, accurately depicting the murders as being instigated and led by
the government and the military. Jean Helene, the Le Monde correspondent,
provided detailed and accurate background information to the Rwandan crisis. While
reporting the mutual accusations levelled at each other by the two sides, the
implication seemed clear that it was Habyarimana's enemies within the government
that targeted the plane. On 12 April, the fear was expressed that the Tutsis would all
be systematically massacred before the RPF captured the capital.67 Catherine Bond,
The Times correspondent, reported on 12 April from Kigali that most of the killing was
probably not random. Michael Taylor, director of British Christian Aid, in a letter to
The Times wrote that groups of armed youth loyal to different political parties were
instigators of the violence. If he had written that they were perpetrators of violence
instigated by her-ups, this partial truth would have been more accurate. But it at least
counteracted the impression of spontaneous tribal violence that was the general
theme of most stories.
Such accurate or partially accurate reportage was the exception, however. The New
York Times had appallingly misleading reports in its initial coverage: the downed
plane was a result of a Tutsi attempt to destroy them Hutu leadership in both
countries; "mobs" or a troop rampage killed the Rwandan premier and ten Belgian
soldiers; anarchy (not interhamwe with their roadblocks) reigned the streets; "rival
tribal factions waged vicious street battles." On all critical points, the 8 April dispatch
by William Schmidt was wrong. Jerry Gray wrote an interpretive piece the next day
explaining the events as a genocidal orgy (rather than a systematic organized
genocide), a continuation of a centuries-old feud. Adding to this fictional tale of Tutsi-

38

Hutu orgiastic killing, Schmidt retribalized the murdered Prime Minister by the
Presidential Guard as a Tutsi 69
If the leading newspaper of record in the United States demonstrated that its
reporting and commentary had more to do with stereotypical Western perceptions
f Africa than with fact, US television coverage and the CNN erred on the side of
vagueness, generally referring to "unspeakable atrocities," and "ethnic violence," but
picked up the theme of tribal or mutual ethnic slaughter. It would not be until 7 May
that ABC correspondent Ron Allen suggested that the events were not a product of
spontaneous tribal violence, but were a premeditated political act intended as a final
solution.
An exception to the general New York Times coverage was an op-ed piece by Alison
des Forges of Human Rights Watch providing an in-depth background of the
Rwandan crisis and indicating western complicity and responsibility in the genocide.
However, this was not the predominant English version of events, even if it was an
authoritative one. The editorial line of the New York Times followed the fictional
interpretation of events and concluded that the cure for Rwanda's "blood frenzy" was
the business of Rwandans70. The Times did the same. Le Monde took an opposite
tack, reporting on events in New York rather than in Rwanda. implying an activism of
the Security Council, the newspaper reported on the demand "to stop the massacres
immediately.' This was after the Belgian battalion had announced its departure from
UNAMIR. On the 15th, in an op-ed piece, Bernard Taillefer, a former professor in
Bujumbura and former bank director in Burundi opined that the UN mission must
have a clear mandate to stop the massacres. Otherwise, the UN would be complicit
in crimes against humanity, just as a bystander is complicit when failing to intervene
in the beating of an individual.
In the French press, the genocide was by early May a given, and the emphasis
began to be on French responsibility for it71. Print and television coverage of Rwanda
began to increase also in the English language press, partly because the election in
South Africa had been held and Mandela was sworn in on 10 May in a relatively
peaceful process, and journalists were reassigned to Rwanda. The Times had quoted
Oxfam (29 April) that, "the systematic killing of the Tutsi minority in Rwanda
amounted to a genocide," and reported that the Kagera era river filled with floating
dead bodies, but the focus by 2 May was still on the unprecedented 250,000
refugees that flooded into Tanzania in one 24 hour period72.The refugees became the
predominant story (See Fig 11).
Only when reporters reached Lake Victoria and witnessed the logjam of dead bodies
floating down from the Kagera River did the Western media refocus on the massive
killings. More accurate reporting on the mechanism of the genocide began toappear
in the American press (Time Magazine, 18 May; Associated Press, 22 May), although
Rwanda soon faded- into the background, crowded out by Haiti and the O.J. Simpson
story, at least until Goma (See Study III).
The misleading media coverage was echoed in the accounts of events in Rwanda
which both the Security Council and the Secretary .General gave explaining their
decision to withdraw UNAMIR on 21 April. As discussed above, these were totally
distorted. More generally, the Western media's failure to adequately report on the

39

genocide in Rwanda contributed to international indifference and inaction, and hence
the crime itself.
CHAPTER 5 PHASE 5 - RETROACTIVE CONFLICT MANAGEMENT
(21 April 1994 - Fall 1994)
5.1 UNAMIR II
It was not until the end of April that there was some acknowledgment from the United
Nations that it ought to respond more forcefully to the Rwanda conflict. The initiative
did not come from the Security Council members, where some members had
registered strong disapproval of the proposal to draw down UNAMIR but nevertheless
had voted for it on 21 April. Rather, it was the Secretary General who already on 29
April April had called on the Security Council to take "forceful action" in Rwanda. The
move marked the beginning of a much more proactive role by the Secretariat towards
the crisis. Recovering from its near-paralysis during the immediate aftermath of 6
April, the Secretariat assumed the role of a model executive branch: it asserted the
moral and political need for action, assessed the problem, formulated an innovative
and bold response, and actively sought to mobilize resources for its realization. This
change in itself requires explanation.
The Secretary-General was under increasing pressure from African countries to
demonstrate that the United Nations took its African constituency seriously and did
not give preference to European crises. African members of the UN had called for
action at an early point in the UN debate on UNAMIR, and maintained this position as
April went by and the death toll rapidly mounted. Their calls were supported the
growing information in the UN system that the Rwanda massacres were of a nature
and magnitude that merited deep concern. Information to this effect was relayed from
UNAMIR in Rwanda through the Secretariat's newly established Operations Centre in
DPKO/New York, occasionally with graphic horror. On 23 April, the Under-secretary
General for Humanitarian Affairs, Peter Hansen, travelled to Kigali, becoming the first
New York based high UN official to report back on the situation. The media, as noted,
had scattered and inadequate coverage during most of April. The pressure from
human rights organizations had been constant throughout the month Hence, it
appears that the main causes of reversal lay within the UN system, which to that
extent was able to correct itself. As both data and pressure accumulated, the
Secretary-General took a high-profile role to reengage the UN militarily in Rwanda
despite awareness that the Permanent Five on the Security Council were holding
back.
The central UN human rights mechanisms had not been visible in early Aril, nor did
they figure in this reversal of policy. The new position of High Commissioner of
Human Rights was filled only one month before 6 April, and it is understandable that
the new commissioner did not play an active role until later. A week after the
Secretary-General had put Rwanda back on the Security Council's agenda, the High
Commissioner, Josh Ayala Lasso, called on the UN Commission on Human Rights to
convene an emergency session to consider the killings. More striking was the
passivity of the Commission itself. Only on 25 May, several weeks after genocidal
killings had commenced, and after the Security Council agreed to reverse course and
send in a military force to protect civilians, did the Commission act. A Special
Rapporteur was appointed to report on the human rights situation in Rwanda, and on

40

28 June he confirmed in a detailed assessment that genocide and other human rights
violations had occurred (E/CN.4/1995/7). By this point, the genocide had claimed
most of its victims.
By taking a high-profile role in calling for a reversal on Rwanda, the SecretaryGeneral put the onus of rejection or compliance on the Security Council. the issue
moved between the Secretariat and Security Council for over a month, it became
obvious that the obstacles to action lay in the Council. The immediate verbal
response was accommodating ,and even contained an indirect reference to the
possibility that a genocide might unfolding in Rwanda (S/PRST/1994/21). However,
the major powers were not energized. They did not even express a sense of urgency,
but rather passed the initiative to the African states by asking the Secretary-General
to consult with the OAU and report back on further action. It took almost three weeks
before the Council authorized a plan of action on 17 May (Res. 918 (1994)), and even
then the US delegation delayed the process by requiring further paperwork by the
Secretariat before agreeing to an implementing solution. The final approval for
establishing enlarged UN force with an expanded mandate to specifically protect
civilians was not given until 8 June (Res. 92 an (1994)) - i.e. almost two months after
the massacres had started.
The delays occurred even though time was of the essence. The Security Council had
authoritative information that genocidal violence was unfolding at a rapid rate, with
possibly thousands being killed every day. Already on 30 April, the Council itself
acknowledged that "massacres and want on killing.. in a systematic manner" were
occurring; these terms. The point was reiterated in mid-May. These were further
linked to genocide although in carefully non-committal terms. Secretary-General was
using progressively stronger language to describe the violence in his communications
to the Security Council, going from "massacres of innocent civilians... on a massive
scale" (29 April) to unequivocally declaring a "genocide" (31 May) Reporting on a
specially on he sent to assess the Rwandan situation during the second half of Ma ,
Boutros-Ghali used the figure of 250-500,000 killed (S/1994/640, May 31). In
Washington, US administration off risk had in early May told the Congress that an
estimated 100-500 000 persons had been killed, although they considered the latter
figure to be on the high side. Despite this information and acknowledgment of the
severity of the situation, the Council itself did not take action and slowed down efforts
by the Secretariat to move more quickly by insisting on additional procedures before
authorizing implementation.
The Security Council had no formal obligation to act. The changing situation had
rendered the earlier mandate to implement the Arusha Accords irrelevant. On the
other hand, there was at elates an implicit political obligation given the previous UN
commitment to help implement the peace agreement, and in light of the impact of the
war on peace and security in the region. More profoundly, there was a legal right and
UN collectively and its individual members had the physical capacity to do so. Of the
two types of violence unfolding in Rwanda - the civil war and the parallel massacres
of civilians - the rationale for intervention was most compelling with respect to the
latter. Protection of civilians consequently became the focus for efforts to re-engage
the UN.

41

An innovative plan was sketched in the DPKO on May 13, and refined after the
Secretary-General sent a high-level mission to the region at the end of the month. A
force of over 5,000 men (UNAMIR II) was to help protect civilians by establishing,
where possible, humanitarian zones inside Rwanda, and by facilitating humanitarian
reef to displaced and other needy persons.. While designed under a Chapter VI
mandate, the operation envisaged clearly went beyond conventional peace-keeping;
for example, the final resolution authorized the force to "take action in self defence"
against those who "threaten protected sites and populations [emphasis added]" (Res.
918/1994)) In effect a "6.5 mandate," the formulation permitted flexible and firm
response to protect civilians. It was a significant formalization and a further
development of the practice undertaken on the ground by the rump UNAMIR
contingent in Kigali, where UNAMIR soldiers were posted to sites that had become
sanctuaries for civilians.
It is reasonable to assume that UNAMIR II, if quickly and effectively deployed, could
have had a significant impact in terms of saving lives. Even the minimal efforts by the
UN forces on the ground, it will be recalled, had some protective effect. The most
impressively cost-effective operation was at the Amohoro Stadium in Kigali, where 12
UN "blue helmets" armed only, with hand weapons and barbed wire protected several
thousand persons. Since the victims mostly were not threatened y organized, wellequipped army units (as in e.g. Bosnia), but by mainly para-military gangs and mobs,
a relatively modest force could have significant deterrence effect.
The mandate and design of UNAMIR II seemed appropriate to the situation.
However, the intervention was delayed in two ways which rendered it irrelevant to the
most critical phases of the conflict. Over a month passed before the Security Council
authorized the operation. The actual deployment took another two months, with the
result that the force arrived in Rwanda after the evil war and the genocide were over,
and after a unilateral French intervention with a similar mandate had taken place74
To assess the responsibility for this delay raises the question of whether the causes
were "systemic" characteristics of the United Nations, or the result of particular
actions (or inactions) by individual actors.
By omission and commission, the role of the United States was critical. As the world's
last remaining superpower, the United States had repeatedly demonstrated that it
could move the United Nations to take rapid and effective actions. In the Gulf war
(1990-, the Administration had done this both by committing a significant part of its
own formidable military force, and by mobilizing other states through the US alliance
structure and by exercising its formidable economic power. By not utilizing its
capacity to act, and its formal leadership role in the United Nations, the U.S. must
take a considerable responsibility for the overall failure of the UN to respond at this
juncture. The same applies, though to a lesser degree, to the other major powers on
the Security Council. Both France and Great Britain, in particular, had the capacity for
rapid military action and considerable political resources to energize the Council.
France demonstrated this capacity much later by undertaking unilateral "humanitarian
intervention;' which the Council endorsed with utmost speed.
By not taking the initiative, the United States and the members of the Permanent Five
ensured that the Security Council proceeded along its customary and laborious path

42

of consensual decision-making. More specifically, the explicit unwillingness of the
major western powers to commit troops to a revitalized UN force -which had been
clear in the decision to drawn down UNAMIR I and was reiterated in early May when
UNAMIR II was planned - meant that the UN force had to be established on a mixand-match basis. African countries would send troops, while industrialized states
were to provide equipment and finances. To constitute a force along these lines was
extremely time consuming even under the best of circumstances.75
Problems of financing the force also caused delays and weakened the response. The
role of the United States in this respect was particularly important since the US is
automatically assessed 31% of the costs of all UN peacekeeping, thereby acquiring
more than a formal veto in the matter. US consent is essential to mount an operation
whether or not American troops are involved. The United States made it quite clear
during May that on purely financial grounds it would not readily endorse an expanded
UNAMIR. US reluctance bogged down the UNAM1R discussion from the start. At one
point, US demands for careful planning, prior troop p commitments, and security of
the mission - justified by the need to avoid wasting money on a famed mission forced the Council to delay final authorization of the force for an additional two weeks,
from 17 May to 8 June.
While the structure of UN assessment gives the US an inordinate power to influence
UN peacekeeping, there are ways around this. In early May, the Secretary-General
floated the idea of establishing a voluntary fund to finance an expanded UNAMIR.
Having obtained commitments in principle from several African countries for troops,
Boutros Ghali proposed initial fund of 50-80 million dollars to launch the force. None
of the economically powerful UN members came forward to subscribe, however, and
the US received the idea coolly. By their inaction, other members of the Security
Council ensured that regular assessments structure would apply, thereby keeping the
onus for action on the reluctant US.
US reluctance to support UNAMIR II reflected a progressively critical attitude of the
Clinton Administration towards UN peacekeeping operations. With great deference to
a hostile Congress, the Administration had just completed a review of UN
peacekeeping operations which established stringent criteria for US support (PDD
25). To support UN peacekeeping in Rwanda, the Administration would have to
determine that peace in this remote Central African country was critical to U.S.
national interests. In conventional strategic terms, this would be difficult, and the
Administration did not try. Nor did it elaborate alternative criteria for national interest e.g. to reduce massive international refugee flows or the principled need to react to
genocide.76 Congress had expressed concern over the escalating bill for UN
peacekeeping when UNAMIR I was planned in September 1993. Since then, the
operation in Somalia - deemed a disaster from a U.S perspective - had reinforced
Congressional reluctance to finance UN peacekeeping anywhere, with or without US
troops.
In reality, the budget. for the projected UNAMIR II was quite small when judged
against the "downstream costs" for relief and rehabilitation to assist victims of the
conflict, not to mention the human cost. The estimated budget for UNAMIR II was 115
million dollars for 6 months (or slightly under 20 million a month).77 This was the
same rate as UNAMIR I (about 10 million dollars per month for a force of about half

43

the size), and reflected attention to fiscal stringency despite the changed situation.
Both this budget and an advance voluntary fund of 50-80 million dollars, were well
within the means of the industrialized countries states to finance.
The reluctance of the US and other members on the Security Council to endorse a
military re-engagement also reflected concern about the risks and practicality of
intervention. On the ground, the Rwanda situation seemed confused and anarchic,
raising the question of the mission's effectiveness, security of personnel, and fears
that support operations might be needed for rescue or reinforcement. Behind these
concerns was again the Somalia experience, although the two situations in reality
were quite different. There had been no systematic and massive killings of civilians in
Somalia. The proactive orientation of UNOSOM to disarm armed factions and to
arrest a prominent faction leader had been undertaken with a Chapter VII
enforcement mandate. In Rwanda, by contrast, the proactive function would be to
protect civilians. Although force could be used if necessary, a reduced-risk option
was proposed whereby the units would move in from the border and remain in the
protected zones in outlying areas78. On the other hand, there were obvious elements
of risk. Throughout May when the Council deliberated[ on the nature and mission of a
military reengagement in Rwanda, the members were fully aware there was no
cease-fire in the country or in Kigali; the airport was not secure; the Ugandan army
had stopped all UNOMUR patrols on the Ugandan side of the border to keep arms
flowing to the RPF; and it was not clear that the parties to the conflict would welcome,
let alone respect, a UN force as a neutral, humanitarian entity.
The Rwandan parties were also responsible for the slow and hesitant UN
deployment. During the critical Security Council deliberations in early May, the RPF
sent ambiguous messages. While in principle accepting a humanitarian force, the
Front feared that UNAMIR II at best would irrelevant, and at worst a hindrance to their
advance or protection for the government forces79. These concerns were consistent
with their initial hostility to a UN force in early 1993 - which only changed to lukewarm
attitudes priority or to April16 - and further strengthened the forces of caution in New
York. On the government side, a UN force would prima, facie be even less welcome
insofar as their mission was to protect civilians, and the latter were targeted
principally behind government lines.
Despite the risks of the situation and the novelty of the mission, African countries
responded rapidly with troop commitments. The OAU again emerged as a focal point
for mobilizing support80 By the first week of May, Nigeria and Ghana - both with large
armies and peacekeeping mg experience - had responded positively, and Tanzania,
Senegal, Zimbabwe and Zambia were indicating interest. In addition to regular
financing, however, all needed various kinds of equipment and logistical support;
even Nigerian and Ghanaian units lacked vehicles and heavy equipment. As a result,
the mix-and-match pattern of African troops and Western equipment developed. This
had been practised in other UN peacekeeping operations but on a smaller scale and
not for units that formed the backbone of force. Before being deployed, the troops
committed to UNAMIR II had to be trained and equipped within a multinational and
often two layered bureaucratic structure (UN and bilateral). Donors of equipment
grumbled that African countries used peacekeeping operations to outfit their forces
and worried that their equipment would be misused. Combined with normal"
bureaucratic procedures, this produced long delays.

44

The infamous APC case is illustrative: The United States was to lease (with full
remuneration from the UN) 50 Armoured Personnel Carriers to a second Ghanaian
battalion earmarked for UNAMIR. Pentagon received a formal UN request for these
APCs on 19 May, which started a lengthy process. Paperwork for the lease had to be
completed before the vehicles could be assigned. Several practical issues went back
and forth regarding type of vehicles (wheeled or tracked?), repainting them (white),
finding a training partner (the US requested Egypt but the UN declined due to
"extraordinary preconditions"). It took a full week to transport the 50 vehicles from a
US base in Germany to Entebbe (Uganda), and when the last APCs were finally
unloaded at Entebbe (30 June), they remained on the tarmac under UN Me for a
month before moving to Rwanda. Not until July 30 did the first ADCs roll into
Rwanda. By this time, the end of the war and the installation of a new government in
Kigali rendered their original mission of securing the airport and protecting civilians
quite irrelevant.
The "systemic" and individual factors which caused the crucial delays in establishing
UNAMIR II were the same that had produced a halting deployment of UNAMIR I.
Requiring consensus from key members of the Security Council and being dependent
on national sources of men and equipment, the UN needs three to six months to form
a Peace keeping force of this size. A determined political push by member states,
however, can cut through the bureaucratic tangles to speed up the decision-making
process, or come up with missing force components from national sources. In this
case, strategic disinterest in Rwanda combined with fear of a ailed or costly mission
made key members of the Security Council hold back. Since it is reasonable to
assume that a more rapid deployment of UNAMIR II could have protected a large
number of civilians, the consequences of delay are the equivalent loss of life, and,
quite possibly , a larger outflow of refugees who otherwise might have remained in
the 'protected zones,' as happened in the French humanitarian zone see 5.2).
More fundamental criticism was levelled at the UN response then and in retrospect.
First, critics argue, the UN insisted on being neutral even when faced with a situation
of manifest evil (Brauman 1994, African Rights, 1995). This criticism is valid given
that the organization itself invoked the term genocide - although belatedly 81 making a neutral position indefensible from a legal and moral perspective. More
fundamentally, it seems that the main obstacle to an effective response in Rwanda
was not that the UN insisted on neutrality, but that it was not there.
5.2 Operation Turquoise
While the UN was struggling to mount troops and equipment for an expanded UN
presence in Rwanda, France suddenly offered on June 19 to send its own force, but
under French command and control. Officially designated as a humanitarian
intervention to protect civilians and hinder a mass outflow of refugees, Operation
Turquoise was launched and executed in a manner suggesting mixed motives. Partly
for that reasons, the consequences were both political and humanitarian in nature.
At the UN, the Secretary-General presented the French offer as a stopgap measure
until UNAMIR H was fully deployed, then expected to take another three months82.
Critics have argued that France could readily have speeded up this process b placing

45

its Turquoise-designated units at UNAMIR's disposal. However, strong RPF
opposition to accept a UN force with a French contingent made this difficult as long
as UNAMIR operated under a Chapter VI mandate requiring at least minimal consent
from the local parties. When France decided to intervene unilaterally, it was ardless
of RPF permission and with a heavily armed force authorized to use "all means
necessary" under Chapter of the UN. In the event, the RPF chose not to challenge
the interventionist force.
By retaining national command, the French government was able to conduct and
claim credit for an operation that on purely military grounds was generally judged to
be well planned and superbly executed (Connaughton, 1994). The political credits
were also "national." The ably run Operation Turquoise came to be juxtaposed with
the uncertain and fumbling UN peace-keeping operation. At the same time, the
French had requested and quickly obtained a Security Council endorsement of the
intervention (Res. 929 (1994), 22 June). The Operation consequently confirmed the
growing precedent for unilateral interventions conducted under national command,
and for national purposes, but legitimized by the UN. The overall effect was to further
undermine the institution of collective international intervention
as delegated to the UN and envisaged in its Charter83.
These wider consequences partly flowed from the judgment that the operation had
been a success. As planned, the units moved rapidly and mostly avoided armed
confrontations with the RPF or any of the other parties. They could claim with some
reason that the intervention saved lives and stabilized the situation in the south
western corner of Rwanda, thereby reducing the outflow of refugees. The French
presence facilitated relief work carried out by humanitarian organizations. Moreover,
the force accomplished all this without incurring any casualties and withdrew as
planned within the two months time limit specified at the outset.
Each of these claims have some validity, although their significance must be judged
in a wider context. Operation Turquoise did save some lives if it is assumed that
these otherwise would have been lost before the RPF could reach the area. By 2
July, the French had established control over the south-western comer of Rwanda,
equivalent to one fifth of the national territory and proclaimed it a "safe humanitarian
zone." The RPF claims that its forces could have "liberated" this area within a short
period of time, and that the Tutsi who survived for over two months to be rescued by
the French would equally have been there later if RPF units had arrived. As noted,
however, there was a dynamic at work which tended to speed up the killings of Tutsi
behind government lines as the RPF advanced. What would have happened in the
Southwest absent the French therefore remains unclear.
The numbers are also uncertain. French government claims that Operation Turquoise
had saved "tens of thousands" seem exaggerated. Probably the vast majority of the
Tutsi population and associated Hutu in the Southwest had been killed by the time
French troops entered. 84 Some 13-15,000 persons remained in camps and sites
guarded by a hostile gendarmerie - including 111-13,000 in the Nyarushishi death
camp in Cyangugu (Prunier 1995, ICRC, interviews 1995, African Rights 95:1147).
These were freed by the French.

