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Saturday 12 April 2014

[RwandaLibre] A Closer Look at Where Rwanda's Lethal Weapons Came From

 

Genocide resesarcher

A Closer Look at Where Rwanda's Lethal Weapons Came From

Posted: 04/11/2014 5:28 pm EDT Updated: 04/11/2014 5:59 pm EDT

Last week marked a significant step forward in the campaign to control
the global distribution of lethal weapons. Eighteen countries,
including five of the world's leading arms exporters, ratified the
landmark Arms Trade Treaty one year after it was adopted by the UN
General Assembly.

The decision brings us one step closer to the total of 50 signatures
required to bring the Treaty into force. It is the world's first
Treaty designed to regulate an industry worth up to $85 billion per
year.

A discussion about the regulation of lethal weapons takes us to
Rwanda, where commemorations are underway to mark the twentieth
anniversary of the Genocide against the Tutsi.

More than one million people were killed between April and July of
1994 and hundreds of thousands of survivors suffer to this day. There
is no better example of the devastating effects of the ready
availability of weapons globally.

Genocide is always organised, usually by the state, often using
militias to provide deniability of state responsibility. And while it
is true that most of the killings in Rwanda in 1994 were carried out
with machetes and clubs, those government-sponsored militias that were
intent on carrying out large-scale massacres were reliant on imported
automatic rifles and hand grenades.

The buildup of arms in Rwanda started in 1990. Genocide researcher and
author Linda Melvern documented in her 2004 book

Conspiracy to Murder that "in the three years from October 1990,
Rwanda, one of the poorest countries in the world, became the third
largest importer of weapons in Africa, spending an estimated $US 112
million."

By its own admission, the Rwanda government bankrupted its economy to
pay for those weapons. And for ordinary Rwandan citizens, it had
reached a point where cheap weapons were so readily available that
they could purchase hand grenades alongside bananas in markets across
the country.

So where did these weapons come from?

In 1992, a $6 million contract was signed between Egypt and Rwanda,
with payment guaranteed by a French bank. It included 60-mm and 82-mm
mortars, 16,000 mortar shells, 122-mm D-30 howitzers, 3,000 artillery
shells, rocket-propelled grenades, plastic explosives, antipersonnel
land mines, and more than three million rounds of small arms
ammunition.

In May 1993, a French arms dealer agreed to sell $12 million worth of
weapons to Rwanda. On Jan. 21, 1994, in violation of the terms of the
recent peace accords, a French DC-8 cargo plane landed covertly in
Kigali

loaded with weapons, including 90 boxes of 60mm mortars.

South Africa supplied automatic rifles, machine guns, mortars, grenade
launchers and ammunition.

On Jan. 10, 1994, a militia commander and former member of the
President's security guard, code-named "Jean-Pierre", gave UN
peacekeepers details of the planned genocide. The informant told UN
Colonel Luc Marchal that each of the militia units he controlled had
the ability to kill 1,000 people every 20 minutes, and that he was
overseeing the provision of weapons and training for militia recruits.

General Romeo Dallaire, Commander of the UN peacekeeping forces in
Rwanda, faxed General Maurice Baril in the Department of Peacekeeping
Operations (DPKO) at UN headquarters in New York and advised him of
the weapons distribution and extermination plan that "Jean-Pierre"
provided.

On Jan. 12, 1994, Dallaire got a fax signed by Kofi Annan, Head of
DPKO, advising Dallaire not to seize the weapons that were stockpiled
by the militia because it was not in the mandate of UN peacekeepers to
do so.

When he arrived in Kigali on Feb. 21, 1994, Belgian Foreign Minister
Willy Claes was shocked to witness the open distribution of stockpiled
weapons to civilians.

UN Secretary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali of Egypt then gave a formal
report about peacekeeping in Rwanda to the UN Security Council, on
March 30, 1994, in which he recounted the distribution of weapons,
training of militia, assassinations and street violence.

Despite this recognition by the UN of the devastating effect that
imported weapons was having, absolutely nothing was done to prevent or
stop the slaughter of one million Tutsis and those who protected them.

Twenty years ago in Rwanda, the government got the message from the
international community, again and again, that it could get away with
genocide facilitated by foreign arms. It was not until May 17, 1994,
more than five weeks into the genocide, that the United Nations
Security Council imposed an arms embargo on the genocidal regime.

With the global Arms Trade Treaty still not ratified, I cannot help
but wonder how many other governments are getting that very same
message from the international community today.

http://www.google.ca/gwt/x?gl=CA&hl=en-CA&u=http://www.huffingtonpost.com/tim-gallimore/a-closer-look-at-where-rw_b_5135559.html&q=closer+look+rwanda+lethal

--
SIBOMANA Jean Bosco
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