Fiche du document numéro 26899

Num
26899
Date
Tuesday July 12, 1994
Amj
Auteur
Fichier
Taille
16441
Pages
2
Surtitre
INTERNATIONAL
Titre
10,000 died in one day of massacre French soldiers find mass graves where the Tutsis had taken refuge
Soustitre
By John Kampfner in Kibuye
Tres
 
Page
 
Lieu cité
Lieu cité
Mot-clé
Cote
 
Résumé
French troops in Rwanda have discovered the massacre of around 7,000 Tutsi massacred in a football stadium. A nearby pit would contain 3,000 bodies. This discovery leaves the French in a terrible dilemma as their 800 men in Kibuye found themselves defending the predominantly Hutu population, whose forces carried out the massacre.
Source
Extrait de
 
Commentaire
 
Type
Article de journal
Langue
EN
Declassification
 
Citation
FRENCH troops in Rwanda have discovered the mass grave of about 7,000 massacred Tutsis in a football stadium. A nearby pit is thought to hold 3,000 bodies. Military sources say the victims were slaughtered in the stadium and a nearby church before local people were ordered to bury them with their bare hands. Even for members of France's special forces, who have made Kibuye one of their three forward posts since intervening in the civil war three weeks ago, the discoveries were harrowing. They chose the stadium as a base because it was easy to defend. They came across the largest grave last Saturday when their vehicles disturbed the turf. Perched on top of rolling hills overlooking Lake Kivu, Kibuye is a picturesque place, but on one day in April, it became a slaughterhouse. About 7,000Tutsis,Rwanda's minority tribe, were herded intothe stadium, kept there for three days and mown down with unspeakable brutality.A mile away, in the church of St Jean, another 3,000 Tutsis took refuge. Nowonly the stench of rotting flesh and the odd bone protruding from the groundtestifies to their existence. According to the few Hutus who have risked theirlives to speak of the events of April 17, the Rwandan government's Interahamwemilitia locked the Tutsis in a stadium stand and fired rocket-propelled grenadesat them from a nearby hill. Those who survived the bombardment were finished offwith machetes. Local people were then told to dig a pit, throw the corpses inand cover them with soil. The massacre was carefully planned. Children weretaken from the Gatwaro primary school a few yards away. Their textbooks arestill there, still open. The murderers never expected the graves to be opened,and the discovery leaves the French in a terrible dilemma. Their 800 men inKibuye have found themselves defending the majority Hutu population, whoseforces carried out the slaughter, and many others across the country in which atleast half of Rwanda's one million Tutsis have been killed. Now the Hutus are onthe run everywhere. Their militia could gun or chop down innocent civilians, buton the battlefield they have been beaten by the small but well-trained RwandanPatriotic Front. It is now a matter of days before the Tutsi-dominated RPF,which holds two thirds of Rwanda's territory, completes its victory. Still, itwill be difficult to bring any of the butchers to justice. Almost everyone in Kibuye tries to deny anything happened there. Frora Hawandime, 17, was walking across the mass grave, stepping on human bones gnawed by dogs and covered with flies. The smell was overpowering. What was under the ground, I asked him, pointing to the bones and the burnt clothes. "Nothing," he said, before adding: "There are only Hutus in there. The Tutsis killed them and ran away." He then rushed off. The scene at the Roman Catholic church was more gruesome. The altarhad been replaced but all around it were bloodstains the Hutus could not concealwith a lick of paint. The corrugated iron roof was still speckled with bulletholes. The circular stained-glass windows had been blown out. A seminarist, theonly Hutu I found who showed a hint of remorse, explained what had happened. TheTutsi men stood guard outside the church that day, he said. When the Hutumilitia arrived, the men begged that they be used as sacrifices. The militiamenopened fire on them with sub-machine guns. With the women and children coweringand screaming in the small chapels, they lobbed grenades through the windows.They completed the job with machetes before dumping the bodies in land dug up bythe church steps. As we waited for the French barge that was to take us out ofthe town, we were invited to share a bottle of beer at the hotel by the harbour.The idea of a drink with these people, some of whom probably took part in
thekillings, was too much. But I took the opportunity to ask two of the Hutus,educated men, one an agronomist, the other a doctor, what had happened at thestadium and church. They started by saying they were refugees; that they had notbeen there during the massacres. Not that anything had happened anyway. When Idescribed what I had seen, one replied: "How can you tell who is Hutu and who isTutsi?" He might as well have said it was the Jews who killed the Germans in theconcentration camps. A French commando held an emaciated seven-year-old girl inhis arms. He had been asked to look for her by doctors in a refugee camp inZaire, where the girl's sister was being looked after. The soldier found hersheltering with a Hutu woman. The girl was a Tutsi, the only one they believedwas still alive in the town. One of her arms had been broken by an Interahamwethug with a club. By the standards of Rwanda's war, she had been lucky. As thebarge pulled away, a militia man put his machete close to his throat. Hisgesture was easy to understand. If it had not been for the French, the girlwould never have got away, and we would not have got close to the stadium. Yetthe Hutus depend on the French, and when Operation Turquoise is over,yesterday's butchers are likely to be tomorrow's victims.
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