46

The issue of lives saved is central in evaluating the mission because it was launched
and endorsed by the United Nations as a "strictly humanitarian" operation (Res. 929
(1994). By that criteria, the mission was not ineffective, but the timing made its
potential underutilized. If a similar effort to save lives had been undertaken in April
rather than in late June, the number of lives saved undoubtedly would have been
much higher.
The late date of the intervention fuelled widespread suspicions that the main purpose
of Operation Turquoise was to save France's erstwhile clients in Rwanda from total
defeat. A careful analysis of the planning of the operation suggests that this was not
the principal political agenda, at least initially (Prunier 1995).85 Moreover, the
intervention was first proposed by the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Alain Jup, evidently
in response to mounting pressure from NGOs and media to stop the slaughter.
Simultaneously, critics focused on France’s role in arming and sup supporting the
government on whose side the atrocities were being perpetrated. An intervention
designed to save lives and help. ring relief supplies to displaced persons would be an
atonement of sorts. Media coverage was important element in this respect, and
official guidelines for the Operation directed the troops to "demonstrate great
understanding towards journalists and humanitarian organizations86. Commonly
offered, the atonement explanation seems plausible. A Times journalist captured the
sense when reporting
on 1 July that "a week after starting the rescue mission, French Special Forces finally
discovered 250 Tutsi people yesterday." It also helps to explain why the French
pulled out as promised after two months, leaving the RPF to take full control of the
zone. In this respect, French policy was consistent with the trend which had been
observable since 1990 of rendering only half-hearted support to the regime: the
Habyarimana government had received significant aid, but not enough to hold back
the RPF.
If Operation Turquoise was a humanitarian gesture for some, this did not exclude
consequences of another kind. As the mission was implemented, it became clear that
it had the effect of giving some protection to retreating government forces. By late
June, government troops were falling back as RPF units moved quickly into the
Southeast region, and a similar rout was occurring in the rest of the country. Strong
pro-FAR circles in the Ministry of Defence saw the French intervention as an
opportunity to help the Rwandan army which for ears they had been training and
equipping (Prunier 1995). Soon after a 'safe humanitarian zone" had been declared
on 4 July, French commanders announced that RPF rebel forces would not be
allowed to enter, and attempts to do so would be met with force. To RPF SecretaryGeneral Theogene Rudasingwa and more neutral observers as well, this was clear
evidence that the Operation was exceeding its UN mandate which specifically
prohibited an "interpositional force." Force commander General Lafourcade
sharpened the partisan edge of the intervention by declaring on 11 July that members
of the "interim government" - who were directly linked to the genocide - would be
allowed to seek asylum in the French zone. A contrary statement from the Ministry of
Foreign Affairs declared that they would be interned, but the military were on the
ground and in fact made no arrests. Instead, French forces were observed by
journalists and foreign relief personnel to escort members of the former regime out of
the zone.

47

For a humanitarian intervention force of some 25,000 men, the unit was heavily
armed (including air support from 4 Jaguar fighter-bombers and four Mirage ground
attack planes based in Goma,). This discouraged the RPF from challenging the
intervention militarily, even though they feared that the French planned to divide the
country and dig in. The RPF instead accelerated its advance so as to secure Butare
and Kigali (2-4 July) before the French could do so.
After 4 July a dividing line between the two armies running just west of Butare was
tacitly accepted. Apart from two incidents, there were no military confrontations: the
French ceased their advance, and the RPF did not press forward into the zone.
Effective and early communication between the two parties was instrumental in
avoiding an escalating conflict which neither wanted. Established in Paris just prior to
the operation and continued throughout, the communication structures permitted
careful management of a conflictual relationship.
Within the zone, the French operated by and large in a friendly environment; indeed,
the embrace of local Hutu leaders proved something of an embarrassment. This
removed some of the security concerns which had weighed on the planning of
UNAMIR II. With a formal welcome from the Hutus in the Southeast and tacit
agreement from the RPF, the intervention became a relatively low-risk venture.88
The point is important since the efficient execution of Operation Turquoise is often
held up as a standard by which the more reticent UNAMIR II can be judged. In fact,
they operated in different security environments and so are not fully comparable.
Longer-term consequences of the intervention stem from the friendly relations
between the French and the people in their zone. French forces were instructed to
disarm the militia89.This they did when encountering paramilitary groups, but
apparently did not follow a consistent and proactive disarmament strategy based on
cordon and search operations (Prunier 1990. Importantly, there were no official
instructions to disarm government troops. As a result, the French zone facilitated an
orderly retreat of FAR units through the zone and into the south Kivu area of Zaire
with their weapons intact. Two major military camps - as distinct from civilian
refugees - were formed near Bukavu, the main destination for refugees moving out of
the Southwest. A UNHCR report estimated the Bukavu camps held 10,000soldiers, or
approximately 1/3 of the Rwandan army (UNHCR/ FRS/A/04: para. 5).90
The French did not "rescue" either the government forces or the militia in the sense
claimed by RPF and other critics. If the French zone had not been declared, both
soldiers and militia would probably have moved across the border sooner rather than
later. A more fundamental problem lay elsewhere. Neither the UN mandate for
Operation Turquoise nor the objectives the French government set for the mission
included disarming soldiers. Yet, the very concept of safe humanitarian zone implies
a demilitarized site, and has developed as such in practice by humanitarian agencies
ICRC 1993). The failure of the French to proactively disarm government troops within
the zone must count as a significant lost opportunity , or rather, deliberately
bypassed. Even if only partially successful, this would have helped the successor
government deal with the defeated enemy in an order manner and in accordance with
legal norms. Similarly, French policy in the zone was not to screen or arrest suspects
in connection with the genocide, hence this was not included in the mandate

48

requested from the Security Council. General Lafourcade's staff claimed to have
compiled a list of suspects, but these were not turned over to UNAMIR which moved
in when the French pulled out in late August (Human Rights Watch, 1995).
On the other hand, the French intervention clearly helped reduce the refugee outflow
from the Southwest. This greatly facilitated relief operations (see Study III and IV).
Given the huge outflow of the time, this issue was so significant that the success or
failure of Operation Turquoise in large part came to be judged against its capacity to
stabilize the situation in the southwest and stem the outflow. The reverse side of this
dynamic was that militant communities were established inside the French-protected
zone instead. Operation Turquoise thus served to internalize the problem of "refugee
warrior" communities. In some respects, these camps posed fewer problems for the
new government than the large concentrations in exile. The last and critical phase of
mantling them turned into a disaster when RPF forces massacred thousands at the
Kibeho camp (see 6.3). The French intervention made the Kibeho massacre possible,
though certainly not inevitable.
Opération Turquoise also had more long-term and indirect consequences. In bilateral
terms, the intervention further poisoned relations between France and the new
government in Rwanda. The uneasy mix between official humanitarian objectives and
political motives at first worried humanitarian organizations, which eared the political
shadow would compromise their relief operations. As the intervention turned out to
facilitate their work, however, they came to applaud it. Others concluded that it was a
disingenuous coupling of national interests to relief operation, which served to
discredit both the UN and the very concept of a humanitarian intervention. For
several African leaders, it was additional evidence that a major European power
could manipulate the UN and humanitarian operation to demonstrate its own
weir
in the region.. The e five developing countries in the Security Council marked their
skepticism by pointedly abstaining on the resolution which authorized the force. In
this perspective, Operation Turquoise was yet another case of powerful western
states using the UN to legitimize their interventions m the South.
The long-term costs of the Operation are also intangibles. The demonstrative
success of a national oration further undermined the peacekeeping operations of the
United Nations, thereby lending support to potentially destabilizing unilateral
interventions. Use of different mandates in the same country added to the confusion
and undermined a principled use of international law. To have free hands, the French
obtained from the Security Council a mandate which invoked a "threat to international
and security" under the UN Charter's Chapter VII. However, the UN force already in
Rwanda, and the expanded UNAMIR being planned, only had a Chapter VI mandate,
the implication being that Rwanda was not for this purpose a threat to international
peace and security. The result was probably to strengthen the forces of cynicism and
cast doubt on the very concept of humanitarian intervention.

49

CHAPTER 6
REFUGEES AND INTERNALLY DISPLACED PERSONS:
THE END AND THE BEGINNING OF CONFLICT
(April 1994 - August 1995)
As RPF units rapidly advanced to seize power in mid-July, members of the old
regime led a massive flow of civilian refugees across the border to Tanzania and
Zaire. Among them were some 300 government soldiers, militia members, local
officials and former national leaders. In Bukavu area in South Zaire, government
soldiers formed separate camps from the very beginning in the Goma area, the army,
the militia and the civilian refugees were more thoroughly mixed. In Tanzania, military
was not as visible among the refugees, but the militia and former officials were.
These refugee settlements were problematic. There was little security in the camps.
Food and other relief supplies were diverted from the intended beneficiaries. The old
leadership used its hold on the camps to intimidate refugees and prevent repatriation.
The areas became a sanctuary allowing the defeated regime to regroup, rearm, and
launch incursions across the border. With ex-FAR officers openly proclaiming their
intention to kill all Tutsi who prevent us from returning," the camps became a key
element in a new cycle of conflict. 91
While "refugee-warrior communities" of this kind are characteristic of several exile
movements, the magnitude of the Rwandan refugee population, and the issues of
guilt arising from the apparent widespread participation in the genocide, made the
situation particularly difficult with respect to both relief and conflict management. The
search for solutions was also precedent-setting in many ways. For the first time in its
history, the UN Security Council discussed security in refugee camps as a
peacekeeping matter. While the Council did not come to a conclusion, the eventual
solution devise was innovative and represented a measure of success.
6.1

The refugee camps: humanitarian and security issues

It was soon painfully obvious that the perpetrators of human rights abuses and
genocide were fed and assisted in the camps. Under the OAU Refugee Convention
and the Statutes of UNHCR, all refugees from war are prima facie entitled to
protection, but the exclusion clause of the 1951 Refugee Convention applies if there
is reason to believe that a person has committed serious war crimes or crimes
against humanity. The legal norms, in a word, are unambiguous. To apply them in the
Rwandan case was another matter. Registration is necessary to determine eligibility,
but the rapid influx and vast numbers involved made it impossible to register the
refugees upon arrival. Even when certain individuals were known prima facie to be
excludable, they could not easily be removed. International relief organizations and
UNHCR encountered the problem as soon as the first refugees arrived in the Ngara
region of Tanzania.
The rapid influx into Tanzania of some 250,0000 persons during a couple of days in
April created mass confusion. Soon after, however, former officials on the commune
and provincial level reconstituted themselves in the camps, thereby gaining
considerable control over the food distribution as well as the camp population in
Ngara.92 Among them was a former Bourgmestre and known killer. Attempts by

50

UNHCR to remove him from the camp resulted in a riot involving several thousand
pile. This event affected aid workers and refugees alike. Some NGOs, including
Médecins sans Frontièrs (MSF) suggested that the only alternative was to leave the
camps. The option was actually carried out by MSF which pulled out, thereby
suspending provision of most medical aid and some water services. UNHCR and
most NGOs decided to stay in recognition of the humanitarian imperative to protect
and assist a vast population of refugees even if that meant assisting persons guilty of
crimes against humanity.
The "Gatete incident" - named after the notorious Bourgmestre - accentuated the
immediate need to police the camps. While policing would not address the problem of
removing the excludable, it would deprive the latter of some power and also improve
security for the refugees. An agreement was reached between UNHCR and the
Tanzanian government which recognized the legal fact that the formal authority and
ultimate responsibility for policing refugee populations lies with the host state.
Tanzanian policemen, paid by the government but supported in other ways by
UNHCR, policed the camps and arrested sufficient numbers to establish the principle
that violations could no longer be carried out with impunity.
The problems in Goma were far more intractable. There, the refugee inflow was
much larger - 1.2 million refugees fled into Zaire in a matter of days - and the soldiers
and militia were more numerous. The refugees established themselves in a corner of
Zaire remote from central authority and possibly any system of accountable
governance. Soldiers and militia carried their weapons with them; those who were
disarmed by Zairean troops at the border were usually able to recover or replace
them with the assistance of other Zairean forces. Altogether, these factors led to an
initial condition of chaos and anarchic violence; later it helped the former leaders to
re-establish the refugee community as a state-within-a-state.
Thus armed, organized groups of ex-FAR soldiers and militias were part of the
sprawling refugee settlements in Goma. In late August, after the devastating cholera
epidemic had passed and the camps were taking shape, a flare-up of violence occur
The absence of any accountable authority in the camps was one factor. The effort by
the former leadership and armed elements to assert their power over the refugees
was another. The purpose was twofold: to prevent the refugees from returning,
legitimizing in that sense the new government in Kigali, and to secure a popular base
for the former regime in its continuing struggle for power with the RPF. The refugees
thus became hostage to the ambitions of the former leaders, as well as victims of
ordinary crime. Killings, threats, extortions, rape and other physical abuses were
common in the Goma cams throughout the fall. Relief distribution was controlled by
the military and the former leaders who used the traditional camps administrative
community unit of "cellule" to divert food. Refugees who tried to return home were
intimidated or killed. While conditions within Rwanda did not encourage return, violent
harassment in the camps helped to bring spontaneous repatriation to a virtual halt
after the first wave of return ended in early August 1994. UNHC attempts to start
registration in September-October had to be aborted when agency personnel were
threatened. Threats to relief officials continued in the fall, culminating in November
when 15 international relief organizations informed UNHCR that they would be forced
to leave the camp if the security situation did not improve.

51

Most of the retreating FAR units in the Goma area had established themselves with
their families in a separate camp (Mugunga). Later, other soldiers consolidated their
presence in a second military camp. This self-induced separation ease the
humanitarian dilemmas for UNHCR and organizations whose function was to assist
only civilian refugees or military hors de combat. The military could still move in and
out of the refugee camps and assert their influence, but the more immediate problem
was the militia. They were present throughout the camps, believed to be behind much
of the violence, and - to the extent that they had played a major role in the genocide were not even entitled to protection and assistance as refugees. Local Zairean troops
who were called in to quell riots had proved to be part of the problem rather than the
solution.
6.2 Searching for Solutions
As the lead agency in refugee matters, UNHCR early on raised the issue of camp
security with the Zairean government. In September 1994, a joint mission from
UNHCR and the Government of Zaire considered the feasibility of separating the
militia from the rest of the population. The mission estimated that around 100,000
persons, consisting of militia members and their families, would have to be moved.
The costs and problems of identifying, separating and relocating this group - by force
if necessary - were considered prohibitive. UNHCR fell back to a more modest
proposal to police the camp with a security contingent drawn from Zaire's elite forces,
backed by international technical expertise.
The High Commissioner, Sadako Ogata, obtained agreement from the relevant
Zairean authorities and forwarded the proposal to Boutros Boutros-Ghali at the end of
September. The proposal was almost identical in format to the Zairean Camp
Security Operation (ZCSO) which finally was agreed upon. However, the agreement
came only after the UN Secretariat and the Security Council had debated and
deliberated for over three months, rejecting the initial proposal and examining counter
proposals in the interval. In the end, UN/New York asked UNHCR to unearth the
original draft (S/1995/65). Meanwhile, security conditions in the Zairean camps
worsened - in one incident in Goma in late November, 21 persons were killed and 77
wounded. Intimidation of refugees wanting to repatriate continued, and the former
leadership strengthened its hold.
The initial reaction of the Secretary-General to the UNHCR proposal was negative. In
part, Boutros-Ghali was disinclined to rely on Zairean forces due to the political
sensitivities of working with President Mobutu and, in effect, helping to finance his
elite troops. More fundamentally, the UN Secretariat viewed the question of security
in camps as more an a protection issue; they considered it as properly a matter of
peacekeeping since it involved separating civilians from armed groups and in
principle dealing with the latter as the source of the problem. So defined, the matter
went beyond the mandate and competence of UNHCR, which only concerned the
protection of the rights of refugees, and required the involvement of the Security
Council. The Secretary General consequently took charge of the issue and instructed
DPKO to prepare options for a comprehensive solution.
While security problems in refugee camps were common and recurring issues, the
Security Council had not previously considered them to be a matter requiring
peacekeeping. UNHCR officials remained skeptical, citing tensions between
humanitarian concerns and military operations. When General Dallaire floated a

52

proposal to extend UNAMIR Us operations to the camps in Zaire, UNHCR opposed
it on the grounds that UNAMIR had shown insufficient understanding of humanitarian
aspects of the emergency and voluntary repatriation.
Further, countries which had contributed troops to UNAMIR were reluctant to become
involved. As one representative said, it seemed risky, to "send our boys into the black
pits of the camps in Zaire." A similar sentiment prevailed when the Security Council
discussed the options laid out in DPKO's report of 18 November (S/1994/1308).
The Secretariat's maximum option was a comprehensive assault on the problem
which entailed not only separating the soldiers and militias from the civilians, but also
disarming the former (Jones 1995a). The operation was seen to require 7,000 wellarmed troops, 4,000 for the Goma region and 3,000 for the Bukavu area, and a
Chapter VII enforcement mandate. Having hesitated to send less than that even to
Rwanda, the Security Council dismissed the option as "fantasy," as one participant
later said. Option B was a slimmed-down version of A, involving 3-5,000 troops and a
Chapter VI mandate. It was received with more interest, but when members were
asked to contribute troops, only I out of states approached responded in the
affirmative. Simultaneous on-site investigation by a joint DPKO-UNHCR team
concluded that the task, at any rate, was more difficult than anticipated and would
require more than 5,000 troops. That left the third option of privatizing the security
service. A British security company offered to train and provide logistical support to
Zairean troops. While attractive to some Security Council members who saw it as a
way to depoliticize a sensitive issue, others argued that it amounted to shirking an
international public responsibility. UNHCR, which would have to raise the funds,
found it much too expensive.
The Security Council failed to support any of the options tabled. In early January,
Boutros-Ghali acknowledged that his efforts to find a suitable plan for dealing dealing
with the situation had failed and asked UNHCR to revive its original proposal of
September 1994. This was to materialize in the form of the Zairean Camp Security
Operation (ZCSO).
The Zairean Camp Security Operation : In a novel development, UNHCR and the
Government of Zaire signed a memorandum of understanding on 27 January 1995,
whereby the latter agreed to provide a contingent of elite troops to police the refugee
camps, working with an international civilian police unit. UNHCR would pay their
salary, food, health care, an other incentives. The operation was carefully designed to
meet demands from the Zairean government that its troops would only serve under a
national command structure93.The Zairean troops would be trained and liase with an
international group of civilians with police and military backgrounds, but would remain
under the command and control of their own officers. The first group of 100 men from
the prestigious Presidential Guard arrived on 11 Frebruary;by the end of April the
contingent was increased to a total of 1,513.94
By mid-1995, the operation as narrowly defined had successfully established security
in the camps. The ZCSC had been trained in refugee law and riot control, and worked
closely with the small international civilian police (CLSG). Their task was to improve
law and order conditions in the camps; prevent intimidation and violence against
refugees wishing to repatriate; protect- relief personnel, infrastructure, equipment and

