Rwanda, Burundi and the assassination of three Hutu presidents

by Ann Garrison

KPFA Weekend News broadcast April 9, 2016

The Rwandan Genocide is commemorated in Rwanda and at the United Nations as “the Genocide against the Tutsi.” However, it was preceded by the assassination of three Hutu presidents and by the massacre of hundreds of thousands of Hutu civilians in Burundi. There is also ample evidence that hundreds of thousands of Hutus, as well as Tutsis, died in the Rwandan massacres.

Transcript

Melchior-Ndadaye, Rwanda, Burundi and the assassination of three Hutu presidents, World News & Views
Melchior Ndadaye, Burundi’s first elected president and the first Hutu president, was assassinated by the country’s Tutsi army on Oct. 21, 1993.

KPFA Weekend News Anchor Loula Acanmu: April 6 marked the 22nd anniversary of the assassination of Rwandan President Juvenal Habyarimana and Burundian President Cyprien Ntaryamira. The assassinations were widely believed to have triggered the ethnic bloodletting known as the Rwandan Genocide.

In Rwanda, the event is officially “the genocide Against the Tutsi,” despite evidence that hundreds of thousands of Hutu people also died. Tutsi governments in Rwanda and Burundi have been allies of the West, and Western officialdom has therefore found it convenient to identify Rwanda and Burundi’s Tutsis as the victims in both countries.

KPFA’s Ann Garrison spoke to Burundian American Le Beni Tazira, whose voice is frequently heard on CIUT-Toronto’s Taylor Report.

KPFA/Ann Garrison: Le Beni, April 6 was the 22nd anniversary of the assassination of two Hutu presidents, Rwanda’s Juvenal Habyarimana and Burundi’s Cyprien Ntaryamira. Can you tell us about the significance of this event in the region’s history?

Le Beni Tazira; Yes, I can, but as a Burundian, I can give it more on the angle coming from a Burundian. What we saw was not just assassination of Cyprien Ntaryamira, because a few months before, another Hutu president, Melchior Ndadaye, was also assassinated. So, to Burundi, it was a second hit. And we know very much what happened after the first – chaos all over Burundi.

And in neighboring Rwanda, the people there had seen what happened in Burundi with the killing of Ndadaye and they were watching closely. Remember we’re very close neighbors. When someone shouts from one country, you can hear him in the other country. And so, by the time the plane was gunned down in Kigali, I think the population reacted even more aggressively than in Burundi.

Rwandan-Pres.-Habyarimana-Burundian-Pres.-Ntaryamira-plane-shot-down-Kigali-040694-graphic, Rwanda, Burundi and the assassination of three Hutu presidents, World News & Views
Rwandan President Juvenal Habyarimana and Burundian President Cyprien Ntaryamira were both assassinated when Habyarimana’s plane was shot out of the sky over Kigali, Rwanda, on April 6, 1994. Both were members of their countries’ Hutu majorities. No one has ever been prosecuted for the crime.

And so, it wasn’t just a plane that was shot down on that specific date. I think it was some history before that, where the killing of Melchior Ndadaye, another Hutu president, caused a lot of insecurity in the region.

KPFA: OK, that was Oct. 21, 1993, …

Tazira: Yes.

KPFA: … about six months before the assassination of the two Hutu presidents in Rwanda, the Rwandan president and the Burundian president who had succeeded the assassinated Burundian President Melchior Ndadaye.

Tazira: Yes, and here’s how the region looked like. In Burundi, President Melchior Ndadaye was assassinated by Buyoya’s Tutsi military. Buyoya was the previous president, and he had a military that was 100 percent Tutsi.

They came to his (Ndadaye’s) house one night and killed him – and killed most of his government. And a few survived and were able to create a rebellion.

But next door in Rwanda, they were in the middle of a war against a Tutsi rebellion. And so I believe the Rwandans were watching Burundians, what’s going on. Once they killed the president, you had a lot of destabilization. Then you had military going into our villages and just massacring people.

Rwanda-Burundi-map-2, Rwanda, Burundi and the assassination of three Hutu presidents, World News & Views And so you had so many hundreds of thousands … we had up to 1.5 million refugees going into Tanzania, in Congo, in Rwanda. And so the Rwandese saw that happen in Burundi and how ruthless the military had been on the people.

KPFA: Rwandans had seen first the assassination of a Hutu president, followed by the massacre of hundreds of thousands of Hutus and hundreds of thousands of Hutu refugees fleeing into Rwanda, Tanzania, Congo.

Tazira: Yes. Actually it was up to 1.5 million. After that you had the downing of their own president. So that was actually the beginning of the whole region blowing up.

KPFA: And that was Burundian American commentator Le Beni Tazira.

The assassination of three Hutu presidents posed an existential threat to Rwandan and Burundian Hutus, much as an assassination of President Obama, were such an event to occur, would pose an existential threat to Black Americans, whether they are among the current president’s admirers or not.

As the African Great Lakes Region, in Tazira’s words, “blew up,” hundreds of thousands died in the Rwandan Genocide. Two million Rwandan Hutus fled into the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Rwanda, Uganda and Burundi invaded the Congo, and millions of refugees and Congolese people died in the ensuing Congo Wars. And Congo’s immense resources were ruthlessly plundered.  At the same time, Burundi suffered a brutal civil war from 1993 to 2005.

In Berkeley, for Pacifica, KPFA and AfrobeatRadio, I’m Ann Garrison.

Oakland writer Ann Garrison writes for the San Francisco Bay View, Black Agenda Report, Black Star News, Counterpunch and her own website, Ann Garrison, and produces for AfrobeatRadio on WBAI-NYC, KPFA Evening News, KPFA Flashpoints and for her own YouTube Channel, AnnieGetYourGang. She can be reached at anniegarrison@gmail.com. In March 2014 she was awarded the Victoire Ingabire Umuhoza Democracy and Peace Prize for promoting peace in the Great Lakes Region of Africa through her reporting.