Associated Press
NEW YORK – Rwanda’s president said Monday his country and neighboring Congo are making “very good progress” in restoring peace to war-torn central Africa.
But Kagame said both countries recognize “that there is still a lot of work to be done.”
“We’re making very good progress,” he said in a speech to the International Peace Institute. “The major problems have been resolved. That’s the starting point.”
Central Africa’s Great Lakes region has been a hotbed of political instability and fighting since the 1994 genocide in Rwanda saw more than 500,000 people, most of them from the country’s Tutsi minority, slaughtered by a regime of extremists from its Hutu majority.
After Tutsi rebels led by Kagame ended the genocide, the extremist Hutus fled into neighboring eastern Congo.
Congo, known as the DRC, cut off diplomatic relations with Rwanda over its support of a rebel movement whose mission was to hunt the Rwandan Hutu fighters in eastern Congo after the genocide.
Kagame disputed claims that Rwanda intervened in Congo to exploit the country’s rich natural resources, using the hunt for perpetrators of the genocide as a pretext.
“Rwanda does not have capacity to exploit our own mineral resources,” he said, so “how can we take advantage of those in the DRC?”
The United Nations established a peacekeeping force in Congo in November 1999 which Kagame said was very costly and did not achieve “corresponding results,” because fighting continued and the Hutu rebels were not disarmed.
Rwanda and Congo normalized relations in 2007, and in January, both armies teamed up and conducted a successful joint offensive in volatile eastern Congo.
“The situation has now changed fundamentally because Rwanda and the DRC both now recognize that we must work together to find answers to peace for Congo,” Kagame said.
“How effectively they are able to manage these complex problems they have to deal with may be different than how we manage to deal with our own problems within our borders,” he said. “But these collaborative efforts are very important and they … have made a huge difference.”
“Genocide in Rwanda — the causes of it are not Rwandan, are not African,” he said. The genocide “has its roots somewhere else.”
The Rwandan leader questioned the fairness of the International Criminal Court, the world’s first permanent war crimes tribunal, saying it is widely seen as targeting Africans, developing countries or weak countries and not dispensing justice equitably on a global basis.
Since 1994, the world witnesses the horrifying Tutsi minority (14%) ethnic domination, the Tutsi minority ethnic rule, the ruling RPF tyranny and corruption in Rwanda.
It’s become public knowledge that the current Tutsi-led government has been characterized by the total impunity of RPF criminals, the Tutsi economic monopoly, the Tutsi militaristic domination, and the brutal suppression of the rights of the majority Hutu (85%) of the whole Rwandan people by the RPF criminal organization.
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