53

supplies; and escort returnees to the border. Reports from both UNHCR and other
sources suggest progress towards these ends. The numbers of killings, theft,
banditry, rapes, beatings, and other safety incidents had been greatly, reduced, and
the associated tensions in the camps had diminished. Relief workers found it easier
to perform their duties. The critical impunity question had been addressed as people
were arrested and punished for criminal acts. Small arms were seized, although
systematic searches were not conducted nor envisaged 95 Ex-government officers
who made political speeches in the refugee cams were investigated and in some
cases acres (Halvorsen 1995). The effect on repatriation was more uncertain. The
UNHCR figures for repatriation show a steady decline during the first three months
after the ZCSC was formed, but, after a low point due to the Kibeho massacre in April
1994, a steady climb was recorded from May to July (See Study IV).
Given the importance of camp security issues in refugee situations worldwide, it is
important to consider the factors behind this relative success story. The most
important of these appeared to be the elite nature of the Zairean troops, their careful
training and substantial remuneration, and their close liaison with the international
civilian contingent.
Yet, the program did not deal with the security issues in a broader sense. The former
government soldiers were still in their separate camps; the militias and the military
had easy access to the regular refugee camps from which they recruited and trained
new soldiers. They were armed and were receiving new arms supplies. Their ability
to make incursions across the border and, in the longer run, to mount a more serious
security supplies to Rwanda was unimpaired, indeed it strengthened over time.
The UNHCR solution, in other words, was based on a fragmentation of the problem
rather than the comprehensive assault envisaged in the alternative peacekeeping
approach. Being left out, the mill component of the security issue was now left
unattended. It was clearly outside the competence and mandate of the UNHCR take
on a rag-tag army in exile. The Security Council had declined to act, although the
camps were clearly a matter of international peace and security. The OAU was silent,
even though the conflicts wrought by refugee-soldiers are scattered throughout the
history of post-independence Africa, including Rwanda. Zaire, itself in a condition
considered precarious by many, made no efforts to accept its minimal legal
responsibility as a host state to prevent armed incursions being staged across the
border.
While some of the troops retreating into North Kivu were disarmed by Zairean troops
at the border, many weapons were either stocked for later use or replaced by new
ones. Virtually all levels of Zairean authority were involved in channelling arms to the
ousted Rwandan government troops, including national and provincial authorities, the
armed forces (FAZ) and semi-private cargo companies. 96 Supplies were delivered
across the border via Goma airport during the war (April-mid-July, and continued to
be supplied afterwards (late July and August 1994), as documented. Zairean
authorities helped ex-FAR units and staff to establish themselves in five sites along
the border in the North and South Kivu area. Thus, with Zaire's help, the defeated
forces could regroup, retrain and rearm freely. In doing so, the Zairean government
violated a number of international legal instruments - including the UN arms embargo
on Rwanda (S/RES/4 18 (1994)), the 1969 OAU Convention which proscribes armed

54

encampments of refugee-soldiers close to the border, and international law
prohibiting armed incursions across the border - as well as the legal and moral
principles to punish perpetrators of genocide.
There is clear evidence that France also shipped arms to the government side via
Goma in May and June 1994. According to the French consul in Goma at the time,
the shipments were part of a contract concluded by the French and Rwandan
governments prior to the UN arms embargo of 17 May. France apparently failed to
report these and other shipments to the UN Committee set up to oversee the
implementation of the arms embargo. 97 The evidence implicating other countries in
violation of the spirit, if not the letter, of the arms embargo is less compelling,
although actual or prospective supplies from South Africa and China have been
reported. Since the retreating government forces brought the reserves of the Central
Bank along with them, they had easy entry to a large and poorly controlled
international market of dealers in small arms.
In addition to a large external refugee population, war and genocide had created a
large number of internally displaced persons, especially in the French 'safe zone"
where an estimated 1.2-1.5 million people had fled towards the end of the war. For
the new Rwandan government, the concentrations of internally displaced represented
an internalized version of the problems posed by the camps across the border to
Zaire.
6.2

Internally displaced: Kibeho98

In the aftermath of Operation Turquoise, up to 390,00099 internally displaced
persons (IDPs) were left in 33 camps in the south-west of Rwanda. In the Fall of
1994, the government decided to close the camps by December 1994, using force if
necessary. The NGOs and UN agencies 101 insisted on voluntary return. In
November, with the government, they developed an Integrated Humanitarian
Response. Operation Retour was launched in December of 1994. But it ground to a
standstill in February 1995 because the 1DPs were no longer willing to return to their
homes voluntarily because of the deteriorating situation in the home communes and
the intimidating actions of the hard core within the camps. 102 An Integrated
Operations Center (IOC) working group was established by the government, UN
agencies and NGOs on 6 February 1995, and an IOC was set up within the Ministry
of Rehabilitation and Social Integration (MINIREISO) in March of 1995.103 Increasing
insurgency across the borders heightened the security 105 concerns of the
government. l04 RPA shootings, beatings, and harassment in camps had increased
in February. By the end of February, the IOC concluded that Kibeho camp, with
almost half of the remaining IDPs, was becoming a criminal sanctuary and possibly a
centre for recruitment and training of insurgents.
The government once again decided to close the camps, using force if necessary. In
early March, the Integrated Task Force developed six options 106 to reconcile the
legitimate aspirations of the Rwandan state, on the one hand, to establish stability on
its territory and prevent genocidal killers who sheltered in the camps from escaping
justice, and the concern of the UN and the NGOs, on the other hand, with protecting
the rights of individuals and avoiding exposing innocents to unnecessary risks. The
first option focused on independent forceful action by the RPA; it predicted that a

55

mass chaotic dispersion would result, with large numbers heading across the border
to Burundi, and large numbers of deaths, particularly children. Such action would also
violate the agreement of cooperation between the international agencies an the
government, instill distrust in the people of the government, and create a rift between
the international community and the government. On the other hand, continuing with
a plan of voluntary return would violate government policy and would not only likely
be ineffective, but would consolidate extremist control of the camps. The UN, NGOs,
and government agencies were faced with a real dilemma.
The first option was rejected. Four other options focused on various ways to expedite
a voluntary program, and they too were dismissed because, among many reasons,
they did not satisfy government policy and would lead to consolidation of extremist
control over the camp. The other option dealt with avoiding the use of force while also
surrendering the principle of strict voluntary return. A variation of this option was
adopted.
The decision was made to close the camps in series by gradually reducing food
supplies and transferring them to the home communes. Those who chose to remain
in the camps after the returnees left would be investigate as perpetrators of the
genocide. The plan would be accompanied by a program of information in both the
camps and the home communes, strengthened security and the administration of
justice in both places, and an escort service jointly conducted by the RPA and
UNAMIR to guarantee safe conduct, complemented by food stations manned by
NGOs along the way. The operation would begin about 6 April. The commencement
date was postponed until mid-April, then 18 April, and then there was an agreement
to postpone again until the 24th, but there is confusion on whether the latter date was
communicated to the RPA.107 When the cooperative plan for vacating the camps
seemed to be breaking down, there were late warnings that a number of casualties
could be expected if the plan was executed improperly. 108
On 18 April, the RPA surrounded Kibeho camp with two battalions and cut off the
food supply. The Minister said that the humanitarian community agreed to that
commencement date. 109 A population of 80,000 was squeezed by the cordon from
five hills onto one hill. 110 On 18 April, 8-11 children were killed in a stampede. On
19-20 April, 13-22 IDPs were killed by the RPA when IDPs threw stones or started to
take weapons. On 20 April in the late afternoon it started to rain. A large group of
lDPs, deprived of food, shelter, and sanitation for three days, were either stampeded
or panicked and tried to break through the cordon. The RPA suffered casualties from
firing from II)Ps. The RPA fired into the crowd; numerous IDP casualties resulted.
The cordon was restored. In late afternoon, when it was raining hard, the cordon was
breached again. There was more firing, more RPA casualties, more return fire by the
RPA with numerous IDP casualties. The RPA even used rocket propelled grenades.
On the night of 22 April, there was both sniper fire and machete attacks among IDPs.
The evacuation of the camp had deteriorated into a full scale battle using innocent
victims as expendable tools of war.
The number of persons killed ranged from a low of 300 - which was used by the
Special Representative of the Secretary General, Sharyar Khan, and the govern and a high of 8,000, which was given by Australian UN= soldiers who made a partial
count. Official UNAMIR estimates were revised downward soon after April 23. A

56

reasonable estimate is that in the planned effort to close Kibeho Camp, between
4,000 and 8,000 people were killed, including many women and children. The large
numbers of deaths were the result of the gunfire, machetes, and trampling. 111 The
International Commission of Inquiry found that many of the dead suffered from
machete wounds. Since the RPA did not have machetes, this suggests that the hard
core elements in the camps were responsible. However, there was also evidence of
summary executions of IDPs by the RPA.
Though there was a serious problem in the implementation of the agreed plan, and
specific confusions over the commencement date, there were deer problems,
specifically the different priorities, perspectives and values of the various parties, and
the hangover effect of the genocide on the perceptions each of the co-operating
parties had of the other. The repeated shift in commencement dates consolidated the
RPF suspicions about and NGO intentions. The UN had failed to comprehend
adequately the urgent security concerns of the government.
What or who was responsible for this appalling loss of life? There were many
candidates. The terrible circumstances played a key role: the internally displaced
were kept in camps; Operation Turquoise had failed to arrest the militants; the
alleged perpetrators of the genocide continued to use their own Hutu compatriots as
shields and as potential cannon fodder to launch attacks on the government and
even used machetes to enforce obedience within the camp.
The under equipped and impoverished government still threatened by the militant
elements from the defeated genocidal regime could easily be faulted. There was a
clear break-down in communications and authority among various governmental
sectors. 112 The International Commission was clearly correct in faulting the RPA for
its lack of communications, its inexperience, its inappropriate equipment and training
for what was essentially a police action. But these were not the essential elements;
none of them explain the RPA's precipitous action, 113 the most immediate cause of
the disaster.
Could the RPA have been stopped? UNAMIR II had a mandate to support and
provide safe conditions for displaced persons. The mandate included taking selfdefense actions against those who threatened populations in protected sites and the
distribution of humanitarian relief. But the humanitarian agencies and UNAMIR U had
agreed to the suspension of humanitarian relief, admittedly gradually rather than
suddenly. Moreover, several UNAMIR units were at the time on joint patrols to escort
the bulk of the population to their home communes. Should the Force Commander
have abandoned the returnees, immediately consolidated his contingents from all
over Rwanda, and ordered the superior forces of the RPA to cease and desist?
UNAMIR 11 was also tinged with the understandable accusation by the RPF that the
UN had not permitted its predecessor to protect them in Kigali prior to 6 April, and
had even been withdrawn when the genocide commenced. If confronting the RPF at
Kibeho, the UN force would be subjected to the accusation that they were protecting
the killers rather than trying to arraign them. For these reasons, UNAMIR was
impotent to do anything.

57

The NGOs understandably placed primary emphasis on the well-being of their
humanitarian charges, perhaps without giving adequate consideration to the
predicament and need for both security and justice, and, most importantly,, the sense
of urgency of the government. The International Commission criticizes the NGOs for
allegedly encouraging IDPs to remain in Kibeho but cites no evidence for this charge.
Government sources close to the event, and whose primary interests differed from
that of the NGOs, found little to substantiate the Commission's conclusion. 114
However, tension between the command and control structure of UNAMIR and the
anarchic system of NGO coordination did not help the efficacy of the return operation.
A more serious factor was the failure of the international community to invest
adequate resources in Operation Retour to initiate the information campaign in both
the camps and the home communes, as well as rehabilitate the justice system and
the home communes in preparation for the returnees, particularly in the winter phase
of the plan when the on was still a voluntary one. There was also a failure to act
sooner and use the not-so-gentle persuasion of promising to withhold food when the
incentives for returning home to take advantage of the January crop season was at
its greatest, before the extremists could organize the resistance, and when the IDPs
were not subject to the dismal feedback by returnees and new IDPs about the
perilous conditions in the home communes.
Serendipity was also a factor. The weather did not co-operate. What was not at fault
was the effort to achieve coordination and the willingness to devise a plan that
attempted to be both humane and realistic. The international community, however,
was not realistic enough in its lack of an adequate sense of urgency and its
reluctance to employ
On 18 April, the RPA surrounded Kibeho camp with two battalions and cut off the
food supply. The Minister said that the humanitarian community agreed to that
commencement date. 109 A population of 80,000 was squeezed by the cordon from
five hills onto one hill. 110 On 18 April, 8-11 children were killed in a stampede. On
19-20 April, 13-22 IDPs were killed by the RPA when IDPs threw stones or started to
take weapons. On 20 April in the late afternoon it started to rain. A large group of
IDPs, deprived of food, shelter, and sanitation for three days, were either stampeded
or panicked and tried to break through the cordon. The RPA suffered casualties from
firing from IDPs. The RPA fired into the crowd; numerous IDP casualties resulted.
The cordon was restored. In late afternoon, when it was raining . hard, the cordon
was breached again. There was more firing, more RPA casualties, more return fire by
the RPA with numerous IDP casualties. The RPA even used rocket propelled
grenades. On the night of 22 April, there was both sniper fire and machete attacks
among IDPs. The evacuation of the camp had deteriorated into a full scale battle
using innocent victims as expendable tools of war.
The number of persons killed ranged from a low of 300 - which was used by the
Special Representative of the Secretary-General, Sharyar Khan, and the government
and a high of 8,000, which was given by Australian UN soldiers who made a partial
count. Official UNAMIR estimates were revised downward soon after April 23. A
reasonable estimate is that in the planned effort to close Kibeho Camp, between
4,000 and 8,000 people were killed, including many women and children. The large
numbers of deaths were the result of the gunfire, machetes, and trampling111. The
International Commission of Inquiry found that many of the dead suffered from

58

machete wounds. Since the RPA did not have machetes, this suggests that the hard
core elements in the camps were responsible. However, there was also evidence of
summary executions of IDPs by the RPA.
Though there was a serious problem in the implementation of the agreed plan: and
specific confusions over the commencement date, there were deer problems,
specifically the different priorities, perspectives and values of the various parties, and
the hangover effect of the genocide on the perceptions each of the cooperating
parties had of the other. The repeated shift in commencement dates consolidated the
RPF suspicions about and NGO intentions. The UN had failed to comprehend
adequately the urgent security concerns of the government.
What or who was responsible for this appalling loss of life? There were many
candidates. The terrible circumstances played a key role: the internally displaced
were kept in camps; Operation Turquoise had failed to arrest the militants; the
alleged perpetrators of the genocide continued to use their own Hutu compatriots as
shields and as potential cannon fodder to launch attacks on the government and
even used machetes to enforce obedience within the camp.
The underequipped and impoverished government still threatened by the militant
elements from the defeated genocidal regime could easily be fault. There was a clear
break-down in communications and authority among various governmental Sectors
112
. The International Commission was clearly correct in faulting the RPA for its lack
of communications, its inexperience, its inappropriate equipment and training for what
was essentially a police action. But these were not the essential elements; none of
them explain the RPA's precipitous action, 113 the most immediate cause of the
disaster.
Could the RPA have been stopped? UNAMIR II had a mandate to support and
provide safe conditions for displaced persons. The mandate included- taking selfdefense actions against those who threatened populations in protected sites and the
distribution of humanitarian relief. But the humanitarian agencies and UNAMIR II had
agreed to the suspension of humanitarian relief, admittedly gradually rather than
suddenly. Moreover, several UNAMIR units were at the time on joint patrols to escort
the bulk of the population to their home communes. Should the Force Commander
have abandoned the returnees, immediately consolidated his contingents from all
over Rwanda, and ordered the superior forces of the RPA to cease and desist?
UNAMIR II was also tinged with the understandable accusation by the RPF that the
UN had not permitted its predecessor to protect them in Kigali prior to 6 April, and
had even been withdrawn when the genocide commenced. If confronting the RPF at
Kibeho, the UN force would be subjected to the accusation that they were protecting
the killers rather than trying to arraign them. For these reasons, UNAMIR was
impotent to do anything.
The NGOs understandably placed primary emphasis on the well-being of their
humanitarian charges, perhaps without giving adequate consideration to the
predicament and need for both security and justice, and, most importantly, the sense
of urgency of the government. The International Commission criticizes the NGOs for
allegedly encouraging IDPs to remain in Kibeho but cites no evidence for this charge.
Government sources close to the event, and whose

59

primary interests differed from that of the NGOs, found little to substantiate the
Commission's conclusion114. However, tension between the command and control
structure of UNAMIR and the anarchic system of NGO coordination did not help the
efficacy of the return operation.
A more serious factor was the failure of the international community to invest
adequate resources in Operation Retour to initiate the information campaign in both
the camps and the home communes, as well as rehabilitate the justice system and
the home communes in preparation for the returnees, particularly in the winter phase
of the plan when the operation was still a voluntary one. There was also a failure to
act sooner and use the not-so-gentle persuasion of promising to withhold food when
the incentives for returning home to take advantage of the January crop season was
at its greatest, before the extremists could organize the resistance, and when the
IDPs were not subject to the dismal feedback by returnees and new IDPs about the
perilous conditions in the home communes.
Serendipity was also a factor. The weather did not co-operate. What was not at fault
was the effort to achieve coordination and the willingness to devise a plan that
attempted to be both humane and realistic. The international community, however,
was not realistic enough in its lack of an adequate sense of urgency and its
reluctance to employ not-so-gentle methods earlier, while the RPA clearly lacked
sufficient humanitarian sensibility for the well-being of the innocents, particularly
women and children. In the end, a clear division of responsibilities and explicit lines of
authority in the implementation of a coherently drawn-up camp evacuation might
have averted the tragedy.

CHAPTER 7: CONCLUSIONS
1.EARLY WARNING
The Puzzle
Did those charged with the responsibility for making decisions in the various agencies
and states which comprise "the international community know that the assassination
of Hutu political opponents and genocide of the Tutsi in Rwanda would take place?
No. Virtually no one anticipated the swiftness, scale, thoroughness and unique
character of the genocide as it unfolded. In its horrific enormity, it took almost all
international observers by surprise.
If they did not draw such an extreme conclusion, did those with the capacity to
prevent and mitigate the genocide have the information upon which such a
conclusion could be drawn? Yes. Many knew that organized extremist forces existed.
Increasingly, the latter even gave public proof of their existence by words and deeds.
A pattern of violence was discernible, and the state apparatus itself was clearly
implicated in arms distributions to para military groups and extremist pro agenda
advocating the need to rid Rwanda of all Tutsis and their supporters. By early 1994,
specific information a a out plans and conspiracies towards this end was picked up by
the UN system, most significantly in the notorious "Black File" of January 1994.
Close observers commonly interpreted this information in the Rwandan context to
mean that large scale ethnic violence against civilians was likely if the civil war was

60

renewed, as seemed likely in early 1994. However, in the higher echelons of state
and international agencies, the early warning signals were hardly heard at all, and
news of the genocide was an even greater surprise. But pieces of information were
available to permit policy makers on any level to draw the more radical conclusion
that both politicide and genocide might occur on a scale quite different from past
patterns of 'just" hundreds and thousands of victims.
Should the alarming indications have resulted in more thorough assessments and
preparations? Absolutely, given the political commitment and actual involvement of
the UN in Rwanda, the expected large-scale violence by close observers, and the
possibility of genocide. The legal right and the normative obligation to act to prevent
genocides according to the Geneva Convention, and the enormous cost of a
miscalculation, made contingency planning clearly imperative.
Then why did states, international organizations, and other parties who had assumed
some responsibility for regulating the Rwandan conflict and had the capacity to act
not draw the appropriate conclusions? Since close observers did anticipate mass
violence and advocated swift interventionist action, analyzing the problems that
afflicted the central decision makers is critical to understand the failure to act. The
problems of receiving even clear and unequivocal signals are found in four areas:
contradictions in the international system; the UN structure; attitudes of senior
officials towards messengers and the inadequacies in the messages sent; and
interference.
Contradictions in the International System
Neutrality and Intelligence Gathering
Unlike nation-states, the United Nations does not collect and analyze information to
protect itself from ostensible enemies. The world organization has no clear-cut
security agenda and is supposed to be a neutral body. Yet, in matters of threats to
international peace and security, the neutrality principle does not necessarily apply,
as in Chapter VII enforcement actions. By the same logic, the UN should not be
neutral towards genocide, or towards parties threatening civilians whom the UN has
placed under its protection. Moreover, once the UN assumes responsibility for conflict
management, it needs a capacity for information collection and analysis dealing with
military and political issues of member states. Nevertheless, member states are
reluctant for reasons of national security to let the UN develop such an intelligence
function.
Financial, Remote and Regional Interests
In the area of conflict management, the UN is particularly beholden to the United
States which pays almost a third of the budget for peacekeeping. When regional
states and organizations, which are closer to the conflict and its consequences, and
in this case were willing, indeed eager, to involve themselves, they were not given the
wherewithal to do, so, including a structure to gather and analyze information. The
OAU, which was intimately involved in the diplomatic process to settle the conflict,
only had a skeletal staff for these purposes. The lack of resources also characterized
Tanzania as the most disinterested state in the region whose major motive was to
Zaire had access to the Rwandan regime but no interest in collecting, let alone
sharing, any information which could be used against the Rwandan government.

