Mass Graves with 2,000 Bodies Discovered Two Decades After Rwanda Genocide

Authored by time.com and submitted by nabadiyonolol
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(KIGALI, Rwanda) — Mass graves that authorities say could contain more than 2,000 bodies have been discovered in Rwanda nearly a quarter-century after the country’s genocide, and further graves are being sought nearby.

The new discovery is being called the most significant in a long time in this East African nation that is still recovering from the 1994 killings of more than 800,000 people.

Some Rwandans are shocked and dismayed that residents of the community outside the capital, Kigali, where the mass graves were found kept quiet about them for so many years.

“Those who participated in the killing of our relatives don’t want to tell us where they buried them. How can you reconcile with such people?” asked a tearful France Mukanagazwa. She told The Associated Press she lost her father and other relatives in the genocide and believes their bodies are in the newly found graves.

The discovery of the graves in Gasabo district came just days after Rwanda marked 24 years since the mass killings of ethnic Tutsi and moderate ethnic Hutus.

“It is very disturbing that every now and then mass graves are discovered of which the now-free perpetrators never bothered to reveal to bereaved families so that they can get closure,” the daily newspaper The New Times said in an editorial this week.

“Definitely some very cruel people still live in our midst,” it added.

Between 2,000 and 3,000 people are thought to be buried in the graves based on the number of area residents who went missing during the genocide, Rashid Rwigamba, an official with the genocide charity Ibuka, told AP.

The information leading to the discovery came from a local landlord who at first refused to answer questions about the suspected mass graves until threatened with arrest, Rwigamba said.

Houses and toilets that had been built on top of the graves have been destroyed to make way for the search. “The exercise is ongoing and we have identified another house we suspect was built on a piece of land where victims were buried,” Rwigamba said.

Bodies found so far include those of babies, based on the clothing that has been found, he said.

At least 207 bodies have been exhumed from one of the graves and 156 have been exhumed from another, said Theogen Kabagambire, an Ibuka official from Gasabo district.

It was not immediately clear what would be done with the bodies or the graves.

During the genocide, a roadblock manned by Hutu militias was established meters away from the sites of the mass graves, survivors told the AP.

Authorities have launched investigations and those found to have participated in the killings will be prosecuted, Kabagambire said.

SaskatchewanGuy on April 26th, 2018 at 21:09 UTC »

The book “Shake Hands with the Devil: The Failure of Humanity in Rwanda” by Lieutenant-General Roméo Dallaire is one of the best books I have ever read. The story is heart breaking, but there are points of hope and humanity in there.

The above comments talk a lot about he UN’s effectiveness- but one of the things that really comes across in the book is that the UN is only as effective as its member nations allow it to be. A few men, some without guns made huge differences in saving people- but the larger push was thwarted by bureaucracy at every turn.

I highly recommend it for anyone the least bit interested in the subject.

JellyBean_Brownies on April 26th, 2018 at 18:00 UTC »

I remember the news when this was happening. U.N. forces were stationed there and were not allowed to intervene, those service personnel had to watch men, women and children be killed in front of them, all the while they had the means to stop the slaughter and were ordered to do nothing.

gah this makes me feel sick.

Red_Lobby on April 26th, 2018 at 17:40 UTC »

Some Rwandans are shocked and dismayed that residents of the community outside the capital, Kigali, where the mass graves were found kept quiet about them for so many years. “Those who participated in the killing of our relatives don’t want to tell us where they buried them. How can you reconcile with such people?” asked a tearful France Mukanagazwa. She told The Associated Press she lost her father and other relatives in the genocide and believes their bodies are in the newly found graves.

Damn.