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- <text id=94TT1015>
- <link 94TO0172>
- <title>
- Aug. 01, 1994: Cover:Rwanda:Cry the Forsaken Country
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Aug. 01, 1994 This is the beginning...:Rwanda/Zaire
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- RWANDA, Page 28
- Cry the Forsaken Country
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> For more than 2 million refugees, hunger and disease take up
- where a vicious war left off
- </p>
- <p>By Nancy Gibbs--Reported by Bruce Crumley/Paris, Marguerite Michaels/Kigali
- and Andrew Purvis/Goma
- </p>
- <p> In the Munigi cholera camp in northeastern Zaire, the very ground
- is infected by the dying. Nurse Isabel Subiros, wearing jeans
- and pink rubber gloves, steps carefully around the contaminated
- diarrhea and vomit and bloody needles. She accidentally pricked
- herself this morning. She tries not to think about it, or anything
- that is happening around her. "It is best just to work," she
- says.
- </p>
- <p> She bends over a teenage girl dressed only in a red knit sweater,
- a shrapnel wound on the back of her leg reeking of gangrene.
- Her name is Faida, her eyes are empty, waterless like the rest
- of her body, and Isabel can not find a vein to insert the intravenous
- tube that could save her. "The blood vessels close down as they
- are dying," she explains, failing to find a vein on one arm
- and trying the other. The girl resists: "Leave me alone." Isabel
- withdraws. "This one wants to die," she says, and the wound
- will kill her anyway.
- </p>
- <p> The worst part of the triage is knowing that most of the sick
- never make it close enough to the medical tents to stand a chance.
- The refugees of Rwanda's civil war stretch for miles in every
- direction, building what are fast becoming death camps. The
- old, the young and the weak drop where they are. "You have to
- choose," says the young nurse, turning away from an older man
- crying out for help. There are always more voices, pleading
- with her, pulling at her legs. "You can't get to everybody."
- </p>
- <p> Until last week, the world did not get to everybody either.
- It certainly did not get to Rwanda, a country so infected by
- tribal hate and civil war that it seemed beyond saving. Three
- months of fighting between followers of the majority Hutu government
- and the mainly Tutsi rebels of the Rwandan Patriotic Front (R.P.F.)
- left at least 500,000 dead. Most of the victims were Tutsi civilians
- slaughtered by Hutu militiamen. Of those who survived the genocide,
- at least 2.2 million have fled the country, including a million
- Hutu refugees who pushed northwest into the Zaire town of Goma
- in just five days last week. Meanwhile, hundreds of thousands
- of earlier refugees, Hutu and Tutsi alike, languish in camps
- across the eastern border in Tanzania and across the southern
- border in Burundi. If the exodus continues, half the country's
- population of 7.5 million will soon have died or dispersed.
- </p>
- <p> That finally propelled President Clinton to action. Since the
- beginning of April the U.S. has contributed just over $150 million
- in aid to Rwanda but stoutly resisted leading a full-scale relief
- effort. On Friday Clinton ordered a round-the-clock airlift
- of food, water and medicine and dispatched the first of what
- could soon be up to 4,000 soldiers to distribute it throughout
- the border regions. The President was moved, he said, by the
- reports that Rwandans in the camps were dying at the rate of
- one a minute. "In the days to come," said the President, "as
- Americans see this heartbreaking, unfolding tragedy, the suffering
- must not only touch our hearts, it must move us as a nation
- to take the practical actions that this crisis demands."
- </p>
- <p> Meanwhile, at the U.N., Secretary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali
- was revising his figures upward as he urged a massive relief
- effort. The early estimate was $274 million, but "at this very
- moment, as I am speaking," he said on Friday, "Rwanda's needs
- are constantly growing." He put the new figure at $434 million,
- but who could precisely calculate the cost of a catastrophe
- that kept growing? That same day, U.N. relief agencies were
- busy redrawing their maps after 200,000 more refugees crossed
- the northwest frontier into Zaire in just 24 hours.
- </p>
- <p> They came like pallbearers, carrying everything from sweet potatoes
- to sofas in the naive hope that things of value would not be
- stolen by soldiers or bandits along the way. By last week, when
- the R.P.F. declared victory and installed a new multi-ethnic
- government, Rwanda had become "a nation without people," said
- Panos Moumtzis, spokesman for the U.N. High Commissioner for
- Refugees. "The whole country is coming out of its borders."
- Unless the refugees can be persuaded to return, to harvest the
- crops now rotting in the fields and rebuild the schools and
- hospitals out of the rubble, disease and starvation will exact
- a toll that even the most savage soldiers could not.