61

Uganda had such an interest, and through the RPF also had access to information,
but their early warning capacity supported the RPF. RPF early warning could be
dismissed as propaganda. France had both interests and a significant capacity for
intelligence collection on Rwanda, but its interests were clearly artisan and led to
defining the role of the RPF in adversarial terms (this included even the French
Ministry of partisan Affairs, which was committed to the Arusha process).
The United States also had the capacity, but it was initially truly disinterested, in the
sense of being both objective and remote, and utilized its capacity only sporadically.
When the US did become more interested, a State Department official at the desk
level wrote a report in January 1993 which painted a very prescient disastrous future
for Rwanda and the safety of Tutsis. The CIA undertook a January 1994 desk-level
analysis of the Rwanda situation as a worst case projection of the course of current
events which included scenarios of deaths in the order of half a million casualties.
This indicated that specialist analysts who focused on a problem could use current
information to develop reasonably accurate scenarios. However, lacking a "smoking
gun" or verification from personnel on the ground, neither report was taken seriously
or distributed widely. Since Rwanda, both in January of 1993 and 1994, posed only a
hypothetical problem rather than being an actual crisis, there was less inclination by
higher officials to attend to projected scenarios. Further, US officials were inclined to
dismiss the problem of Rwanda in light of events in Somalia and its own
preoccupation with budgetary issues. In any case, the US was not inclined to share
its information and the analysis based on it.
For the UN, both the interest and capacity to "cover" a crisis in a peripheral state are
critical. Caught between the absolute disinterestedness of the major power and the
need to cater to dominant financial interests, the UN has been unable to establish the
appropriate balance between disinterestedness and utilizing regional interests to
advance the peace process.
Structure and Culture
Though the UN was inhibited from systematically collecting and analyzing critical
information and communicating the analyses to those with the power to take action
against the genocide, the Secretary-General has had a mandate to engage in
preventive diplomacy and peacekeeping even in inter-state conflicts. He has also
been given an explicit mandate to engage in early warning. That mandate can be
easily extended to cover the analysis required for preventive diplomacy and effective
peacekeeping. Why has this capacity not been appropriately developed?
The individual relevant units are thinly staffed given the exponential increase in the
global responsibilities assumed by the UN. For instance, only one person in DPKO
consistently monitored Rwanda, but that person carried a heavy weight of operational
responsibilities. But there are deeper reasons for the failure.
With the changed mandate of the Secretary-General since 1990, the SecretaryGeneral reorganized the Secretariat, but in so doing, sacrificed an independent
information and strategic analytic arm separate from any operational functions in
dissolving ORCI, the Office for Research and Collection of Information because of its
shortcomings. The Secretary-General distributed its responsibilities among the
Political, Humanitarian, and Peacekeeping Affairs Departments, while the Office for

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Human Rights monitors human rights abuses. There was no central unit in the
Secretariat or elsewhere charged with collecting even "soft" intelligence, including the
information available in the vast structure of UN agencies and organizations to
translate the assessments into policy options and strategic planning. As the DHA task
force evolved into the focal point for early-warning in the UN system for mitigating the
consequences of conflicts, there was no parallel tool to generate early warning
signals required for contingency planning inn preventive diplomacy and
peacekeeping operations. The DPA, which was expected to undertake this task, was
too understaffed and had no systematic link to strategic planning.
Further, the cultural milieu of the Secretariat had reverted to being politicized in two
senses. In the Rwanda situation, the DPKO at some critical junctures seemed to be
too subservient to the concerns of the major powers. In this case, the DPKO only
proposed "what the traffic would bear" (their words), not what the analysis dictated.
Further, some personnel suggested that others were carriers for dominant state
players. Politicization versus professionalism in a context of relative great power
disinterest by one major power and a partisan interest by another proved to be a
devastating combination.
Messengers
In spite of these deficiencies resulting from the current mandate of the UN and its
structural problems, UN headquarters did receive crucial information that should have
led it at least to undertake some contingency planning. However, the UN Secretariat
had a propensity to discount the information and warnings received from within its
own system while paying inordinate attention to media analyses, if the SecretaryGeneral's 21 April rationale for withdrawal is any indication.
Using information the various humanitarian organizations obtained from their own
field operatives, an inter-agency task force in Geneva was assigned the task of
sharing information about impending human disasters so they could be better
prepared. It had many problems. It was ad hoc. Each of the agencies showed an
understandable reluctance to collect and divulge sensitive political information that
might jeopardize their operations in a country. More importantly, the inter-agency task
force was oriented towards anticipating the humanitarian consequences of a crisis
(e.g. population movements, the requirements of relief operations, etc.) rather than
the development of the crisis itself task force had no access to the sort of politicalmilitary information so critical in discerning escalating conflict. Nor did it have
adequate support from qualified analysts. As a result, while the UN system has an
early warning capacity, this capacity is inappropriate to questions of early warning for
conflict management purposes.
Even greater suspicions were cast on the human rights organizations which
discerned patterns of violence they characterized as genocide. Part of the problem
was the manner in which the warnings were conveyed. These organizations did not
put human rights abuses in a political context necessary for understanding the nature
and probable evolution of the conflict, including its likely points of culmination, or
translate them into strategic options. Further, the human rights machinery of the UN
itself was virtually irrelevant to the early warning process, not only lacking the

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capacity to relate human rights violations to a dynamic analysis of the social forces
which produced them, but utilizing a monitoring process that was sporadic and
provided no follow-through on reports.
Within the New York Secretariat, particularly in DPKO, far too little attention was paid
to early warning emanating from human rights organizations. Thus was exacerbated
by a tendency to pay undue attention to the media, particularly the New York press.
With a few notable exceptions, the media in general perpetuated the
misrepresentation of the slaughter in Rwanda as one of anarchic ethnic violence. It
took almost a month for most of the media to "get the story straight."
The Secretary-General's report justifying withdrawal on 21 April reflected the
misrepresentations of the media rather than the analysis of informed or more
professional observers of Rwanda. When the Secretary-General by mid-May did
perceive the situation correctly, he lacked the sustained support that adequate media
coverage can bring to a crisis.
The import of the messages from the Rwandan media were downplayed. Hutu
extremist calls in the hate media to rid the country of Tutsi were interpreted by some
foreign observers as efforts to put pressure on the RPF to make concessions at
Arusha, or as exaggerated rhetoric. Even members of the RPF politburo
acknowledge in retrospect that they underestimated the significance of the extremist
radio broadcasts.
Interference Factors
Functional contradictions and structural deficiencies compounded by discounting
some messengers and exaggerating the values of others are, however, only part of
the explanation. The Rwandan Patriotic Front was closest to the scene, had networks
in Rwanda to provide information, and was in close contact with human rights and
refugee organizations as well as its own Diaspora around the world. If any party had
a stake in anticipating mass murder and its extent, and with developing contingency
plans to prevent, or, at least, mitigate such a disaster, this Tutsi-dominated rebel
organization surely did.
True, the leadership issued public warnings accusing the government of severe
human rights violations and identifying those responsible for killings in 1992-3 as
guilty of genocide. But leading Front members acknowledge in retrospect that they
did not anticipate the magnitude of the genocide and the RPF did not develop
contingency pans for such an eventuality. Why not?
Five factors afflicted everyone involved in the Rwanda crisis to different degrees:
incredulity, mind blindness, shadows, noise, and desensitization.
Incredulity
Genocide is rare. Its path of development was unfamiliar and difficult to discern.
Despite the precedent of Cambodia, many associated the concept of genocide with
the highly mechanized Nazi holocaust. The idea that hundreds of thousands could be
slated for execution in a poor, agricultural society, and that this could be carried out in
a short time, seemed incredible.

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Mindblindness
RPF leaders admit that on the eve of their 1990 invasion they expected that
thousands of Tutsis might be killed in retaliation, as had happened in the early sixties.
But to consider genocide as both a possibility and one which they had very limited
ability to mitigate, let alone stop, would have either frozen them into impotence or
forced them to accept that they had a measure of historical co- responsibility in the
slaughter. Hence, a sort of mindblindness developed - i.e. an inability to use the
information available to deduce the appropriate conclusions.
A similar blindness (but in the nature of "wishful thinking") may help to explain the
failure of more remote actors to anticipate the genocide. For the French government
to acknowledge that genocide. was in prospect would be to accept a far greater
degree of responsibility for its own involvement in backing the Habyarimana regime
and its connected extremists. For the United States, it meant having to confront the
fact that it had a legal right and a moral responsibility to intervene. For the UN
Secretariat it would have meant preparing for a very different kind of mission in
Rwanda at a time when its first principle of action was "not to cross the Mogadishu
line.' The UN mindblindness carried a double level of guilt and denial by instilling a
false sense of confidence among the Tutsi in Rwanda, who could not imagine that the
world in general, and the UN in particular, would flee the scene when a UN
peacekeeping force was already in place.
Shadows
The tardy and inadequate response of the UN and its leading members was also
influenced by external blinkers, by previous events that haunt decision makers, distort
perceptions and constrain their willingness to act. These are in the nature of
shadows.
One such blinker was the shadow of hope. Arusha became an inertial force. The
peace accords so preoccupied almost all the players that they tended to shift into the
background the growing organization of extremists intent on undermining that peace.
The pursuit of the agreement, the hope invested in its effectiveness, and the
eagerness to see it implemented dominated their attention right up until April 6.
The other blinker was the shadow of despair and the propensity to read the present
through traumas of the past. Somalia certainly directly coloured the American
propensity to view (and deform) the Rwandan operation through the Somali lens. The
issuance of PDD 25, a new directive in M May of 1994 strictly limiting American
involvement and funding of peacekeeping, was a culmination of the shadow of
Somalia. But Rwanda was not a failed state; on the contrary, it was an example of a
state which, having been taken over in an extremist coup d’Etat, was executing a
massive genocide.
The UN was also haunted by Somalia. Fear of taking causalities in a UN mission
made the Security Council and the Secretariat willing and ready effectively to follow
the Belgians peacekeeping out of Rwanda once the hostilities broke out.
In the shadow of Somalia, the American and UN observers misinterpreted the events
on the ground and exaggerated their impotence to respond effectively. Not only were

65

the wrong lessons learned from Somalia, the right ones were ignored. In fact, the
lesson of Somalia should have been that too few forces inserted tardily can
undermine a whole operation.
Noise
This is a standard element often used to explain intelligence failures. At the same
time as the situation was particularly tense in Kigali in March of 1994, the UN was
pre-occupied with a long list of crises or problem areas - in Russia, Angola, Burundi,
EI Salvador, Georgia, Haiti, Liberia, Nagorno-Karabakh, Somalia, South Africa,
Tajikistan, Eritrea, Sudan, Mozambique, Hebron, North Korea, and especially the
former Yugoslavia (including the security and safety of the UNPROFOR). Because of
Rwanda 's peripheral relationship to the major issues and structures of international
relations, the signals from Kigali were weakly heard.
In a context crowded with actual crises, it was particular difficult to get busy decisionmakers to shift their attention from a potential crisis.
Confusion about the Message
Noise may overwhelm a message. but this propensity is exacerbated when the
message itself is confusing. At various points, different actors monitoring the conflict human rights organizations, the RPF, the Special Rapporteur of the Commission on
Human Rights - used the term genocide. But the term conveyed different meanings
which created confusion among the listeners. .
The problem with the term ' genocide' as a signal comes in the different implications
and illustrations of the two uses of the term. The use of the legal definition of the term
in an accusatory sense arguably diminished the impact of the term in its function as a
warning signal. If the killing of 300 Tutsis constitutes genocide (in the legal sense),
then warning s about a potential genocide signal the potential death of a few hundred
more. The linking of the deaths of 300-1N people to the terms Apocalypse' and
genocide' diminished the impact of these terms as warnings. While significant in and
of itself, early warning about a legal genocide leads to very different thinking about
consequences and reaction than would a clear signal of an impending genocide in
the popular sense.
In the popular consciousness, the concept of genocide is linked to the massive
slaughter of Armenians by Turkey at the turn of the century, the extermination of
millions of Jews in Europe by the Nazi regime, and the wiping out of an entire
generation and class of people by the Khmer Rouge in Cambodia. The numbers
involved in each of these cases are measured in the hundreds of thousand or
millions. Unfortunately, events propelled Rwanda into the same tragic class.
Desensitization
Only six months before the genocide occurred, massacres in Burundi claimed the
lives of an estimated 50,000 to 100,000 persons. There was no worldwide outrage
and little response. This failure of the international system to be startled or to respond
reflected a pre-existing propensity to expect disasters out of Africa. The threshold for
international response seemed to increase accordingly: if 100,000 persons could be

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killed with impunity, the possibility of another particular responses. Hence, massive
slaughter did not seem so extraordinary, nor did it require. there developed a mental
indifference to the possible consequences of the rising tensions in Rwanda.
This was reinforced by the tendency to view the struggles within Rwanda as a the
recurrence of ancient conflicts between Hutus and Tutsis rather than as a product of
a centrally led, political, murder machine. As one Belgian official later put it: "We've
learned from our experience that whenever there is trouble in Rwanda, the Hutu and
the Tutsi kill each other."
2. CONFLICT MANAGEMENT
The international community might have responded better had the early warning
systems generated a clearer anticipation that a genocide was on the horizon. Yet,
conflict management is a function of capacity, interest and commitment as well as
information. In the Rwandan case, the relevant actors knew at a critical stage that the
situation was unstable and dangerous. Unforeseen detrimental events did indeed
occur to give the situation a turn for the worse - in particular, the October 1993 ethnic
massacres in neighbouring Burundi. But the major powers which controlled UN
peacekeeping operations paid only cursory attention to Rwanda and there were no
contingency plans except for withdrawal. The sustained and careful attention so
necessary to successful conflict management was lacking.
There was considerable international investment in preventive diplomacy in Rwanda,
but when this failed and genocide ensued, the international community effectively
disengaged. Humanitarian relief within Rwanda and to refugees across the border
soon resumed, but these efforts were designed to deal with the consequences of
conflict rather than the violence itself. Re-interventions to save civilians had very
limited impact, as indeed might be expected from retroactive conflict management.
The reasons for this fundamental failure to respond are found, ultimately, in a
structural mismatch between institutions and interests in the contemporary state
system. Revitalized by the end of the Cold War, the United Nations in the 1990s
rapidly expanded its peacekeeping operations throughout the world. Rwanda was
added to the list in October 1993. The framework for peacekeeping, however, was
set by the distribution of power in the Security Council, which in form still reflected the
world as it was half a century ago. Apart from France, the major powers on the
Council were basically uninterested in a small Central African country that was
marginal to their economic or political concerns, and peripheral to international
strategic rivalries. Through their power of veto and financial commitments, these
states also controlled the peacekeeping or enforcement operations of the United
Nations. Preoccupied with crises elsewhere, especially in Bosnia and Haiti, and
haunted by the memories of Somalia, they decided not to engage in Rwanda until it
was too late. Other potential actors were either unwilling or, at that late stage,. unable
to respond on their own. Hence, a principal lesson from the Rwandan conflict is that
in a world of multiple crises, even major disasters in a seemingly peripheral state fall
victim to neglect.
Another lesson refers to the general principle that respect for international law and
norms will tend to diminish conflict, whereas violations will tend to stoke it. The

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behaviour of state and presumptive state actors in the Rwandan conflict was in this
respect less than adequate, and mostly counter reductive. International law and
associated principles designed ID uphold international order were repeatedly violate
including sanctity of national borders and arms embargoes. International refugee law
was not observed. The legal right and moral obligation to intervene to stop genocide
was not acted upon. Human rights law was repeatedly and severely transgressed
with impunity. Donors continued to give economic aid, and, in one case, also
substantial military assistance, to a. government lied to systemic violations of human
rights. While this might be expected in a world of competitive nation-states observing
the rules of Realpolitik, it should also be recalled that the consequences of
lawlessness in this case were exceedingly costly - both for the Rwandan parties and
people, and for outside states concerned.
International efforts to manage the conflict - as distinct from addressing its
humanitarian consequences - were a failure when judged against international norms
governing the prevention or mitigation of genocidal violence, as well as other UN
standards. By explicitly asserting the right to intervene in a world otherwise governed
by principles of national sovereignty, the Genocide Convention implicitly affirms the
associated moral obligation to act. The United Nations and its members had already
assumed some responsibility for conflict management in Rwanda by establishing a
peacekeeping operation to help implement the Arusha Accords. When the Accords
failed and the genocide commenced, the UN formally acknowledged an obligation to
help protect civilians. This recognition came belatedly in the form of a Security
Council resolution on 17 May 1994 - i.e. six weeks after the genocide commenced.
The tardiness in authorizing and deploying a protective force weakened its
operational effectiveness, but not the validity of the principle.
Critical actors at critical junctures
While policies were shaped by underlying structures of power and interest, the
various actors nevertheless operated within a framework of alternative options that
permitted a certain choice. Among these, a few stand out as commendable efforts to
reduce or mitigate the conflict; others are conspicuous for failing at critical moments.
Significant in this respect are:
* The Tanzanian government and the OAU efficiently and patiently spearheaded a
sustained international effort to mediate the civil war. While the Arusha Accords in
retrospect were not as perfect as the sponsors claimed, the agreement did provide a
reasonable basis for settling the civil war. Partly undermined by unforeseen
developments in neighbouring Burundi, the peace agreement also carved some
seeds of its own destruction by failing to take care of the losers. Having been
excluded from the settlement and not dealt with otherwise, the Hutu extremists
became an obstacle to its implementation.
* UNAMIR on the ground was an exercise in doing the most with as little as possible.
The Force Commander struggled in vain to bring the mission up to authorized
strength and to alert an unresponsive UN Secretariat (DPKO) to the fact that the
situation in early 1994 was seriously deteriorating. Once the civil war resumed and
genocide commenced, UNAMIR was able to save lives by protecting some 15-,000
persons in the Kigali area, despite lack of supplies and heavy equipment and a

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drastically down-sized-force. Its credibility and hence ability to modify the conflict in
other respects (e.g. by promoting a cease-fire) was critically undermined by the
decision to withdraw.
* Of the humanitarian agencies, the ICRC in particular helped to provide protection to
thousands of civilians.
* After a bungled start and initial paralysis by the DPKO, the UN Secretary-General
recovered the initiative by proposing that the UN re-engage itself to mitigate the
conflict. The Under-Secretary General of Humanitarian Affairs helped focus attention
on the crisis during the early period and was the first high-level representative from
New York to visit Kigali after April 6.
* While failing to anticipate that some 1.5 million persons would flee across the
border, UNHCR soon recognized the need to deal with the problem of militarized
refugee camps so as to avoid the start of a new conflict cycle. The agency's
innovative proposal was bogged down in discussions at UN/New York, where the
Secretary-General sought to address the problem comprehensively as a
peacekeeping matter. This failed, however, and the result was a critical delay of
several months before UNHCR could move ahead to deal with the camps issue.
* Of the regional states, Uganda and Zaire at various times provided support which
served to escalate the conflict rather than reduce it, though Uganda also contributed
to the mediation process.
* Through its military and economic assistance, as well as diplomatic support, France
gave significant and sustained aid to a regime that was linked to systemic human
rights violations and ultimately genocide.
* The Belgian decision to withdraw its UN contingent at the time of crisis crippled
UNAMIR and drastically reduced its options for the future. Belgian lobbying for the
Security Council to withdraw the remaining force altogether helped shape the final
decision to this effect.
* By acts of omission, the United States ensured that neither an effective national
response nor a collective UN effort to mitigate the genocide materialized. Citing
financial restraints, the United States wanted a barebones UNAMIR before April 6,
argued for withdrawal soon afterwards, and delayed the authorization as well as
deployment of an expanded UN force in May-June.
* The media by and large covered events in a fundamentally irresponsible manner.
Notable exceptions were reports from correspondents for BBC, Le Monde, Liberation
and the Times. The rest of the media reported in a highly selective and initially
misleading way, although some later were quick to charge Western governments with
complicity in the genocide. Genocide and politicide were at first depicted as tribalethnic conflict with ancient and typically African roots. Coverage did not become
intense until the genocide was over, and huge refugee flows streamed into Goma.
The failure of the media to accurately and adequately report, on a crime against
humanity significantly contributed to international disinterest in the genocide, and
hence to the crime itself.

