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- <text id=94TT0770>
- <title>
- Jun. 13, 1994: Rwanda:All the Hatred In the World
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Jun. 13, 1994 Korean Conflict
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- RWANDA, Page 36
- All the Hatred In the World
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> As Tutsi rebels pursue their fast-moving offensive, they find
- they are taking over a once populous country that is now both
- deserted and embittered
- </p>
- <p>By Andrew Purvis/Nyarubuye
- </p>
- <p> The miasma of death hangs over the village of Nyarubuye, overpowering
- the scent of the surrounding eucalyptus trees. Their leaves,
- rustling in the wind, are all that moves. In the cool of the
- parish church, a body lies between the rough wooden pews, its
- skull split from crown to forehead by a machete blade. Outside,
- a mother and child, caught from behind by screaming Hutu militia,
- lie face down in the flowers, locked in a pitiful final embrace.
- Farther away, in a low mission building, 400 more bodies are
- piled on one another, the rooms thick with the stench of rotting
- flesh. One woman and her baby tried to hide in a small pit toilet;
- they were discovered and hacked to death. "How can I come back
- here?" exclaims Consolata Mukatwagirimana, a young Tutsi woman
- of 27 who escaped the massacre six weeks ago that may have left
- 1,500 dead here and in the surrounding hills. "My family is
- gone; our neighbors are dead; there is nothing left."
- </p>
- <p> For the predominately Tutsi rebel movement that now seems destined
- to form the next government of bloodstained Rwanda, that is
- a haunting lament. As they press their advantage against government
- troops and murderous Hutu militia, the rebels of the Rwandese
- Patriotic Front are beginning to realize how little of their
- tiny Central African homeland will be left for them if and when
- the R.P.F. takes control. Mile upon mile of terraced hillsides
- and thatch-roofed villages lies deserted. The reek of decomposing
- bodies and packs of well-fed dogs serve as the only reminders
- that this was once one of the most populous regions on earth.
- </p>
- <p> After two months of bloodletting, hundreds of thousands of Rwandans
- have fled to neighboring countries--some to escape the butchery;
- others, including Hutu who joined in the killing, fearing retribution
- from the rebels. Up to 2 million more have jammed into camps
- within Rwanda, seeking safety in numbers. Most are in government-held
- territory in the western and southwestern parts of the country,
- out of reach of aid agencies and at severe risk for epidemics
- and starvation. United Nations peacekeepers, deployed in the
- once picturesque capital of Kigali now being shelled into a
- sprawling ruin, concede they are powerless to intervene: last
- week the diminutive force was twice compelled to suspend humanitarian
- operations after its vehicles came under heavy fire.
- </p>
- <p> By one estimate, more than half of Rwanda's 7.5 million population
- has been killed or displaced since April, and that number is
- growing daily as massacres continue in government-held territories.
- "Our people have been totally traumatized," says rebel Captain
- Richard Matsiko, a medical doctor treating massacre victims
- behind the front lines. "Children who could talk, laugh and
- entertain are just blank. They don't know what has happened
- to them."
- </p>
- <p> For the estimated 15,000 to 20,000 soldiers of the R.P.F., it
- has been a bitter homecoming. Many were born or have lived most
- of their life in exile, their families driven from the former
- Belgian colony after the Hutu ousted the Tutsi elite from power
- in 1959. In neighboring Burundi, Tanzania, Zaire and Uganda,
- they suffered the indignities of the stateless: scapegoats for
- the political crises of the day. Through it all, the exiles
- saw their homeland as a mythical country of verdant hillsides
- and crystal lakes, whose people and terrain they could glimpse
- only in textbooks. "I didn't know much about Rwanda," recalls
- rebel leader Paul Kagame, 37, in a rare quiet moment on the
- outskirts of Kigali last week. "But I knew it was my country."
- </p>
- <p> Now, after nearly four years of marking their victories in inches--in 1990 a single government soldier killed was cause for
- celebration--Kagame's forces have taken well over half the
- country in just two months. Last week they pressed their offensive
- into Kigali and the southwest, relentlessly shelling Rwandan
- army positions and closing in on the seat of the interim government
- in Gitarama, 25 miles southwest of Kigali. Army troops, their
- morale plummeting, have yet to launch a single counterattack.
- Despite ongoing cease-fire talks in the capital, the rebels
- are unlikely to call a halt to the fighting before the government
- has been routed and the massacres stopped.
- </p>
- <p> Yet with each advance, the true extent of the country's destruction
- comes more sharply into focus. Late last week rebels seized
- the town of Kabgayi, releasing up to 20,000 Tutsi who had been
- held captive by government soldiers. At one camp, a local priest
- reported that 50 Tutsi were dying each day, some taken out and
- killed under cover of darkness by Hutu militia, others dying
- from untreated bullet and machete wounds. "Our people have too
- much hatred," rebel soldier Patrick Kayilanga, 24, said last
- week in Kigali. When rebels took the city's main airport recently,
- Kayilanga discovered that both his parents and 10 brothers and
- sisters had been massacred. Now, he says, he is making plans
- to emigrate to Canada: "Rwanda is a tiny place. But we have
- all the hatred in the world."
- </p>
- <p> The R.P.F. leadership is only too aware that a military victory
- alone will not bring lasting peace to their homeland. Despite
- a number of moderate Hutu in their ranks, theirs is still seen
- as a Tutsi movement, representing an ethnic minority that even
- before the latest massacres made up just 15% of the population.
- Hundreds of thousands of Hutu who have fled the rebel advance
- to neighboring countries must be convinced that they can return
- home without threat of retribution.
- </p>
- <p> To persuade them, R.P.F. leaders talk of prosecuting only the
- ringleaders--the "burgomasters" and government officials whose
- orders triggered the massacres. Many of the militia were acting
- only on threat of death and should be shown clemency, they say.
- "These people have been taught to hate, taught to kill," asserted
- Kagame. "They can be re-educated."
- </p>
- <p> But that magnanimous message has been undercut by reports of
- rebels killing the Hutu as they flee the country. In the huge
- camps of northwestern Tanzania, a number of refugees are telling
- stories of massacres that they claim are committed by the R.P.F.
- Those tales are difficult to confirm--and the rebels argue
- that they have been planted by militia in the camps as a way
- of deflecting blame from their own misdeeds--but the effect
- is the same. The Tutsi have a long way to go before convincing
- all Hutu that their intentions are genuine and that the cycle
- of death will not continue.
- </p>
- <p> More difficult still will be quelling the anger of the Tutsi,
- who have doubtless suffered most from Rwanda's carnage. Some,
- like Consolata Mukatwagirimana in the village of Nyarubuye,
- are resigned. "The Hutu are there," she said last week. "You
- can't do anything about them. You can't kill them all."
- </p>
- <p> But others still harbor a fierce hostility toward their attackers.
- In the rebel-held town of Gahini, Rayontina Mukansonera, 19,
- describes being raped repeatedly by Hutu militia before escaping
- in the confusion following the rebel advance. "They showed no
- mercy," she says, matter-of-factly. "Someone who destroys your
- life deserves to die also." For the R.P.F., healing the ethnic
- wounds of this brutal war will take more than words alone.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-