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Rwanda: U.S., France blamed for genocide
By Our Special Correspondent
NEW DELHI, JULY 8. An international panel set up by the
Organisation of African Unity (OAU) has blamed the United States,
France and Belgium for failing to prevent the genocide in the
strife-torn African state of Rwanda.
The panel which included the former Chief Justice of India, Mr.
P.N. Bhagwati, has concluded that the genocide - in which 800,000
people belonging to the Tutsi tribe were killed - was avoidable.
The mass killing, the committee concludes is ``one of the
singularly notorious events of the last century.'' According to
the panel, the Rwandan Government - led by the majority ethnic
Hutus - deliberately incited the killings. The conspiracy,
however, succeeded because the members of the U.N. Security
Council, despite anticipating these events did not act.
The report accuses the United States of deliberately restricting
the size of the U.N. military mission which otherwise could have
helped prevent the massacre.``Even once the genocide began, a
serious military mission could dramatically have reduced the
magnitude of the slaughter. But the U.S. made sure that no such
force would ever reach Rwanda, even after it was known beyond
question that one of the 20th century's greatest tragedies was
unfolding.'' In fact, the U.S. voted for further pruning down the
size of the authorised U.N. military presence in Rwanda.
The panel did not spare France from blame. The French Government,
the committee claimed had ``unrivaled influence'' on the Rwandan
Government. But despite its reach, it did not insist that the
attacks on the Tutsi must cease. In fact,the French troops
allowed Rwanda's political and military leadership along with
large section of its army to escape the border into Zaire. This
in turn ``significantly contributed'' to the continuing conflict
in Central Africa.
Others named by the panel who failed Rwanda in its time of
greatest need include: the Government of Belgium, the Secretariat
of the United Nations, and the Roman Catholic church. Of those
named, the President of the United States, the Secretary-General
of the United Nations, and the Prime Minister of Belgium have all
apologised for their responsibility. Neither the French
Government nor the Catholic church has ever apologised or
accepted responsibility, it said.
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