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In a more general sense, the failure to respond was also linked to inadequate
structures or procedures in decision making. Some problems concerned the
relationship between the OAU and the UN, and point to the importance of including one way or another - the relevant regional forces in order to achieve a durable
solution to a local conflict.
Decision-making structures
Regionalism and the Disjuncture between Mediation and Implementation. From the
beginning (1990), regional states participated in diplomatic efforts to deal with the
conflict. While two of them were also involved in the war (Uganda and Zaire), that
was considered all the more reason to include them in the process, which was
spearheaded by another neighbouring state (Tanzania) and the OAU. The latter's
interests were primarily in a higher rational order that, among other things, would
spare the region another large influx of refugees. Over time, all external parties to the
conflict appeared to gain a stake in the success of the mediation effort, and all signed
the final document. There was, however, no continuity between the mediation and
implementation phase of the peace accords. The UN took over the peacekeeping
operation, essentially closing the regional effort and cutting out the OAU. The
consequent structural disjuncture between the mediation and implementation phase
affected three critical areas which made it difficult to maintain the momentum of the
Arusha peace process. These were:
* Mandate and expectations: The Arusha Accords presumed and specifically called
for a peacekeeping force with a broader mandate than the UN was willing to
undertake.
* Timing: The timetable of the Arusha process presumed a speedy international
presence, yet this did not sufficiently take into account, nor was it adequately
coordinated with, the timeframe for establishing UN peacekeeping operations.
* The extremists: The existence of an extremist group excluded from power in the
results of the peace process, but continuing to hold power in the interim, should have
been dealt with by other means in the implementation phase. In the shifting of
responsibility from one set of actors to another, this critical issue fell out of focus and
the extremist issue was neglected.
In important respects, Rwanda got a peacekeeping force rather different from what
the negotiators of the agreement had anticipated and deemed necessary for the
implementation of the Accords. The disjuncture was partly caused by organizational
competition between the OAU and the UN. The OAU actively sought to obtain a
leading role in the peacekeeping phase as well, but the Security Council insisted that
the UN would not pa unless it retained command and control of the operation. Apart
from France, which lobbied hard to make it a UN force, and the Rwandan
government which happened to be a member, no other states in the Council gave the
issue much consideration. The UN Secretary-General weighed in on the side of his
own organization. Moreover, the dismal record of the OAU in managing its minor
military mission in Rwanda (NMOG land II), gave ammunition to critics in the UN who
maintained that the OAU had neither the capacity nor the required impartiality to
undertake peace keeping operations. As it turned out, however, the UN Headquarters

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did not run an effective peacekeeping operation in Rwanda either, and UN neutrality
in face of genocide became a matter of criticism rather than approbation.
Issue of stakeholders: While the United Nations had formal responsibility for helping
to implement the Arusha Accords, the main stakeholders in the peace agreement
were in the region, not in the Security Council. The latter consequently gave
UNAMIR 4t narrow mandate, a limited budget, and- scant attention. When the Arusha
Accords appeared to unravel, the Security Council threatened to withdraw rather than
strengthen UNAMIR. When the crisis erupted after April 6, there was a "stampede to
get out," as one member of the Security Council described the reaction of the
chamber. At this critical juncture, the department of the UN Secretariat most directly
responsible (DPKO) showed neither initiative nor an ability to rise above its
assessments of what "the traffic would bear " in the Council.
African states showed more interest, partly reflecting the notion that African states
had a special responsibility for solving their own conflicts. States in the region had
particularist interests as likely receiving countries for massive refugee flows. Apart
from the military observers, the African battalion in UNAMIR I was the only unit which
stayed put during the crisis; Ghana decided to keep its contingent while the Belgian
and Bangladeshi governments withdrew theirs. During subsequent UN efforts to
manage the conflict retroactively by reintroducing a force, only African countries
offered to send troops. Operating under severe resource restraints, they required
external financing and some equipment, to which the major powers only reluctantly
agreed.
In sum, the regional contribution to conflict management was undervalued and under
utilized despite recent and formal recognition by the UN leadership, including the
Secretary-General, of the need to involve regional organizations to promote
international peace (Cf.. Agenda for Peace, 1992).
Decision-making process
The United Nations: UN procedures governing peacekeeping operations made for
slow and incomplete deployment. While this was not specific to Rwanda, the
consequences were more acutely felt because the country had no "patron" in the
Security Council that could cut through the political and bureaucratic morass. The
Secretariat for the most part proved unwilling or unable to compensate.
Before the acute crisis erupted on 6 April, DPKO, which had responsibility for
UNAMIR, made no contingency plans or efforts to strengthen the mission's
preparedness for worse case scenarios despite clear evidence of mounting tension.
The problem was partly due to limited institutional capacity in face of a rapid increase
in peacekeeping operations worldwide. The restraints were also more deep-seated,
as indicated by the failure of DPKO to overcome a near-paralysis when the crisis
broke and Rwanda moved to the top of the agenda. DPKO's communications to the
Security Council were tailored to expectations of what the Council would approve
(thus giving the Permanent Five anticipatory vetoes); options were formulated in
terms of standard operating procedures, rather than the unique needs of the
situation; and instructions to the field were heavily influenced by concern to reduce
risk so as to avoid failures" - which was defined as the death of UN peacekeepers.
Only when the Secretary-General in late April decided to provide some leadership did

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the Secretariat play an innovative and proactive role, based on more comprehensive
and independent assessments of the requirements of the Rwandan situation. At that
point, however, the limitations of retroactive conflict management, and inability of the
UN to respond with dispatch, rendered the operation largely irrelevant.
The critical importance in this case of leadership raises broader issues of
accountability and transparency in the ongoing discussion of UN reforms. Given the
large number of crises in the world, the Secretary-General can not respond equally
effectively to all. However, the criteria for selection, and the process which leads the
Secretariat to highlight some conflicts rather than others, remain obscure to the
public. Similarly, the fateful decision to virtually withdraw UNAMIR was taken by the
Security Council in informal consultations. In keeping with normal Council
procedures, only select formal statements made at the conclusion of the decisionmaking process (21 April) were recorded in the proceedings and are thus in the
public domain.
The effectiveness of UNAMIR also suffered from three characteristic features of UN
peacekeeping operations:
* The Field Mission had very limited authority to make decisions; routine matters as
well as issues heavily dependent upon judgment of the situation in the field were
micro-managed by New York.
* When deployed in late 1994, UNAMIR I had only a small investigative unit and no
separate human rights component designed to monitor and report on human rights
violations. This limited its ability to gauge a deteriorating situation. It also signalled to
the Rwandan parties that the UN placed low priority to human rights violations in the
implementation of the peace accords.
* The normal, slow process of assembling a peacekeeping force had monumental
consequences. Once the Security Council decided in May 1994 to gage the for the
explicit purpose of protecting civilians, a period of about 3 months elapsed before
new UNAMIR units arrived in Rwanda. In the intervening period, hundreds of
thousands were killed. The deployment was particularly slow because none of the
industrialized states that could have provided the UN with fully equipped units at sort
notice were willing to do. The solution was to match Western equipment with African
troops, a process which was particularly time consuming.
Policy issues
The international response to the Rwandan crisis also raised several policy issues of
general concern:
National peacekeeping operations with a UN umbrella: The French Operation
Turquoise was quickly deployed and efficiently run and some held it up as a model. It
should be noted, however, that smooth operation was not only a function of its being
national (as distinct from cumbersome multilateral). Effective communication with the
RPF made it possible to agree on the boundaries of the French "safe humanitarian
zone," and behind this line, French troops were in generally friendly territory. The
operation also raised some troublesome issues. Mounted at the same time that the
was struggling to obtain troop commitments for UNAMIR II, the French initiative
detracted from the collective effort and weakened the credibility of multilateral

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interventions. The circumstances of the operation cast doubt on official claims that it
was a purely humanitarian intervention, thus degrading the latter concept.
Democratization. International insistence that Rwanda's political system be
democratized had contradictory implications. The formal institutions of multipartism
provided apolitical framework for accommodating the RPF and in that respect foreign
donors promoted a formula that would help terminate the civil war. On the other hand,
democratization so defined did not address human rights issues, and in some
respects became a substitute for dealing with them. The results of efforts to
strengthen civil society were also ambiguous in that they provided space for both
human rights organizations and extremist groups. More generally, donor demands for
democratization added to the overall pressures experienced by a regime that was at
war and faced national economic collapse as well as mounting intemal opposition.
The combined effect was a sort of system overload which enhanced the power and
possibly the appeal of Hutu extremists. These dysfunctional consequences were not
sufficiently recognized at the time in the belief that the multiparty system entailed by
democratization and endorsed by the Arusha Accords would take care of the
extremists in d course.
Preventive Diplomacy: In retrospect it can be clearly seen that the closer the parties
at Arusha came to ending the civil war, the more Rwanda inched towards disaster.
The inter-connectedness of the two tracks - the civil war and the civil violence - was
recognized at the time, but the Arusha process was basically designed to settle a
war, not to prevent a dimly perceived future catastrophe. If there is a lesson here, it
lies in the tested principle that a settlement to end one war can be the beginning of a
new one unless the peace agreement is also constructed as preventive diplomacy.
Refugees: Two principles of refugee policy are generally recognized in the
international community: that refugees have the right to return, and that those which
cannot return be given asylum or resettlement elsewhere. Failure to observe such
principles typically create festering refugee problems, and in many cases militant
communities who seek to exit from their dilemma by force. The phases of the
Rwandan conflict considered here started and ended with festermg refugee
problems. While cognizant of the problems preceding the 1990 invasion, UNHCR
could only rely on its good offices to promote a solution. Significantly, the agency
lacked even the capacity to adequately assess the magnitude of the problem, let
alone other means to pursue what in the early 1990s came to be known as a
"comprehensive refugee policy," that is, an approach which addresses causes and
solutions to refugee problems and not only immediate material and protection needs
(A/AC.96f799, 1992).
The formation of new militant and militarized refugee communities in Zaire during the
second half of 1994 indicated the beginning of another conflict cycle. The response of
the lead UN agency for refugees, UNHCR, reflected increasing awareness of the
problems posed by such communities. It was recognized that a solution, if any,
requires disaggregating the community and hence the problem. This entails
separating the refugees from the military and dealing with gee former within a legalpolitical framework of repatriation or resettlement. The latter constituted a military
security problem and had to be dealt with as such. By early 1995, reasonably
effective arrangements were made to improve poling of the cams in both Tanzania

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and Zaire. Yet, the issue of the armed militants and their links to refugees remained
unresolved as the armed groups were free to rearm and regroup near the border. A
solution to this problem required, in the first instance, greater cooperation from the
authorities in Zaire and foreign arms suppliers.

CHAPTER 8: RECOMMENDATIONS
A. General - Humanitarian Realism
In matters of conflict management, the international response to the Rwanda disaster
revealed a high degree of formalism. The United Nations projects a vision of the unity
of humans governed by norms which enhance equality and justice, peace and the
well-being of all, and these principles were duly referred to. In practice, the behaviour
of states was mostly characterized by contests for power and a narrow concept of
self-interest. The UN as a collective actor was unable to rise above its members in
this respect. Yet, the picture is more complex. Within the UN system, a number of
states identified national security with international security and the attempt to
enhance world order by placing units of their armed forces at the disposition of the
UN. Other states invested in preventive diplomacy, recognizing that renewed conflict
would threaten regional peace and security and probably create large refugee flows.
Some states took some notice of persistent efforts by NGOs to flag human rights
issues.
It is possible, therefore, to escape from formalism. The issue is not choosing between
vision and reality, between idealism and prudence. State policy based on narrow selfinterest alone is costly in terms of the conflicts and humanitarian expenditures it
entails, and in the diminution of the sense of ourselves. A policy which leads to
shame is not realistic. On the other hand, promoting an idealism which fails to
consider the dictates of Realpolitik is a recipe for future disasters and failures.
The central issue is to define a prudent idealism. To translate this most general
philosophical approach into policy is a challenge for all concerned with public policy.
In part, the task is to develop structures that include the stakeholders; in part it is to
develop policy approaches and procedures which ensure that the stakes held are
compatible with a rational order of justice and peace. Some guidelines which embody
the principles of humanitarian realism can be derived from the Rwandan case.
B: Policy Approaches to Conflict Management
Coherence
Lack of policy coherence was a problem throughout, but from a conflict perspective
the human rights issue is central. There was the tendency to isolate human rights
monitoring into a superego role rather than an integral element in anticipating and
responding to the crisis. The exemplary work of human rights organizations was too
often content with resting on the fence of abstract principles. At the same time,
organizations involved in economic development did not incorporate human rights as
a specific dimension of development. Peacekeeping operations did not acquire a
human rights component until after the crisis had erupted.

74

1. Human rights monitoring must be integrated with related economic
development planning, diplomacy and peacekeeping operations, as well as
humanitarian polices to aid refugees and displaced persons. A coherent
approach must be developed in the work of the United Nations and exemplified
in coherent plans of action.
Targeting
While all conflicts are important, in a world of limited resources and attention span,
greater efforts must be made to prioritize issues for purposes of early warning and
conflict management. While prioritizing among crises involve difficult trade-offs,
similar ranking are made, for instance, by legal scholars who seek to identify the most
basic human rights in international law.
2. The UN Commission on Human Rights and the High Commissioner for
Human Rights should develop a capacity to relate human rights violations to a
dynamic analysis of the social forces which produced them, and strengthen
procedures to flag crisis areas in terms of severity and urgency. Procedures
must be improved to investigate such situations and ensure that the results are
put before the relevant decision-makers.
3. Special efforts must be made to act on crimes against humanity. The
international community should regard itself as in a permanent state of war
against perpetrators of crimes against humanity with a need to determine the
crises which are both most urgent and amenable to corrective intervention.
Delegating
It will be recalled that the failure to mitigate the genocide in Rwanda was neither a
function of lack of early warning, nor of malevolence, but essentially of neglect. The
case points to the inability of the UN, with its fragile structure and economic base, to
respond adequately in world of multiple, simultaneous crises. Absent a division of
labour among international organizations and state actors, the UN becomes
overburdened and formalism develops: abstract principles are recorded in resolutions
but policy follows the interests - or disinterest - of the major powers on the Security
Council. In Rwanda, the result was neglect. The regional organizations and states i.e. the most immediate stakeholders in both peace and war in the Great Lakes
region - were excluded at critical stages.
4. In the developing relationship between the UN and regional bodies in matters
of preventive diplomacy and peacekeeping, regional bodies and parties most
concerned should be given a greater role and greater capacity to deal with
local conflicts. Current plans for strengthening DAU's peacekeeping functions
with the support of the UN should be accelerated.
* A system of resource reallocation should take into consideration that most of the
worlds' conflicts occur in regions where the neighbouring states and regional
organizations have the fewest resources to deal with them.
* The UN should remain the body which sanctions action, sets the parameters, and
monitors the implementation of forceful intervention, and, where needed, helps

75

finance and provision such actions, but should be the body of last resort in the
implementation of enforcement action.
* Regional participation in preventive diplomacy should be carried over into
peacekeeping so as to ensure continuity between mediation and
implementation.
Timing
The process of establishing and deploying UN forces in Rwanda was slow and
inadequate relative to the task at hand, though reasonably quick according to
'normal" procedures for UN peacekeeping. The consequences in terms of lives lost
were significant, possibly enormous.
5. The international community must increase its capacity for raid response, as
exemplified in several current proposals for a rapid deployment force. The UN should
undertake a comprehensive review of procedures to enhance rapid response,
including budget procedures. Existing plans to strengthen rapid response by African
peacekeeping forces should be carried forward.
Conditionality
Policy conditionality in Rwanda entailed several dilemmas. Attaching human rights
conditions to development aid required early action before conditions developed into
a crisis where development aid became irrelevant. Yet, the nature of the conflict in its
earlier stage was difficult to discern and did not raise sufficient alarm. The
relationship among different kinds of conditionality was another problem.
Conditionality on economic restructuring exacerbated social tensions and
undermined efforts to improve human rights through political conditionality.
6. A more general concept of "conflict conditionality " should be considered, where
different kinds of conditionality (economic, political, human rights are treated flexibly
in terms of their likely contribution to, or impact on, violent social conflict. Policy
should be informed by systematic study of past cases regarding the timing, nature
and effect of such conditionality.
Preparedness
An underlying philosophy and policy guidelines are mere abstractions unless the
tools are in place to respond to a crisis. Effective crisis management requires
preparedness which permits a proactive stance.
7. The UN and the states that assume multilateralism as an integral part of their
foreign policy must develop systems of planning and response to humanitarian crises
that go well beyond simply the ability to deploy troops with speed, but must include
planning, strategies and the preparation for deploying the wide array of personnel
required for such emergencies.
C. Early Warning
Early warning was less critical in the Rwanda crisis than the willingness and ability to
respond. Nevertheless, the failure to respond adequately was in part influenced by
the failure to collect and analyze the information that was provided and to translate
this into strategic plans. Information and analysis is critical, not only in assisting in

76

anticipating a crisis, but in determining the appropriate response in a particular
situation.
As many UN resolutions have reiterated, there is a need to develop an early warning
system within the UN. However, such an early warning system must go beyond
simply developing a network or building on the new enchantment with data-based
systems for anticipating crises and their degree. The and regional organizations must
develop, both at headquarters and in the field, a high level capability for collecting
and analyzing information in a particular crisis area and translate this into strategic
alternatives further, this early warning analytic system must have direct and regular
access to the Chief Executive.
The UN has neither the capacity nor the need to build such an early warning system
on its own. The organization needs to build on area expertise inside and outside the
relevant regions - in the Rwandan case, the Great Lakes Region of Africa - utilizing
information officers to coordinate a world network of specialists in various state
agencies, academic institutions, rights monitoring groups, etc.
The following characteristics of an ideal early warning system would have been
extremely helpful if even approximated in the Rwanda case: a) the presence of
specialized units in the field, in regional institutions (i.e. the OAU conflict resolution
unit) and within the UN system, without any operational responsibilities, but with
responsibility for collecting and analyzing information and translating that information
into strategic options; b) the backstopping of that unit with a network of experts, many
of whom are in academia, electronically linked to participate in the provision of
information and analyses; c) the institutional assignment of lead responsibility for
regions to ensure that even states considered peripheral in the international system
are not ignored and lest other Rwandas fall through the cracks of an intelligence
analysis system; d) fitting human rights monitoring within a larger information and
analytic structure that can process the info Information in terms of complex social
conflicts (not currently done by human rights organizations) and communicate this to
the policy planning levels; e) the development within the human rights monitors and
any early warning system of a method of prioritizing and flagging in order to bring
significant attention and resources on important cases; f) linking early warning with
contingency preparedness, since even under the best circumstances it is impossible
to pin-point specific future outcomes of a complex social conflict, and since the
absence of any contingency planning will limit what will be heard.
8. The UN should be at the centre of the development of a network of experts
focused on different geographical areas for collecting and analyzing
information and developing strategic alternatives to guide preventive
diplomacy and peacekeeping operations. A specialized unit without any
operational responsibilities should designed to collect and analyze information
available in the international system and translate that into strategic options.
The head of such a unit should have access to the highest levels of decisionmaking within the UN and in the various parts of the network. As participants in
this system, regional organizations should develop specialized area early
warning systems.

77

These early warning networks would help relieve what seems to be an overreliance
on media sources of information. The inadequate media coverage of the genocide in
Rwanda is a separate and serious matter of concern.
9. The media should retrospectively examine their reporting on Rwanda to explain
and draw lessons from what is probably one of the most serious failures in the history
of modern journalism by a high proportion of the media.
D. The Parties
In addition to the above general recommendations, more specific recommendations
emerging from this study are addressed to various actors concerned with complex
humanitarian emergencies.
At the core of the Rwanda crisis were two interrelated issues concerning ~ ethnicity
and refugees. Ethnicity was utilized as a means of fostering divisions and mistrust of
the minority group. The refugees were members of that minority group and originally
residents of the country, but prevented from returning and denied full rights of
residence in the countries of first asylum.
Unresolved refugee issues typically worsen over time to become festering sores and
sources of new conflict. To deal with the refugee issue effectively, UNHCR would
have needed: i) a plan of action to settle the problems within a reasonable timeframe,
and ii) support from states and financial institutions with leverage that could be
brought to bear on the situation.
10. In areas of unresolved refugee issues, the underling political dimensions
must be recognized and dealt through strategic plans of action. The 'Latter
should have specific time lines for implementation, recognizing that in every
case, choices will have to be made between lesser evils rather than optimal
justice.
If left unattended, ethnic conflicts, like refugee problems, typically fester and recur.
Much is known about the dynamics of ethnic conflict and methods of resolving them
in principle; additionally,. there are international norms relating to minority rights and
a substantial body of precedents for adjudicating disputes involving such rights.
11. Codification of minority rights should be brought forward by the United Nations
and relevant regional bodies. Consideration should be given to develop mediatory
mechanisms such as regional commissioners for minority rights along the lines
established by CSCE/SCE).
A central problem that was evident in Rwanda and is also in evidence in other crises
is the effect of a system of condemnation without any penalties. This reinforces a
sense of impunity for those who violate the human rights of others.
12. The present nascent legal system for investigating and prosecuting crimes
against humanity must be developed from one rooted in two specific crises into a
standing system of investigation, prosecution, and punishment for those engaged in
such crimes.