- </p>
- <p> Madness spreads like an eager germ through the camps that have
- doubled, then doubled again in size. Between the town of Goma
- and the airport, a woman dances naked down the highway, cursing
- at the listless crowds and at the corpses lying on mats by the
- roadside. A man at the edge of a mass grave laughs in delight
- when he manages to toss the lifeless body of a child squarely
- into the middle of the burial pit. A team of laborers is moving
- bodies from a field to the trucks nearby, when a young man lying
- among the corpses rolls over. "Get up! Get out of there!" yells
- the gravedigger. But the man wants to stay. He figures he will
- end up in the improvised graveyard one way or another.
- </p>
- <p> "This is the beginning of the final days," declares Deogracias
- Bivunde, who watched at least 40 refugees be trampled in a stampede
- by his home outside Goma. "This is the apocalypse." Two weeks
- ago Goma was a quiet place on the shores of a lovely lake, tucked
- amid banana groves and thick woodlands in the shadow of a spectacular
- volcano that lit the northern sky at night. The town was home
- to 80,000 residents; now it has more than a million sick and
- starving newcomers. Outside the airport, a sign extols The Pleasure
- of Traveling.
- </p>
- <p> They camp on doorsteps, in schoolyards, in cemeteries, in fields
- so crowded that people sleep standing up. Men and women search
- for fresh water only to find a thick, slimy brew so fouled by
- human waste that it does more to spread disease than quench
- thirst. For miles around, the trees have been disappearing,
- fed into pitiful cooking fires. If the refugees could burn corpses,
- there would be fuel enough for weeks.
- </p>
- <p> Cholera is proving more efficient than carbines. It kills in
- hours, draining the body of fluid so fast that nurses without
- equipment for transfusions cannot rehydrate victims in time.
- Along the roadways and in the camps it has become hard to tell
- the sleeping from the dead until the bodies swell up in the
- tropical sun. Refugees wrap their faces in scarves and rags
- and surgical masks, hoping to filter the stench from the rotting
- bodies everywhere.
- </p>
- <p> The Munigi camp is about six miles up the road from Goma. Two
- relief workers lift a girl in a pretty turquoise dress and feel
- her neck for a pulse. Finding none, they carry her over to the
- pile of corpses, which they will douse in chlorine to disinfect
- them. But as they put her down, her head turns. Quickly they
- take her back to the tent where they are treating victims, but
- do not bother to set up an IV. She is too sick to save, the
- workers explained. "But she's moving," says one, "so you can't
- just leave her with the dead."
- </p>
- <p> A woman at the camp gave birth four weeks prematurely. Early
- the next morning the mother seemed alert as a nurse set up a
- drip to treat her cholera; but she continued to bleed, and died
- before noon. Her husband arose and left, and the baby, still
- caked with blood, was left alone on the mat. "Without breast-feeding
- she is going to die," said one relief worker, swaddling the
- baby in a cloth wrap and leaving her in a cardboard box in the
- corner of a tent.
- </p>
- <p> The hunger and the sickness conspire to kill as many as possible,
- but the hate still works as well. Hutu continue to attack Tutsi
- in the Goma camps. These bodies are different--not passive,
- wasting corpses, but twisted wrecks of crushed skulls and flaking
- blood. A Tutsi woman is accused of brewing poison tea and giving
- it to 60 Rwandan soldiers, killing them all. She is beaten to
- death. One group of Hutu fall upon a Tutsi man along the road
- to the airport, beat him senseless, then lay him on his stomach
- and stomp on his spine until it snaps. No one bothers to cover
- his body. There is no time to count the dead, much less bury
- all of them.
- </p>
- <p> Everywhere are the children, alone and terrified. At a camp
- west of Goma, Adrien Ntahobari, 12, sits with his niece Florinne,
- 6. They sob together. "I lost my mother. I don't know where
- she is," says the boy. The day before, the children had wandered
- for hours through the vast crowds looking for her in vain. They
- returned at nightfall to sleep in the open, curled up together
- in Adrien's oversize sweater. "I am hungry and my head is hurting,"
- he says, wiping flies from his swollen eyes. Neither child has
- eaten in two days, and Adrien is running a high fever, probably
- from malaria.
- </p>
- <p> At the Ndosho orphanage nine miles outside of Goma, they hang
- onto the clothes of any adult in sight, and when night falls
- and the air grows cold, they cry for their mothers. "You hold
- them and they don't want to let you go," says Julienne Mukeba,
- 24, a law student from Kinshasa who is volunteering at the camp.
- They arrive by the hundreds, some orphaned, some wrenched from
- their parents during the crush at the border crossing, some
- abandoned by the starving. Many are too young to tell their
- stories; the staff make up names. And many don't last long.
- "Our morgue is filled with babies," said Dr. Nimet Lalani. "We've
- lost them all."