78

Outside arms suppliers contributed to and exacerbated the conflict in Rwanda in
violation of the Arusha Accords and the spirit, if not the text, of the UN arms embargo.
13. Breaches of arms embargoes agreed to by treaties or instituted by the UN should
be investigated, and members breaking such agreements should be penalized.
The Rwandan case demonstrated the need for authoritative determination of when a
genocide is in progress. A non-state body should hold hearings to determine whether
human rights violations constitute genocide and permit corrective actions according
to the 1948 Convention. Since time is typically of the essence in such cases, a
system of rapid determination as well as rapid police action is needed.
14. The World Court or another independent international tribunal should be
assigned the task of holding emergency hearings in order to determine
whether a prima facie case of genocide is occurring and thus justifies
international intervention.
Questions were raised about the absence of a professional ethos in the UN
Secretariat, particularly in the DPKO, where analysis and options in a critical phase
were based less on the dictates of the information and an analysis of alternatives
available, but more on the willingness or, more correctly, unwillingness of Great
Powers to endorse such actions. The weakness of the international civil service in
this respect is not only related to the recruiting and promotion system, but also to the
insecure financial base of UN peacekeeping. Such operations have long been a
deficit operation and subject to prolonged struggles for states to pay up. By being
assessed a hefty 31% of all peacekeeping operations, the United States carries a
disproportionate burl en and have a disproportionate influence on the undertaking of
peacekeeping operations.
15. Attention should be given to promote conditions conducive to greater
professionalism in the Secretariat. Officials should be trained as international
civil servants and assessed in terms of such professionalism.
The issue of UNAMIR's mandate prior to. April has been exaggerated. Far more
important were the rules of engagements and the narrow strictures within which the
force was ordered to operate. Nevertheless, the dichotomy between Chapter VI and
VII operations sews confusion because it conceals a range of actions which are
neither pure peacekeeping.(VI) nor classical enforcement against an aggressor (VII).
Colloquial identified as Chapter VI.$ actions, these include a variety of circumstances
and responses which need to be specified separately. Doctrine needs be developed
for their utilization instead of relying on ad hoc innovation.
16. The UN, particularly. DPKO, should encourage the development of doctrinal
clarity by elaborating standard operating procedures for peacekeeping actions
that are neither classical Chapter VI not Chapter VII.
Sound principles warn against micro-managing a military or political operation in the
field. In the Rwanda case, the peacekeeping mission operated within much too
narrow limits of discretionary power. The Force Commander and the SRSG required
authorization from Headquarters for even petty financial matters, let alone more
substantial issues. The strictures against micro-management are even more

79

pertinent when the Chief Executive carries ultimate responsibility for responding to a
number of crises at the same dine.
17. Field officers, both political and military, must be given terms of
engagement sufficiently broad to permit them to respond to changing
circumstances with innovation and dispatch. Greater budgetary autonomy and
sufficient field staff are also necessary to strengthen the effective field
presence.
The UN failed to build on the lessons of the old world disorder and the need to
identify the perpetrators of violence in order to confront them with diplomatic isolation
and sufficient military force to deter their actions.
18. The UN should review the doctrine of neutrality to clarify its meaning and
the range of situations where it is appropriate and where its invocation is
inappropriate.

ENDNOTES
1 The terms of reference asked us to examine issues of early warning and conflict
management. Events that took place in Rwanda in 1994 are referred to as an
"emergency," as "the Rwandan experience," and as a "conflict." Not once is the term
"genocide" used (Emergency -Prevention and Conflict-Management Efforts, Terms of
Reference for Study II, January 1994). "Emergency and” experience" are
euphemisms to refer to what happened. "Conflict" is partly misleading because two
sides are fighting one another, which covers the civil war in Rwanda but not the
genocide. Hence, we have deliberatedly included the term "genocide" in the title.
2
The African Charter on Human and People's Rights (1986), Art. 12(2) states that,
"Every individual shall have the right to... return to his country. This right may only be
subject to restrictions, provided for by law for the protection of national security , law
and o order public health and morality ." The same right is affirmed in Art. 13 of the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights (!,an 948), though not qualified as in the
African Charter ("Everyone has the right to leave any country, including his own to
return to his country"). The relevant clause in the International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights (1966) is similar: "No one shall arbitrarily deprived of the right to enter
his own country" (Art. 12 (4)).
3

The preamble to the 1969 Convention on the Refugee Problems in Africa affirms
that the signatories are "determined to discourage" refugees from using their status
for subversive activities (paras. 4 & 5). Art. Ill deals in its entirety with "Prohibition of
Subversive Activities," prohibiting refugees from engaging in subversive activities
against any member state of OAU and requires that the host states undertake to
"prohibit refugees residing in their respective territories from attacking any State
Member... by use of arms, through the press, or by radio" (IIl.2). To further ensure
that these conditions are met, Art. II (6) advises that, "for reasons of security,"
refugees shall settle "at a reasonable distance from the frontier of their country of
origin." These provisions are unique to African regional instruments of international
refugee law. More generally, the Charter of the Organization of African Unity

80

expresses "unreserved condemnation" for subversive activities on the part of
neighbouring states or any other state Art.III (5). The African Charter on Human and
People's Rights states unambiguously that territories [of signatory states] shall not be
used as bases for subversive or terrorist activities against another party (Art.23(2)b).
4
Recent studies discussing reform of the UN relating to peacekeeping and preventive
diplomacy include, The Canadian Committee for the Fiftieth Anniversary of the United
Nations, Canadian Priorities for United Nations Reform. Proposals for Policy
Changes by the United Nations and the Government of Canada, Ottawa: United
Nations in Canada and the Canada Communications Group, 1994) ; Gareth Williams,
the Foreign Minister of Australia in 1993 - Cooperating for Peace: The Global Agenda
for the 1990s and Beyond, NSW, Australia: Allen and Unwin; Boutros Boutros-Ghali
An Agenda for Peace, UN 1992; cf. also Foreign Affairs, September/October 1995.
5

In recognition of the importance of these problems in Africa, the African refugee
convention - unlike other instruments of international refugee law - deals at some
length with the problem of refugees exercising their "right of return" through armed
force. The preamble to the 1969 Convention on the Refugee Problems in Africa
affirms that the signatories are "determined to discourage" refugees from using their
status for subversive activities (para. 4,5). Art.III deals in its entirety with "Prohibition
of Subversive Activities, prohibiting refugees from engaging in subversive activities
against any member state of OAU III .1), and requires that the host states undertake
to "prohibit refugees residing in their respective territories from attacking any State
Member... by use of arms, through the press, or by radio" (III. 2). To further ensure
that these conditions are met, Art. II (6) advices that "for reasons of security,"
refugees shall settle "at a reasonable distance from the frontier of their country of
origin." These provisions are unique to African, regional instruments of international
refugee law.
More generally, the Charter of the Organization of African Unity expresses
"unreserved condemnation" for subversive activities on the part of neighbouring
states or any other state Art.III(5). The African Charter on Human and People's
Rights states unambiguously that "territories... of signatory states... shall not be used
as bases for subversive or terrorist activities' against another party (Art.23(2)b).
6

The link between high-level positions in the Ugandan army (NRA) and senior
positions in the RPF reflected the important role which the Rwandan refugees had
played in Museveni's struggle for power. RPF Commander Fred Rwigyema had been
the Chief of Staff of the NRA and briefly also Deputy Minister of Defense in the
National Revolutionary Council. Paul Kagame, who replaced him, rose to the ranks of
deputy Chief of Military Intelligence in the NRA. Several other senior RPF officers had
served under Museveni.
7
While there are no systematic studies of the subject, observations to this effect were
made by social scientists in Kampala who were close to the refugee community
(August 1995 communication), and is also noted in Watson (1991) and Braeckman
(1994).
8
.According to a Kampala-based social scientist close to the exercise, the lead
question in the preliminary survey was: "Do you wish to return to Rwanda?" The
typical answer was "Who would not want to return to Rwanda?" The survey
was conducted in the refugee settlements by two local employees of UNHCR.

81
9

Museveni denied giving either military logistic or financial support to the RPF, and
charged the RPA with stealing Ugandan army equipment. He also assured the
Rwandan government that the borders had-been sealed, that Uganda did not provide
RPF with weapons, would not allow them to retreat back into Uganda, and would
arrest them if they returned. Cf. Briefing given by the Minister of State for Foreign and
Regional Affairs, Hon. David Omara-Atubo to Diplomatic Representatives Resident in
Kampala on 4 October 1990. See also Ambassador Katena-Apuli's letter to Stephen
Goose of 26 August, 1993, in which he asserts that, "On the day of the invasion,
October 1990, the Uganda Government declared all Rwandese who had left NRA to
attack Rwanda as Deserters under the Operational Code of Conduct. That means on
conviction by a Court Martial, they would be punishable by death." There is no
evidence that any were arrested. On the contrary, RPF Commander Paul game
travelled often and openly to Kampala where he met with journalists, foreign
supporters and diplomats throughout the war, but was never arrested (Human Rights
Watch Arms Project, Arming Rwanda: The Arms Trade and Human Rights Abuses in
the Rwandan War, Washington, January 1994, 20).
10

''The charitable view," wrote the well-informed Africa Confidential, was that
"Museveni has been unable to control his army. The cynical view is that he has been
playing a double game, allowing... RPF-commander... Rwigyema to build up his
expeditionary army while professing friendship with his neighbours" (Africa
Confidential, vol.31, no.20, p.2). Close observers conclude there was significant
assistance, pointing to the RPM use of Ugandan territory and shifts of equipment
from the Ugandan Army to the RPF at the time as well as later (Human Rights Watch
1994, Punier 1995) The Human Rights Watch report Arming Rwanda (1994)
concluded there was institutional complicity" based on findings that "...Uganda
provided weapons, munitions and other military supplies to the RPF. These included
munitions, automatic rifles, mortars, artillery and Soviet-designed Katyusha multiple
rocket systems... and that... Uganda allowed the rebel movement to use its territory
as a sanctuary for the planning of attacks, stockpiling of weapons, raising of funds
and movement of troops" (p. 10). It has been suggested that Museveni supported the
RFA because of ethnic loyalty as well as political reasons. The president is said to
have Tutsi or Hima origins even though he was born and raised in Uganda (Cf N.
Kabukol, Uganda and the Challenge of a New Generation: Recolonization of Uganda
and the Tutsi Diaspora, Kampala, 1991, 8, 11).
11

See Otunnu ~ 995) for a long list of telling signals, also Prunier (1995). Foreign
diplomats and journalists commented one unusual movement of troops towards the
Rwanda border, departing NRA members took farewell with relatives and friends; and
a few days before the invasion, MaJ. Gen. Rwigyema told inquisitive onlookers in
Mbarara that he was taking troops to prepare for celebrations on October 9,
Uganda's Independence Day.

12

There are also reports that the invasion triggered a purge of officers in the
Rwandan armed forces on 2-3 October. The officers appeared to have planned to
carry out a coup in conjunction with the RPF offensive, but were caught by
Habyarimana s intelligence network. If so, Habyarimana probably had information
about the planned invasion as well.

82

13 While not a major state in Francophone Africa, Rwanda had entered that inner
circle called "pays du champs" - states with which France had a special relationship.
The ties had developed steadily since President Habyarimana was received at the
Elysée Palace in 1975. As with other "pas du champs," relations were managed not
only or primarily through the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, but also through the
Presidential Palace (the Africa unit), and aid was channelled through the Ministry of
Cooperation (including military assistance). During periods when the relationship was
non-controversial and involved matters of routine, Rwandan affairs were handled
largely through the Presidential palace in cooperation with the Military Mission Office
in the Ministry of Cooperation (Prunier 1995.
14

Confidential interviews, Washington, May 1995. Reyntjens cites AFP and Reuter
dispatches in February 1993 saying a spokesman for the neutral military observers
group (NMOG) accused French troops of bombarding RPF positions [Reyntjens
1994, p. 176). In a report in Le Monde ("L'armee francaise dans le piege rwandais,"
September 1994), Herve Gattegno cites various evidence of direct involvement,
including a memorandum from the head of the military mission in Kigali
recommending 21 members of the parachutist regiments for medals for bravery
during the fighting in January 1992 (Reprinted in Guichaoua 1995:720- 721).

15

The director at the time was M. Dijoud. Possibly the French were piqued that a
high ranking American official, Deputy Assistance Secretary Hicks, had organized a
meeting between RPF and GoR in Harare in July. A subtle competition between
Washington and Paris developed, driven on the French side by a sense that
diplomatic initiatives in Central Africa properly belonged to a French sphere. In
Washington, there was generally little interest in Rwanda, which gave lower-level
officials greater way for initiatives. The only exception was the personal interest in
promoting African conflict resolution and activist stance of Herman Cohen, the
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Africa. 16 The N'Sele ceasefire agreement of 29
March 1991, Art.II (7), as amended at Gbadolite 16 September 1991 and at Arusha
12 July 1992.

17

A widely publicized case implicated the French government, via the bank Credit
Lyonnais, in helping the Rwandan government to secure finance for a 6 million dollar
weapons purchase from Egypt. Documents in the case were origin all obtained by the
Human Rights Watch (1994). The shipment itself was no secret. American diplomats
in Kigali, for instance, were appraised of the shipment in advance via American
embassy staff in Cairo.
18

Tanzania's brokerage became a significant budget item for the Minstry of Foreign
Affairs. Tanzania's delegation,, headed by an ambassador, worked practically full
time on the conflict for 10 months and the hotel bill for this period in Arusha was
payable in hard currency.
19

The power-sharing formula in the Arusha Accords distributed the portfolios in the
transitional Council of Ministers as follows:
* The ruling MRND would retain defense and planning but otherwise received
marginal ministries, including those for family planning and promotion of women, and
"enseignment superieur et culture."

83

* RPF got the Ministry of Interior, which gave them control over local administration,
the Ministry of Youth, which meant power to organize and form the next generation
(and thus possibilities for establishing structures competing with 's educational
portfolio), and the Ministry of Rehabilitation and Social Integration, which entailed
control over significant resources.
* The principal opposition part, Mouvement Democratique Republican (MDR), got 3
choice portfolios in its batch of 4: Prime Minister, Minister of Foreign Affairs, and
Minister of Primary and secondary education.
* The Liberal Party (PL), also in opposition, got the Ministries of Justice, Commerce
and Labour - all three "heavy" portfolios; The opposition social democrats (PSD):
Finance, Public works and Agriculture.
20

This is based on the figures in the report of the UN Reconnaissance Mission to
Rwanda in August 1993, to prepare for the establishment of UNAMIR. If the higher
figures sometimes cited FAR having 30,000 men and RPF 15,0(see Study 1), the
difference in demobilization requirements becomes even greater, i.e. approximately
24,000 on the government side and 9,000 for the RPF.

21

Current definitions of preventive diplomacy have been formulated by UN SecretaryGeneral Buotros Boutros-Ghali in his 1992 Agenda for Peace as efforts: "to identify at
the earliest possible stage situations that could produce conflict, and to try through
diplomacy to remove the sources of danger before violence results" (para. 15).
During the Cold War, "preventive diplomacy" was customarily used in the sense
pioneered by former UN Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold to mean the
prevention of local conflict from developing into confrontations between superpowers.
22

The letter of 22 February 1993 suggested 20-30 observers, surely a symbolic force
for a 150 km long border.

23

"The majority of the victims have been members of the minority group, the Tutsi,
and they have been killed and otherwise abused for the sole reason they are Tutsi."
But the report continued, "While the casual figures established by the Commission
are significant, they may be below the threshold required to establish genocide....
These technical matters aside, the tragic reality is that for the sole reason of
belonging to the Tutsi group, many Rwandans are dead, have disappeared, have
been seriously injured or mutilated, have been deprived of their property, or have had
to flee their homes and been forced to hide or live in terror" (FIDH 1993:29).
24

Officials in the Africa bureau in the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs s cannot
recall any mention of human rights issues in the communications between Paris and
Kigali during the tenure of ambassador George e Maine. Considered a stronger
supporter of "the presidential tendency," served from September 1989 until arch
1993. He was replaced by Jean-Michel Marlaud, who was more attuned to
multipartism but did not raise human rights issues because he considered the
evidence too flimsy or feared it would play into the hands of the RPF. Reflecting tacit
principles of division of labour during the Cold War, the United States had for some
time considered Rwanda as part of a French sphere of influence in Africa. To the
extent that Rwanda figured at all, U.S. policy was to emphasize democratization and

84

good governance as a means to deal with human right Both Ambassador George
Flatten and his successor David Rawson observed this priority (interviews Kigali and
Paris, August 1995; Washington March 1995).
25

Under the guidance of two "old Rwanda hands;" in the Ministry of Cooperation and
its implementing agency (ADCD), Belgium had chosen Rwanda for a pilot project n
Belgian foreign aid based on new guidelines. Bureaucratic incentives to maintain the
aid help to explain why the Minister of Cooperation Andre Geens strongly advocated
not only renewing but actually increasing aid in late 1991, despite his admission that
the government had not undertaken the expected economic and political reforms
(Willime 1995, pp. 436-439). Another Belgian official who accompanied Geens on his
tour of Rwanda in August 1991 noted that he was "very keen on aid." (Interview with
author, July 1995). The French ambassador in Kigali, George Matre, was known as
an "ancien du Rwanda." Matre was not a diplomat but came from the Ministry of
Cooperation and was described by close observers as a "pro projects man"
(Interview with author). Matre is considered to have wielded considerable if indirect
influence on French policy towards Rwanda during his tenure as ambassador from
September 1989 until March 1993.

26

In Canada the issue came to the forefront in earl 1991. Attempts by human rights
activists to portray a cut off in Canadian aid to Rwanda as a reaction to human rig is
violations were in fact resented by Ottawa, which feared it would complicate
Canadian efforts to promote peace and democratization (the cuts were in fact
budgetary).

27

Agnes Ntamabyaliro. Considered both corrupt and of "Hutu power" persuasion, she
appeared in the self-appointed "interim government" after April 6.

28

Even a concrete and seemingly clear-cut issue as hate radio was too problematic
for the international community to deal with. The Rwandan government had formally
committed itself to abstain from " propaganda radio nuisible," as the confidential
annex to the Dar-es-Salaam joint communique put it (7 March 1993). Although the
vitriolic Radio Mille Collines (RTLM) clearly qualified as "nuisible" and attacked even
members of the diplomatic corps in Kigali, there was no decision to take forceful
measures to silence it. Both the French and the American ambassadors opposed
such action. Ambassador Rawson claimed that Radio Mille Colline was the best radio
for information, and its euphemisms were subject to many interpretations. The idea of
jamming the radio was discussed in a preliminary fashion in the U.S. Department of
Defense, but never passed "first base," as one participant later noted. The reasons
cited were many: It was illegal to interfere in the internal affairs of another state,
Rwanda was not considered an enemy or even an adversary state, and jamming
posed practical problems by requiring the application of sophisticated equipment from
the air or a nearby base. The United States was in principle wedded to a broad view
of freedom of speech ()Interviews Washington, March 1995; Kigali, August 1990.

29

Under the 1503 procedure, discussion is conducted by a small Committee of Five,
and is a means to approach the government in question to deal with the situation
before it is brought onto a public agenda. The confidential discussions are seen as
one step in a process which - in the most severe cases and as a final step - might
lead to a Special Rapporteur with a country mandate. Only on 24-25 May 1994 did

85

the Commission call a special session and appointed a rapporteur to investigate the
genocide in Rwanda.
30

Mrs. Uwilingiyamana appeared at the March 8 meeting at the specific instructions
of the Foreign Minister, Boniface Ngulinzira - who also was murdered after April 6.
Her presence before the Commission visibly angered the MRND member who
remained in the delegation.

31

In 1992, the Special Rapporteur on_" extra judicial, sum or arbitrary executions"
devoted 6 paragraphs to Rwanda in his report to the Commission (E/ CN.4/30, pp.467). The thematic rapporteurs on torture and the Working Group on Enforced and
voluntary Disappearances included Rwanda in their general reports to the
Commission in 1993.

32

The relevant clauses of the Genocide Convention are Art. II, (a) and (b) :
"...genocide means any of the following acts committed with the intent to destroy, in
whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group, as such: (a) Killing
members of the group or (b) Causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of
the group."

33

The report estimated that at least 2,000 civilians have been "victims of extrajudicial,
summary or arbitrary executions" in the period October 1990 and January 1993., For
those who knew Rwandan history, these figures would suggest a turn for the worse:
several thousand persons were victims of the 1959 "social revolution," and thousands
were killed in retaliation for the attacks in December 1963 by Tutsi guerrillas. At that
time, as in 1992-3, the killings took place in the context of a war, and the victims were
primarily local Tutsi who were identified as the internal enemy associated with the
externally-based Tutsi rebels.
34

Diplomats from the region report having seen French DAM officers in the Gabiro
national park with interahamwe units, which were recognizable from their uniform
kangas. It was one of the open secrets of Kigali that the militias were training in the
national parks (interview, Dar es Salaam, August 1995).

35

The French ambassador Marlaud warned most strongly of all that delays would
give the opponents of the Accords opportunities to derail the peace process.

36

The review had started out in mid-1993 on the premise that UN peacekeeping was
a valuable instrument of U.S. foreign policy, but soon took a critical course.
Announced in May 1994, Presidential Decision Directive 25 (PDD 25) held that US
needed to apply stringent criteria of national interest before supporting UN
peacekeeping operations, whether or not this involved US troops (National Security
Council, The Clinton Administration's Policy on Reforming Multilateral Peace
Operations, Washington: May 1994.) The increased activities of UN peacekeeping
after the end of the Cold War had dramatically increased the assessed US
contributions, from a range of 29-47 million dollars in 198589, to a sizable 460.4
million in 1993, the latter figure re representing an increase of 370% from the
previous year. Under a new procedure laid down by PDD 25, the costs of all Chapter
VII operations plus those where US troops were involved would be charged against

86

Pentagon's budget, which inclined the latter to oppose such operations (Rosner
1995, pp. 65-91).
37

At the very high end was the UNTAC operation in Cambodia which had and
international staff of 22,000, including 16,000 blue helmets. The cost of the latter was
estimated to 60-70 million dollars per month (Schear 1995, UN/DPI 1994).
38 On September 10 - the acknowledged unrealistic date for deployment stipulated in
the Arusha Accords - the Security Council had not even approved the force.
According to plans developed in the Secretariat, the military and political leaders of
the mission were to be in lace one week after the Security Council had given its
approval (M+ In fact, the Force Commander, General Dallaire, arrived on 22 October
(M+17), while the Special Representative of the Secretary-General and head of the
entire mission, J. R. Booh-Booh, arrived on 23 ember (M+38). Half of the mission
staff was supposed to be in place in Kigali on M+30; in fact, it took over two months
to assemble 40% of the staff.

39

No country came up with an armoured unit with Armoured Personnel Carriers
(APCs), as UNAMIR plans approved by the Security Council called for. As a result,
the DPKO had to search for left-overs from other UN operations (ard did acquire 8
APCs from Mozambique), the rest had to be obtained through civilian contracts.
Since the commercial market for APCs was limited, and UNAMIR's budget at any
rate was not fully approved until 4 April 1994, the force never got its armoured unit.
The APCs assembled from the any
operation in Mozambique rapidly broke
down. As UNAMIR had no repair facilities, only one was operational by the time of
the April 6 crisis (Interviews, UN/DPKO, Permanent Missions, June 1995). A similar
fate befell the small helicopter unit authorized by the Security Council. No country
offered even half a helicopter squadron. A commercial contractor who eventually was
found withdrew the machines in April when violence broke out.

40

The mission had a temporary budget until the end of 1993. The first formal budget
proposal was released by the Secretariat (DAM) on 3 January 1994 (A/48/837),
translated into 16 languages, and passed to the Fifth Committee subcommittee
dealing with budgets ((Advisory Committee on Administrative and Budgetary
Questions), which began consideration of the budget and released it on March 17th
(A/48/908). On 4 April it was formally approved by the General Assembly (A/48/828
Add. 1). Member states received their request for contribution on April 18.
The process has since been speeded up. Previously the Secretary-General could
spend no more than 10 million dollars per year without an approved budget from the
General Assembly, and then only, with approval of the ACABQ. Now, the Secretariat
can go straight to the ACABQ for a temporary budget of $50 million once an
operation is set up. Formal budgets are prepared for fiscal years rather than
mandated periods (annual budgets for stable periods and 6-months budgets for less
stable periods), which harmonize better with regular national and UN budget
processes (See A/49/375 and A/48/945, and Durch (1993, 1995).

41

Cable from Dallaire, UNAMIR \Kigali to Baril\ DPKO\ Nations, New York, regarding
"Request for Protection for Informant," 11 January 1994.

87

"'-In addition to continuous requests for equipment to bring the force up to its planned
strength, General Dallaire twice requested reinforcements of a company of 150 men
and 5 Canadian bilingual officers, first in late February after the civil violence in Kigali,
and again on March 13.
43

A DPKO official in New York reported the arrival of a French DC-8 with 90 boxes of
60 mm mortar on 22 January1994.

44

Delcroix apparently was alarmed when finding that Rwanda was "awash with
weapons" while UNAMIR stood by powerless. The Belgian UN commander of the
Kigali sector, Luc Marchal, told Reuters news agency that since the Belgian battalion
had arrived three months ago, they had confiscated only 16 weapons and just over
100 hand grenades. Marchal was unequivocal: "It is a problem with the mandate.
Stopping and searching people for weapons is forbidden by New York," he said
(Reuters, dispatch from Kigali, 13 March 1994).

45

To draw attention to the 11 January cable, the DPKO official handling it put it in a
black file. The file was seen both in DPA and DPKO. DPA. Senior DPKO officials
admit that they discussed the cable but judged the informant sources as having
questionable credibility. Although the significance of the cable became clear in
retrospect, this was still denied at senior DPKO levels. As for Dallaire's request for
reinforcements and a proactive mandate interpretation, the DPKO officials said such
requests were not forwarded to the Security Council because the latter was expected
to turn them down anyway (Interviews, New York, April and June 1995, Kigali, August
1995).

46

The principal differences in mandate for a proposed UNAMIR which in documents
preceding its formal proposal to the Security Council is called a Neutral International
Force (N according to the Arusha Accords (AA), the UN Reconnaissance Mission
from the Secretariat, headed by the future Force Commander, which visited the
region on 19 August - 3 September 1993 ("Report"), and the Security Council
resolution 846 of 5 October 1993 (UNSC) which formally established the force are:
@ AA: "guarantee overall security of the country" ((B)1); in Report becomes
"establish security zone in and around the capital city area of Kigali", and in UNSC:
"contribute to the security of the city of Kigali inter alia within a weapons-secure area
established by the parties in and around the city" (3) a ), i.e. a progressive weaker
mandate.
@ AA: "assist in catering for the security of civilians" (in
report becomes "To
monitor the civilian security situation through the verification and control of the
Gendarmerie and the Communal Police," this is subsequently specified as monitoring
with unarmed UN Police Observers; and in UNSC "to investigate and report on
incidents, regarding the activities of the gendarmerie and the police" ((3)h). Here the
mandate becomes more delimited and specific, and to that extent weaker.
@ AA has two strong provisions for confiscating illegal arms (B)4 - "Assist in the
tracking of arms caches and neutralization of armed gangs throughout the country;
and (B)6 -Assist in the recovery of all weapons distributed to, or illegally acquired by
the civilians;" The Report lists such activities as means of achieving the principal
goals identified for NIF, notably "Assist in tracking arms and neutralizing armed
groups (with armed UN Military Forces)" and "Assist in recovering arms in the hands
of civilians (with armed UN Military Forces and unarmed UN Police Observer

88

Significantly, the UNSC resolution has no provisions at all for confiscating illegal
arms.
The other main provisions are similar across all three sources: monitor cease-fire,
mine clearance, monitor demobilization (cantonment points), integration, and
protection for security for humanitarian relief.
47

In Somalia, Boutros-Ghali had taken the lead in proposing a proactive and
eventually Chapter VII mandate which gave the UN force broad powers to confiscate
weapons and enforce peace. The first debacle in Somalia occurred in early June
1993, when a Pakistani contingent of 23 men was lost, the death of 17 US soldiers in
a related mission two weeks later jeopardized the entire operation and was widely
considered as a major defeat for UN peacekeeping. In his recommendation to the
Security Council on 3 March for an expanded mandate for UNOSOM, Boutros
Boutros Ghali argued that the disarming of local factions had to be enforceable to be
effective. He was backed by Res. 814, which stipulated that factions or personnel
who failed to comply with the disarmament process would have their weapons and
equipment confiscated. The Council also supported him on this point after the
Pakistani contingent was ambushed (Res. 837 of 6 June 1993). The main difference
between Res. 814 authorizing UNOSOM II and the mandate of UNAMIR was a
Chapter VII provision to cover the "responsibility" of the UN force "the consolidation,
expansion, and maintenance of a secure environment throughout Somalia on an
expedited basis." UNAMIR was to "assist" local authorities, and only with respect to
the security of the capital by establishing a weapons-secure area in Kigali (Makinda
1994: 76-81).

48

Letter to Salim A. Salim dated 1 April 1994. Boutros-Ghali did not mention that on
the very same day, he had effectively upstaged his OAU counterpart by ordering his
top military advisor, General Maurice Baril, to travel to Rwanda and Uganda to
prepare for a UN monitoring force in the border area. The Baril mission resulted in the
establishment of the United Nations Observer Mission Uganda-Rwanda (UNOMUR),
as approved by the Security Council on 22 June (Res. 846 (1993)). NMOG for a while
limped along and monitored the cease-fire within Rwanda, and - thanks to Salim's
continuous efforts - increased its capacity slightly. It was later folded into UNAMIR, as
was UNOMUR.

49

The other Rwandan operation mounted by the UN was UNOMUR, designed to
monitor the supplies going to RPF across the Rwanda-Uganda border. UNOMUR
had a checkered efficiency record. Established by a UN resolution in June 1993,
UNOMUR had only 81 military observers and lacked equipment for aerial surveillance
of the 150 km long border between Rwanda and Uganda. The Security Council
evidently made cost a primary consideration when deciding that UNOMUR would
focus its control and verification activities on main roads and tracks (Res. 846
(1993)). American military experts regarded the force as largely symbolic.

50

Trying to find out what was happening, Dallaire rushed into a meeting of the top
officers on the evening of 6 April. Col. Bagosora was in charge. When Dallaire asked
him to help maintain stability by recognizing the Prime Minister as the acting head of
state, Bagosora put down the idea, contending she was inept and untrustworthy. By
the next morning she had been killed. Dallaire also learned of the murders of six

89

other moderate cabinet ministers. On the evening of 7 April, he went to the hospital to
identify the bodies of the ten Belgian soldiers.
51

Initially, the focus was on the safety of UN personnel. In a letter to the Security
Council dated 8 April, the Secretary-General raised the possibility that UNF1 might
have to take main responsibility for evacuating UN civilian personnel, in which case
an expanded and strength would be required. A further deterioration of the situation
could just an evacuation of UNAMIR and if so he was ready to make that decision.
While the Secretariat and the council were discussing these options, France,
Belgium and Italy launched evacuation operations of their own, the French giving
New York and the UNAMIR Force Commander 45 minutes notice before landing at
Kigali airport on 9 April.
52

Smaller states on the Council complained in retrospect that the Secretariat
provided insufficient information (Interviews, New York March 1995). Other members
also complained that the Secretariat was inactive. The Ghanaian delegation,
representing a major. troop contributing nation to UNAMIR, found that its calls to
DPKO were not even returned. The informal consultations in the Council reinforce the
impression of a Council that was ready to give the Secretariat room for initiatives, but
the latter did not respond with alacrity. For instance, on 12 April - or five days into the
crisis - several members of the Security Council explicitly asked for views of the
Force Commander and the Secretary-General by the next morning; they also sought
to hear the views of major troop contributors to UNAMIR. DPKO officials briefed the
Council next day, but members were still impatient and asked for specific options.
When the Secretariat came back on 14 April with options, the UK and others
complained of a lack of information for assessing the options. Argentina reiterated
earlier demands that troop contributing countries be consulted.

53

The Secretariat came back on April 14 with two options that both were premised on
an cease-fire, a condition that all recognized was not likely at the time. The logic
apparently was to threaten withdrawal of the entire force unless the RPF and FAR
agreed to a cease-fire. That threat would hardly persuade any of the parties to stop
either the wars or the killings. Security Council members responded that it was
unrealistic.

54

The Secretary-General's report of 20 April uses the term "widespread violence",
not "genocide," but admits that "possibly :.. tens of thousands" had been killed
(S/1994/470). The Security Council resolution (Res. 912 (1994)) is mainly oriented
towards the civil war, which is addressed in conventional inter-state terms. For
instance, Clause 4 claims, "Obviously, a cease-fire agreement is the first step in
establishing a stable and secure environment in the country, thus allowing the
organized, coordinated and secure delivery of humanitarian assistance and the
reactivation of the Arusha peace process." Item 6 - "Demands an immediate
cessation of hostilities between the forces of the Government of Rwanda and the
Rwandese Patriotic Front and for an end to the mindless violence and carnage which
are engulfing Rwanda;" Item 7 - "Commands the active role of the Special
Representative of the SG and of the Force Commander to bring about a cease-fire
and to mediate between the parties in order to bring about the earliest resolution of
the Rwandan crisis." Item 8 decides to adjust the mandate of UNAMIR to act as
intermediary to bring about a cease fire.

90

55

Agence France Press, un "scandal" dont "tout le monde est responsible," Le
Monde, 27 May.

56

On Aril 7, when the crisis broke, Boutros Boutros-Ghali was in Minsk. The next day
he flew to Geneva; when the Belgians-decided to pull out (April 12) he was in Bonn;
when the Security Council debated what that meant for UNAMIR, he was in Madrid.
With this travel schedule, it was impossible to stay on top of developments in a week
of complex and fast-moving events. The essential decision-making during the first
critical week fell to two high-level officials in the Secretariat, Kofi Annan and Iqbal
Riza. Lacking decisive leadership from the Secretary-General, the DPKO seemed
caught in a political culture which made it inappropriate to confront the Security
Council and futile to present proposals it would not readily approve.
57

Letter from the Secretary General to the President of the Security Council, 13 April
1994. The letter was not well received by the Council, where some members saw it
as an attempt by Boutros-Ghali to place the responsibility for UNAMIR withdrawal
squarely on the shoulders of Belgium. In a letter to the Security Council the same
day, the Belgians had publicly pointed to "the chaos in Rwanda. 'The Belgian
government concluded that it was "obvious that under these conditions the
continuation of the UNAMIR operation has become pointless... and it is imperative to
suspend the activities of UNAMIR forces without delay" (1994/430). DPKO reinforced
this interpretation by telling the Security Council (13 April) that with the Belgians
about to leave, the Force Commander could no loner guarantee the security of the
airport or even his own men. DPKO did not relay to the Council the more differentiate
appreciation of the situation made by the Force Commander in Kigali.
58

Invoking NATO solidarity as well, the Belgian Foreign Minister phoned his
counterparts in Washington, London and Paris to plead for withdrawal. "Willy Claes
panicked a bit," a Belgian official later commented. Outcries from the public and the
press over the brutal murders of the Belgian soldiers had placed enormous pressure
on Belgian political leaders to withdraw, similar to the ones faced by the Americans in
Somalia half a year earlier.
59 The United States had been traumatized by the Somalia crisis, which had been
imprinted on American TV screens in the picture of a mob dragging the body of an
American soldier through the streets of Mogadishu. Although no American soldiers
were in UNAMIR, the experience had given peacekeeping a bad in the- United
States. Washington apparently considered total withdrawal as soon as the Belgian
peacekeepers were killed. When the Belgian decision was known, the United States
marked a position in the Security Council favouring withdrawal: on 12 April the
American ambassador expressed serious doubt about the viability of UNAMIR in the
circumstances, noting that it could not carry out its original mandate and might even
be a destabilizing factor. The next day, he suggested withdrawing, leaving only a
skeletal force. On the 14th, the US claimed the Council needed a resolution for
orderly evacuation of the force; on the 15th there was no doubt: the US opposition to
keeping UNAMIR in place was firm.

60

Reports from the informal consultations in the Security make no mention of such
canvassing. It should be noted, however, that even Nigeria which circulated a draft

91

resolution to strengthen UNAMIR did not itself volunteer troops. Although a major
military power in Africa, and a contributor to other peace-keeping operations, Nigeria
claimed it lacked logistics to send reinforcements. However, Nigeria had military
observers serving in UNAMIR and made no move to withdraw these.
61

While recognizing that the Belgian departure was leaving the force quite
vulnerable, General Dallaire and his deputy, the Ghanaian Brigadier-General
Anyidoho, were making dispositions to dig in, did not recommend withdrawal, and
asked for emergency supplies to carry on. The Ghanaian battalion, considered the
most professional and second in strength to the Belgian unit, was redeployed from
the DMZ to Kigali to protect the airport. On 13 April, one day after Dallaire was
informed by the Secretary General's office that the Belgians were pulling out and that
the Secretary-General was inclined to withdraw the entire force, UNAMIR sent DPK0
a long list of requests for emergency supplies, including medicine, water, fuel and
heavy machinery, plus cargo trucks and 1900 flak jackets. On 14 April Dallaire noted
the ironic differences in perception: the Belgians were telling New York that the
UNAMIR staff in the field did not realize how the situation was deteriorating by the
hour; "they say we are too optimistic here."

62

Whether a larger - or only a much larger - force would have made a difference is a
matter of considerable controversy and remains speculative. If the symbolic force of
540 which stayed on helped to protect thousands of civilians, the force of almost
2,000 which was left after the Belgians withdrew would arguably have had a
somewhat greater impact. The force was, however, targeted intermittently by both
side (including the militia) as well as taking indirect fire.

63

The RPF maintains the Security Council was still following French interests by
seeking to stop RPF advances and save the remnants of FAR behind a cease-fire
line. See RPF communiques 10-16 April 1994.
64 Some of the material that we include on the media is taken from Linsey Hilsum's
study, "Reporting Rwanda: The Media and the Aid Agencies" undertaken for Study
Team III. The other sources are: Peik Johansson, settling old tribal scores: an
assessment of the performance of the Western print media, April-July 1994;" "U.S.
Television Coverage of Rwanda" by Todd Eachus and Steven Livingston; the latter
two studies prepared specifically for Study Team II; "British Television News and the
Rwanda Crisis," another study prepared for Study Team and a review of French
press coverage during the genocide in, Verschave, Frangois-Xavier, Complicite de
genocide? La politique de la France au Rwanda, Paris: La Decouverte, 1994, 140-45.
65

There were, of course, articles in the specialist periodicals of human rights
organizations and those specializing in Africa. The only television story on Rwanda
during the period was on the mountain guerrillas. The New York Times did cover the
only Security Council decision to renew UNAMIR and bring it up to full strength Two
and a half weeks later (26 January), in the same paper, a very short story appeared
on the Human Rights Watch Arms Report on the French role in arming and training
the Habyarimana forces. It was a month later (23 February) when Reuters reported
on the assassination of Public Works Minister, Felicien Gatabazi, and the subsequent
murder of the head of the hardline CDR Hutu party. The latter report implied that the
latter was part of the Hutu-Tutsi "tribal" killings, ignoring the fact that Gatabazi was

92

Hutu. Le Monde did carry the Agence France press report on the delay in setting up
the BBTG on 27 March and the potential tential this had for renewal of the civil war.
Even the most voracious reader of newspapers and obsessive television news
watcher would not have known how ominous the situation was in Rwanda, though a
13 March New York Times brief report of the US State department alert on travel to
Rwanda provided a tiny clue.
66

Eachus and Livingston.

67

Le Monde, 12 April, " Le Rwanda a feu et a sang."

68

The consensus by scholars now is that the evidence points to the Presidential
Guard itself as the source of the missile that shot the plane down. The Presidential
Guard also killed the Premier. The Belgian UN soldiers were hacked to death by the
military after their battalion leader told them on parade that the ten capture, tied-up,
and striped men had killed their president (9 April, William E. Schmidt, "Terror
Convulses Rwandan Capital as Tribes Battle'). To be fair, four days later, Schmidt in
his dispatch quoted Colonel Alexis Kanyarengwe, the Hutu chairman of the RPF
stating, "This is not an ethnic war. It is a war against a dictatorship." In the context of
the previous coverage, the assertion sounded like RPF propaganda from a tamed
Hutu in the employ of the Tutsi RPF.
69 12 April.
50
'70
The New York Times, 10 April and The Times, 11 April.
71
Le Canard Enchains, 5 May - "La Franceperd la memoire au Rwanda;" Liberation
18 May "Rwanda. les amities coupables de la France"; L L'Humanite 20 May "Les
responsibilités francaises dans le drame rwandais." See also Prunier, "'Operation
Turquoise': A humanitarian escape from a political dead end," prepared for Study II.
72

20 April, Associated Press; 2 May, Michael Binyon in The Times.
In a letter of 30 April (S/PRST/1994/21) and a resolution of May 17 (res. 918
1994)), the Security Council "recalls that the killing of members of an ethnic group
with the intention of destroying such a group in whole or in part constitutes crime
punishable under international law."

73

74

On 25 July UNAMIR was still at a troop strength below 500 - i.e. unchanged since
the draw down on April 21st.