- </p>
- <p> Sylvestre Gasigwa, 14, lost both parents and three brothers
- in last week's rush. Tears run down his face as he clutches
- a bloody wound on the crown of his head, where another child
- had struck him with a rock in a fight over food. "The food is
- not enough," he says. "I want to go home." And still there is
- no safety. Early last week relief workers spotted a Hutu soldier
- going from tent to tent with a grenade in his hand, looking
- for Tutsi children to kill.
- </p>
- <p> So great an exodus could only have been born of an epic betrayal.
- Western governments and relief officials lob charges back and
- forth; if a few hundred paratroopers had dropped into Rwanda's
- civil war last April, says a high-ranking U.N. official, all
- of this could have been avoided. Now the fighting has stopped,
- and the needy are outside the war zone, but where is the food,
- the medicine, the will to save? Analysts decried the seeming
- indifference of the international community, exhausted by "compassion
- fatigue" from missions in Somalia and Ethiopia and Bosnia.
- </p>
- <p> But the greater betrayal lay closer to home. During the last
- weeks of fighting, the Tutsi rebels chased the Hutu army west,
- pushing more than a million refugees ahead of them. The Hutu
- leaders hid in the safe haven set up more than a month ago by
- French forces sent to provide humanitarian relief. Once protected,
- the defeated despots kept broadcasting messages of hate and
- revenge over Radio Milles Collines, warning their countrymen
- to flee or be killed.
- </p>
- <p> Theirs was a brutal strategy of sacrifice; the idea was to cede
- the land but take the people with them. "The only power remaining
- in their hands was the population," said one veteran aid worker.
- "This was why they created the panic." A mass of refugees would
- pressure the world community to intervene, and show that while
- the R.P.F. may have won, it had no country left to govern. "It
- is the former ((Hutu)) government that killed half a million
- Tutsi," says Nigel Fisher, the UNICEF representative for Rwanda,
- "and then instilled fear in its own people: `You better escape
- because the Tutsi will kill you in revenge, and if you don't
- escape, then you're a traitor and we'll kill you.'"
- </p>
- <p> The deadly message did its work. Up and down the rows of refugees
- in Goma, they tell the same stories, share the same fears. The
- moderate Hutu members of the new government are traitors and
- terrorists. Tutsi promises of peace are not to be trusted. "They
- want to govern us from on top, like they did for 400 years,"
- argues Emmanuel Zabandora, 33, a former professor of physical
- education in Rwanda's capital, Kigali. "The R.P.F. will govern
- without a people. They want to live alone." Hutu refugees stand
- at a mass grave, watching their neighbors being buried by French
- bulldozers near a banana grove. "It was the Tutsi who poisoned
- our food," one declares. "We bought it by the side of the road,
- and now we are dying. God will judge this."
- </p>
- <p> At a run-down hotel in the center of Goma, some former Hutu
- government ministers are holed up, plotting. Jerome Bicamumpaka,
- a Brussels-trained economist, joined the government after the
- assassination of President Juvenal Habyarimana. "We are their
- government," he says. "Of course they will follow their government.
- I could live in Nairobi or Paris. But I will stay here because
- this is where my people are." He repeats the warning of R.P.F.
- reprisals. "If the French leave, there will be no protection,"
- he says. He asserts his right to spread panic and fuel the exodus.
- "You cannot oblige us not to talk. It is freedom of the press."
- </p>
- <p> In fact, relief officials counter, the Tutsi victors showed
- great restraint in their conduct of the four-year civil war
- and their prescriptions for peace. "The one remarkable thing
- that we've seen is enormous discipline by the R.P.F. and the
- Tutsi who have stayed inside Rwanda," says Peter McDermott,
- senior emergency officer at UNICEF. In a gesture of reconciliation
- last week, the R.P.F. named moderate Hutu as President and Prime
- Minister, though the real power seems to be in the hands of
- R.P.F. General, and now Vice President, Paul Kagame, who masterminded
- the military victory. More than half the government posts went
- to non-R.P.F. members.
- </p>
- <p> "Politically the R.P.F. has no interest in seeking reprisals,"
- comments Jose Kagabo, a specialist on East Africa at the Ecole
- des Hautes Etudes in Paris. "It has already fought its war,
- and now seeks to prove that it was right--giving it greater
- moral and political authority. That makes national reconciliation
- a must, and I think you'll be seeing Hutu members and supporters
- of the government traveling to refugee camps soon to ask Rwandans
- to return home."
- </p>
- <p> Tutsi leaders did call on the French to arrest members of the
- old Hutu government who had escaped by helicopter into the safe
- haven, so they could be charged with war crimes. But the French,
- who had long propped up Habyarimana's regime, refused to turn
- on their former allies, saying that they were waiting for U.N.
- guidelines on how to handle war criminals. "All the criminals
- are now outside the country in the camps," an aid worker contended.
- "And you can bet the R.P.F. is going to screen them all before
- they are let back in."