75

For UNAMIR II, the Belgian government outfitted one Malawi company consisting
of 135 men. With training, paperwork and transfer of equipment the process took one
month, which the Belgians prided themselves on as efficient.
76

Only one Congressman was recorded in May 5) as arguing that it was in the
enlightened self-interest of the US to stop genocide wherever it occurred
outflows(Hearings, May5) While a significant refugee outflow (200,000) occurred in
late May, this did not force the conclusion that by reducing violence within Rwanda,
this would probably reduce refugee , hence touching more directly on US interest.
This was demonstrated only after Goma (mid-July), when the US felt called upon to
provide a major and costly humanitarian relief operation.
77
United Nations Peace-keeping, UN/DPI, December 1994.

93
78

This was the proposed American strategy of "outside-in", designed to reduce the
chance of military encounter with either of the combatants. The original proposal of
the DPKO, by contrast, was an "inside-out" move whereby UNAMIR II units would fly
in to Kigali and fan out from the capital. In the end, a combination of the two
strategies were adopted. S/1994/565, May 13, 1994 and New York Times, 14 May
1994.

79

According to the US ambassador to the UN, Madeleine Alright, the RPF called her
on May 4 and said they did not want UN forces in Rwanda (Albright, in statement to
the Congress, House Appropriations Committee, May 5, 1994). On the eve of the
May 17 resolution authorizing UNAMIR II, both Rwandan parties said they would
accept a new UN force if it was only for humanitarian purposes, but RPF warned they
would attack UN forces if they came between their units and the government troops
(NET, May 18). Towards the end of May, when the Security Council went an extra
round to give a second authorization to UNAMIIR II, the RPF reiterated that they
would cooperate with UNAMIR II if it had exclusively humanitarian functions, but was
adamant it would not talk to the UN mission if the latter talked to the "interim
government" (NET 25 May).
80

The Security Council requested on 30April that Boutros-Ghali consult with OAU for
troop contributions to UNAMIR II. The same day Boutros-Ghali discussed the matter
with the OAU chairman, President Mubarak, and approached his OAU counterpart,
Salim A. Salim, for help, as well as leaders of African states who previously had
contributed troops to UN peacekeeping operations. S/1994/530, 3 May 1994.
81

Whether "the organization" as such did so, the Secretary-General did (S/1994/640,
May 31, 1994)-, and the UN Commission on Human Rights, Special Rapporteur for
Rwanda (E/CN.4/1995, 28 June 1994). On U.S. insistence, the Security Council used
the formulation "acts of genocide have occurred" (Res.925 (1994)). While ostensibly
chosen to downplay the relevance of the 1948 Genocide Convention, as critics have
argued, the Convention itself uses that precise term

82

By this time, the Secretary General had firm troop offers from 8 African countries,
totalling 5 battalion and 4 companies, and a modest equipment list from 4 Western
states, totalling 2 aircraft, 50 trucks and 50 APCs. /1994/728, 20 June 1994).

83

A small contingent of 500 African troops, mainly from Senegal, were added to the
French core unit (2500 men) largely to ward off criticism that this was a French rather
than a multinational intervention.

84

The human rights organization, African Rights, estimates that 85-90% of the Tutsi
in the prefecture of Cyangugu had been murdered by the time the French arrived
(African Rights 1995, p. 455).

85

According to Prunier, who was a participant-observer in the process, confusion
rather than clear strategy marked the preparation of the campaign. The Ministry of
Defense at first considered moving into the northwest, Ruhengeri and Gisenyi, but
was informed that this would bring them into direct collusion with the government
forces since this area represented the stronghold of the ancien regime. As a result,
the planning shifted to focus on the southwest, also because it was estimated that

94

surviving Tutsis may be trapped there, hence enabling Operation Turquoise to fulfil its
humanitarian objectives (Prunier 1995)
86"
Operation Turquoise. Rwanda. June 22-August 11, 1994". Official briefing note.
Mimeo.
87

Col. Didier 'Thibaut told Reuters on July 5 that the head of the southern command,
Col. Jacques Rosier, had given him orders to stop the rebels if they tried capturing
Gikongoro. A statement from the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs on July 5 affirmed
that French units would stop RPF rebels from entering the zone in order to protect the
refugees (Financial Times, 6 July 1994).

88

Force Commander General Lafourcade emphasized that his men were not wearing
helmets or flak jackets - in contrast to UNAMIR (Connaughton 1995). In part, this
probably reflected the relatively friendly environment, although Lafourcade did not
mention this.
89
"Operation Turquoise. Rwanda. June 22-August 11, 1994". Official briefing note.
mimeo
90
This was also noted at the time, including in UNHCR Sitreps for August 1994, the
time of the French withdrawal. Some of these soldiers could have retreated before
the French entered on June 23, but this is unlikely since the war was then being
fought in the east (causing an exodus into Tanzania by late-May). The next major
refugee flows occurred in mid-July, both in the north into Goma and the Southwest
into Bukavu. On July 19, UNHCR reported that about 100,000 arrived (UNHCR
SitRep 20 July 1994). By that time, the French zone had been in existence for over
two weeks.
91
Col. Musonera, Bukavu, in interview with human rights investigators. Human
Rights Watch Arms Project, Rwanda/Zaire. Rearming with Impunity. May 1995, vo1.7
no.4, p.3.
92
A UN official who coordinated relief in Ngara described a typical method as follows:
Commune level officials would provoke unrest or riots in the camps; UN and NGO
personnel would be faced with an unmanageable situation; the same persons would
approach them and offer to help control the population. Having no ready alternative,
the agencies would agree and hence treat them as camp leaders for purposes of
distribution and maintaining order.
93

In November 1994, UN/DPKO had proposed a variation on the ZCSC in the form of
an International Police/Military Observer Group, where Zairean troops would serve
under an international military/police supervisory unit. The Zairean government
refused, however, to place its troops under the authority of officers from another
state. Zaire did not object to the DPKO proposals to send a peacekeeping force to
the camps on its territory.

94

Simultaneously, UNHCR launched an appeal to donors asking for pledges to
finance the operation, and for personnel to form the international civilian contingent,
the Camps Security Liaison Group (CLSG). The Dutch government responded
quickly with an offer of l6 policemen; other European and four West African countries
followed suit to provide a total of 45. UNHCR assigned a senior official and five
support staff with the task, among

95

other things, of training the new camp police in refugee law and doctrine. The
Operation was first planned for five months, but was later extended to the end of
1995.
95
By the first week of June, small arms had been seized, including 23 rifles or pistols,
30 grenades, four mines and a variety of ammunition.
96

Detailed evidence is provided by Human Rights Watch Arms Project, Rwanda
Zaire, vol.7.no.2, New York: May 1995, and Amnesty International, Rwanda. Arming
the perpetrators of the genocide. London: 13 June 1995.
97
Human Rights Watch Arms project, vol.7, no.4, p.7.
98
This interpretation of what occurred at Kibeho is derived from interviews with
government and UN officials, and consulting documents prepared prior to the incident
such as: the "Integrated Task Force, Briefing Note, 6 March 1995," the "Strategy for
the Southern IDP Camps, 5 April 1995," "The Integrated Humanitarian Response,
Concept Paper, DHA," "Appeal for Rwanda 1994 Review," (Rwanda Humanitarian
Situation Reports and assorted letters and cables). Further, a number of retrospective
studies on Kibeho were extremely helpful including: the "Preliminary Report on the
April 1995 Closure of IDP Camps and the Integrated Humanitarian Response" by
UNREO, the "Report of the Independent International Commission of Inquiry on the
Events in kibeho, April 1995, and Randolph Kent's unpublished manuscript, "The
Integrated Operations Centre in Rwanda: Coping with Complexity," 1995.
99

On the basis of food distribution figures, the estimates in November yielded a
figure of 350,000. Using health and medical figures, the estimate was 280,000. Given
the daily flow in and out of the camps, and the estimated 80,000 who had returned to
their home communes, in mid-April the camp population of the remaining nine of the
thirty-three original camps was estimated to range between 180,000 and 250,000,
with greater verity attached to the lower figure. Almost half, up to 120,000, were in
Kibeho.

100

Paul Kagame, Vice President and Minister of Defense, who was viewed as the
hero responsible for the defeat of the former government and as the real power in the
existing government, initially set 30 November as the deadline for camp closure. He
was also the one who took responsibility for the use of force on 18-22 April 1995.
101

The UN agencies operating in Rwanda included the FAO, UNDP, UNHCR,
UNICEF, UNIFEM, UNESCO, UNV, WFP, WHO and DHA's field team for
coordination, the United Nations Emergency Relief Operation (UNREO). As of
November 1994, 114 international and 20 Rwandan NGOs were operating in the
country. "From the outset of the April-July events, the international community has
been particularly preoccupied by the fate of the displaced populations in Rwanda....
During the latter part of 1994, the displaced persons throughout Rwanda have been
among the main beneficiaries of programmes carried out under the July-December
Appeal. Parallel to the provision of relief assistance, considerable energy has been
expended by the international community as well as the government, to encourage
and organise the return of the displaced to their home areas." Appeal for Rwanda,
1994 Review, 5.
102

The voluntary return had ground to a halt because of a combination of: the
deteriorating security situation in home communes; the high numbers of arrests of

96

returnees, including many who were widely believed to be innocent even by
government officials; the consequent fears of safety if the IDPs return home; and the
illegal occupation of homes in communes. The return of some people from home
communes to camps reinforced this perception. But these factors were greatly
exacerbated because of the misinformation, intimidation within camps, and killings by
the agents of the ex-government, and the strengthened grip of hard core elements on
the camp population. There was enormous and understandable concern by the
government over security since the camps were believed not only to contain
genocidal killers but members of the Interhamwe who used the camps for recruitment
and training. The government saw the camps as a potential "spearhead" for the fallen
government in Zaire. Cf. Integrated Task Force Briefing Note, 6 March 1995.
103

There were 59 employees in the IOC, 21 full time and 38 part time. The Task
Force governing the IOC consisted of the Director General of Ministry of
Rehabilitation and Social Integration; representatives of the Ministries of Interior,
Defense, and Justice, and from the UN Operational Agencies (UNICEF, WFP, UNDP,
etc.), UN Human Rights, IOM, and senior officials of IOC.
104
Cf. Kent 1995.
105
The reports came from medical NGOs and MILOBs. Cf. Integrated Task Force
Briefing Note, 6 March 1995.
106
The six options included three main ones: 1 - The RPA goes in alone to close the
camps by force; 2 - close camps in series beginning with Kibeho and Ngado (the
largest camps) by ceasing food distribution; 3 - Camps are consolidated and
voluntary return continues with the remaining population receiving basic food until a
judicial system is in place. There were three others based on reorganizing the camps
into more controllable units as variations of the third option: 4 - population would be
transferred to small camps in home communes (a proposal with increased logistical
problems and one which did not fit government policy); 5 - reorganize the camps
communes after closing smaller camps (chaotic and also does not meet government
policy with the additional prospect of new intimidation); 6. - population regrouped by
communes in 4 camps (same proems as above).
107

The source of the initiative and confusion over starting dates in the micromanagement of the operation was an immediate precipitating cause of the disaster. A
10 April agreement between Randolph Kent and the Minister set a start date of 18
April. The Prefer of Gikongoro and the local RPA agreed that camp closures would
begin 16 April without the elements agreed to between Kent and Minister on 10 April
meeting, that is, the coordination of the information plan in the communes and the
camps, increased security in both laces, and the presence of an enhanced justice
process. On 13 April, the RPA drove people by force out of a small satellite camp,
Kivu Gizza. That is when Kent sent his warning to UN headquarters, but he still
believed that the situation could be retrieved and the populations returned in a
peaceful and humane way. On 14 April, a UN strategy position paper was adopted,”
Resettlement of Internally Displaced Persons in Rwanda," spelling out a plan
insisting. on no rapid closure of camps, but an intensified information campaign plus
quick action to deal with security in home communes. This was read as simply
another delay and unwillingness of the UN and the NGOs to go along with the
government policy or the previous agreements to expedite rapid closing of the
camps. Between 15-16 April, an IOC team visited Gikongoro to outline a plan of
action with the Prefer and army commander. On 16 April, the Prefer and the IOC

97

agreed on a new start date of 24 April, with an end date set of l3 May. The Prefer
agreed to telephone the RPA commander on the new agreed date. Whether the
Prefet failed to communicate the message, or whether the RPA just saw this as a
new stall and breach of previous agreements by the UN, or whether the RPA
determined to take the initiative on its own, we do not know.
108

Randolph Kent, who headed UNREO, the coordinating body of DHA in Rwanda, in
a mid-April cable to headquarters warned that, "There may well be at the same time
serious pressures for public condemnations of any acts that are seen as overly
brutal," because "the IDP operation could put the UN in an embarrassing position,
one which will necessitate the distancing of UN agencies from possibly unacceptable
initiatives by the Government." The warning was given, not in order to allow the UN to
take steps to prevent anything happening, but so that the UN could be prepared to
explain what happened and to put it in a context for outsiders. "I hope any statement
will emphasize the complexity of the situation, including the security threat posed by
the present IDP camps."
109

Though the commencement of the RPA operation took the NGO and UN
community by surprise, it was evidently no surprise to the extremists who began
leaving the camp before the cordon could be drawn around the camp. It is estimated
that up to 20,000 of the hard core elements had fled the camp by 16 April.
110

There have been many suggestions in the aftermath second guessing the plan
that was developed. For example, it has been suggested that as the 24 camps were
closed earlier, Kibeho should have been surrounded to prevent the extremists fro m
consolidating in that camp. But surrounding a camp spread out over six hills would
have been extremely difficult if not impossible logistically. It would be akin to setting
up a closed military line around a city of 100-120,000 people. Alternatively,
consolidating the camp in a closer perimeter would have produced precisely the
same conditions as occurred on I8 April 1995. In fact, it is estimated that up to 20,000
extremists were able to escape from the camp before the cordon around the cam was
tightened. Similarly, options which suggest that the police (Rwanda already had an
acute shortage of police lice should have been used instead of the RPA, or that
UNAMIR II (it already had to cover the whole count and the border areas) should
have been the military body to implement the plan merely second guess those
closest to
e information and facts on the ground and fail to recognize the severity
of the security threat that Kibeho posed. This evaluation is not based on imaginary
counterfactual possibilities that the IOC should-have devised. The geographical and
human conditions were such that the options developed by the IOC were, in fact, the
only realistic ones.
111

The International Commission of Inquiry found that there were RPA deficiencies in
communications, equipment, training, experience, and an intelligence failure in
anticipating the reaction of the hard-core, but they did not add the fact that the RPA
unilaterally precipitated the closure without the gradualism provided for in the original
plan There was little evidence that the NGOs overtly tried to subvert the evacuation,
as the International Commission indicated. A representative of the government
indicated that one person from an NGO purportedly urged the camp population not to
comply with the government orders.

98
112

The government was ridden with rivalry among the Ministry of Rehabilitation and
Social Integration, the Defence Ministry and the Foreign Ministry, as well as between
Kigali and Gikongoro.
113
For as long as Kibeho was perceived to be a large security threat, no one else but
the RPA could have tackled Kibeho. If anyone else had, perhaps the up to 20,00
extremists who managed to escape the camp before the cordon was completed
would have stayed, and there would have been a two-sided war.
114

A highly placed MINIREISO official said that only one NGO purportedly urged the
camp population not to comply with government orders (Interview, Kigali August
1995).

REFERENCES
1. Interviews:
The team leaders (Adelman and Suhrke) interviewed officials of the following
organizations/agencies:
United Nations/New York
* The Secretariat, Department of Humanitarian Affairs, Department of Peacekeeping
Operations, Department of Political Affairs.
* The Security Council, national delegations or observers from: the United States,
France, Nigeria, New Zealand, Canada, Sweden, Norway
* UNDP, UNICEF, UNHCR
United Nations/Geneva
High Commissioner for Human Rights Center for Human Rights
Nation delegations to the Human Rights Commission of Finland and Norway UNHCR
DHA
United Nations/Kigali:
UNREO
United Nations /Nairobi:
UNHCR
OAU
The Conflict Resolution Division (Addis Ababa), ex-NMOG/Rwanda, OAU/Kigali
UNAMIR
Former Force Commander and Deputy Force Commander Members of the
diplomatic corps.. Kigali 1990-94: participants/observers at Arusha from:
Belgium, Canada, France, the United States, Tanzania, the Vatican, and the OAU.
EU/Commission. DG-VIII
NGOs
Medecins Sans Frontieres
Africa Watch
U.S. Committee for Refugees
ICRC Geneva
National Actors
The United States: U.S. Congress, Senate Foreign Relations Committee, National
Security Council, CIA, Department of State, Department of Defense

99

Canada:
Department of External Affair, CIDA
Tanzania:
Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Uganda:
Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Rwanda:
Office of the President, Office of the Vice-President, the Ministry of Rehabilitation, the
Secretariat of the RPF.

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DPKO:
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Special Rapporteur of the Commission on Human Rights, 25 May 1994.with add.
(E/CN.4/1994/7/Add.I, 11 August 1993;E/CN.4/I99570, I 1 November 1994;
EICN.4/I995/71, 17 January 1995 The General Assembly:
The General Assembly:
Administrative and Budgetary Aspects of the Financing of the United Nations PeaceKeeping Operation. Report of the Secretary-General. May 1994.
Financing of the United Nations Observer Mission Uganda-Rwanda. Financing of the
United Nations Assistance Mission of Rwanda. March 6 1995.
UNHCR:
95/FRS/A/04 (9 February 1995)
The Security Council:
,
Report of the Secretary-General on the Establishment of the Commission of Experts,
26 July 1994.
Second Report of the Secretary-General on Security in the Rwandese Refugee
Camps, 25 January 1995
The Security Council, Provisional Verbatic Records of Meetings: S/PV.3377(1994),
3368(1994)
Reports of the Secretary-General:
S/1993/25810, S/1993/26488, S/1993/26927, S/1994/360, S/1994/565, S/1994/640,
S/1994/470
Letters from the Secretary-General to the Security Council: April 13,1994;
S/1994/518,1994, S/1994/518
Letters from member states to the Security Council: 4 March 1993(from Rwanda), 13
April 1994(from Belgium), S/1994/531, S/1994/552, S/1994/553, S/1994/586,
S/1994/648.
Statements by the President of Security Council:S/PRST/1993/264, S/PRST/1994/21,
S/PRST/1994/21.
Resolutions of the Security Council: 812(1993), 846(I993), 872(1993), 891(1993),
draft res.S/25981(1993), 912(1994), 918(1994), 925(1994).
Statements by the
(1994),SG/SM/5292.

Secretary-General:

SG/SM/5280

(1994),SG/SM/5289

107

Issued as UN Documents: The Arusha Accords, 1993. Status of Forces Agreements
between the United Nations, Rwanda and (for UNOMUR) Uganda, 1993.

C: Other official documents
France:
Operation Turquoise, Rwanda, June 22 - August 22. Briefing paper.
Rwanda:
Letter from the President to M. Bonifaca Ngulinzira, Miniser of Foreign Affairs and
Cooperation, Kigali (26 December 1992).
Letter from the Prime Minister to the Minister of Defense. "Distribution illegale des
armes h la population civile." Kigali (25 Mars 1993).
Mission Permanente de la Republique Rwandaise Aupres des Nations Unies.
"Allocation Prononcee par son excellence le General-Major Habyarimana Juvenal,
President de la Republique Rwandaise devant la 48eme session de l'Assemblee
General des Nations Unies." New York (6 October 1993).
"Discours Prononcé par le President de la Republique a l'occasion de la presentation
du programme gouvernemental pour le mandat 1989-1994. Kigali, January 15, 1989.
Rwandese Patriotic Front. Press Releases: November 1991; March, August, October,
November 1992; March 1993; April 1994.
Republique Rwandaise Services du Premier Ministre, Comite de Crise pour les
Deplaces de Guerre. "Evaluation des besoins des deplaces de guerre du Rwanda."
Dossiers Preparatoires. Kigali (April 1993).
Rwandese Patriotic Front. "Repatriation of Rwandese Refugees and Assistance to
War Displaced Persons in Rwanda." Rwandese Patriotic Front statement to the 44th
session of the Executive Committee of UNHCR, October 4-8,1993.
Service National de Recensement, Republique Rwandaise. "Recensement General
de la population et de (habitat au 15 Aout 1991."July 1993.
U.S. Congress (1995) Hearings on the Crises in Rwanda and Burundi. Subcommittee
on Africa. Committee on International Relations, U.S. House of Representatives,
April.
-------- (1992). Somalia and the Question of U.S Intervention. A Staff Report to the
Committee on Foreign Relations, U.S. Senate.
U.S. National Security Council, (1994).The Clinton Administration's Policy on
Reforming Multilateral Peace Operations, Washington, D.C.: May.
D: Newspapers and periodicals
Africa Confidential (1994) Africa International (1994)
CBC Radio Reports (1994)
Jeune Afrique (1994)

108

Liberation (1994)
International Herald Tribune (1994) Le Monde (1994)
London Times (1994) New York Times (1994) Reuters (1994)
The Economist (1994) Toronto Star (1994, 1995) Washington Post (1994)

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