- </p>
- <p> Many Hutu leaders only grow more belligerent in defeat. "We
- will reattack, and we will win this time," vows former Cabinet
- Minister Bicamumpaka. "It might take one month, three months,
- six months, but we will arrive in Kigali." Such continued resolve
- only confirms the views of some U.N. officials that casting
- the refugees purely as victims suggests a lack of moral memory.
- "These are the people responsible for most of the murders,"
- says one official in Nairobi. "Yes, we have to feed them. But
- we also have to pursue justice. I can still smell all the bodies
- in Kigali. Imagine these killers now as helpless victims. It's
- obscene."
- </p>
- <p> In fact the refugees include both the swaggering remnants of
- the Hutu army and the civilians, Hutu and Tutsi alike, on whom
- the armed men prey. Many Hutu militiamen were renegades, their
- drinking and raping and viciousness tolerated by army officers.
- As relief workers struggled to get food to the spreading camps,
- the Hutu, equipped with cars and radios, kept track of where
- the next food distribution would occur and raced to get there
- first. The militia, many of them drunk or stoned on marijuana,
- stopped convoys to demand bribes and a portion of the supplies,
- wildly firing their weapons.
- </p>
- <p> The most determined fighters in the camps are the medical commandos
- of the International Red Cross and Doctors Without Borders,
- the French relief agency that dispatches physicians and instant
- field hospitals to the world's most vicious war zones. They
- are fighting the spread of one killer after another: cholera,
- dysentery, measles, even, some U.N. workers fear, bubonic plague.
- </p>
- <p> On Wednesday the first confirmed case of cholera appeared; within
- 24 hours 800 people were dead; then it became too hard to keep
- count. Aid workers set up isolation tents to control the epidemic,
- but know they cannot. Every minute another patient arrives,
- calling for help, for water, and then giving up and settling
- helplessly on the ground, staring at the few workers who bustle
- around. At the rate the disease is spreading, between 7,000
- and 70,000 are almost certain to die in coming days. "I've never
- seen anything like it," said Dr. Koen Henckaerts. "But then
- I haven't seen a million refugees either."
- </p>
- <p> It would take an extra million gallons of purified water a day
- just to counter the dehydration. Last week about 50,000 gallons
- a day were arriving. The volcanic soil around the camps is so
- hard it is impossible to drill new wells or dig latrines without
- heavy mechanical equipment, which is still days away. "What
- do you mean, I must make sure to boil the water?" refugee Dafrose
- Kabutumwa asked a reporter. "Can't you see we're all going to
- die here?"
- </p>
- <p> Even if the doctors manage to treat the diseases, survivors
- need to be fed and sheltered. Goma alone requires 600 metric
- tons of food a day, 1 million blankets, 200,000 rolls of plastic
- sheeting, 200,000 jerricans, 80 water tankers and 90 to 100
- trucks to carry food the 497 miles from the Ugandan capital
- of Entebbe--and these numbers are sure to grow. When the Red
- Cross began its food distribution, a child was trampled when
- the crowd, desperate that there would not be enough to go around,
- surged forward. "If it runs out, or if it doesn't arrive soon
- enough, the violence will follow," warns Red Cross worker Nina
- Winquist, "and then it is always the weakest who lose out."
- </p>
- <p> The World Food Program was able to fly four loaded planes into
- Goma during the first desperate weekend. But two more relief
- planes were turned back because of mortar fire, and, unimaginably,
- a strike by Zaire air traffic controllers arguing with the French
- over who had responsibility for running the airport. Zairian
- officials were demanding bribes for landing rights, and blocked
- some relief flights so that commercial planes could continue
- to use the airport.
- </p>
- <p> Relief officials all agree the only real hope for the Rwandan
- people is for them to return to their country, retrieve their
- farms and rebuild their homes and their lives. "The longer the
- refugees stay here, the more explosive it becomes," says the
- World Food Program's Daan Everts. "It's like a time bomb. The
- exodus has to be undone." The newly installed government called
- for all refugees to come home and promised that no revenge would
- be sought on the civilian population. "I'm not interested in
- leading a country that is considered a desert," Prime Minister
- Faustin Twagiramungu declared. He has only to look around his
- capital to see the scale of the problem. There is no electricity,
- no water, no telephones, only soldiers and guns and checkpoints.
- Even his four little children, who fled with him to Brussels
- two months ago, do not want to come back.
- </p>
- <p> Triggering a mass return will take more than words of reassurance
- from the new leaders. It is too much to ask a country to forget
- a holocaust; it will require international assistance sufficient
- to overpower the memory of what has already occurred. But the
- terrible images of disease and death will fade fast from the
- world's attention, erased by the next catastrophe. Once that
- happens, those Rwandans who did not die in the war will not
- necessarily have much hope of surviving the peace.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-