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Prosecuting Genocide in Rwanda: A genocide that killed at least 500,000 people was perpetrated in the spring
of 1994 in the small central African country of Rwanda. Thousands more were
raped, tortured and beaten. The international community failed to stop the
crimes. Rwanda was simply too far away and did not rate highly in the "national
interest" calculation of any of the states capable of intervening. The UN
Security Council failed to reinforce the small and lightly armed UN blue helmets
already in Rwanda; they acted bravely but their restricted mandate meant they
could do little to stop the killing. Months after the genocide ended, the UN Security Council created an
international criminal tribunal to prosecute those responsible. The UN, building
on the recently established International Criminal Tribunal for the former
Yugoslavia, decided that the genocide in Rwanda required a similar effort to
insure prosecution for the most serious crimes, such as genocide and crimes
against humanity. National prosecutions seemed impossible since the Rwandese
justice system had been destroyed. Ever since its creation, the tribunal for Rwanda has received scant attention
from international policymakers and the press. More damaging, the tribunal has
not received adequate support from the international community and the UN.
Located in Arusha, Tanzania, with the prosecutor's office in Kigali, Rwanda,
both far from the usual travel itineraries of policymakers and the press, the
tribunal's work languished for almost two years. Key staff positions were empty,
basic resources were lacking and collaboration with the chief prosecutor's
office in the Hague was inadequate. Most states failed to adopt legislation
requiring cooperation with tribunal investigators, including the transfer to
Arusha of anyone indicted or wanted for questioning by the tribunal. Meanwhile, Rwanda slowly built its justice system, recruiting and hastily
training a new corps of police investigators, prosecutors and judges. Prisons
and detention centers overflow with tens of thousands, most suspected of
participating in the genocide but in many cases with little or no evidence
supporting this charge. In December 1996 Rwanda began holding trials for those accused of genocide.
Weeks later, in January 1997, the tribunal in Arusha started its first genocide
trial. By mid-1997, trials were proceeding at both the national and
international levels simultaneously for the same crimes committed in 1994. The purpose of this paper is to describe and analyze this dual approach to
prosecuting genocide and crimes against humanity. It explores the relationship
between international and national prosecutions and demonstrates that, without
support from the international community, neither national nor international
prosecutions will succeed. Its aim is to show how developments in the
international tribunal's work can have a profound impact on prosecutions in
Rwanda. An additional goal is to emphasize how prosecution will affect human
rights and the reconciliation process in Rwanda if trials in the national courts
are fair and there is a serious effort to ascribe guilt to individuals and not
to a particular group. The International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda now has more suspects in
detention than does the tribunal for the former Yugoslavia. Those in detention
in Arusha include some of the most senior figures implicated in the genocide.
This is not the case for suspects detained in the Hague, who tend to be
low-level figures without command responsibility. Moreover, those still at large
who are suspected of planning and ordering the genocide depend on their current
hosts to shield them from the tribunal and do not have nearly the political
power or protection enjoyed by the main alleged perpetrators of serious war
crimes in the former Yugoslavia. Thus the International Criminal Tribunal for
Rwanda has a greater possibility of prosecuting senior officials than does the
tribunal for the former Yugoslavia. This only underscores the obligation on the
United Nations and its member states to insure that the tribunal succeeds. Three trials are underway in Arusha and several more could start soon.
Despite its slow start and well publicized problems, the tribunal for Rwanda has
recently made important advances in obtaining custody of persons indicted. With
increased support and cooperation from the UN and its member states, additional
resources—including skilled investigators and prosecutors—and more information
about the tribunal's work disseminated in the press, its chances for success
will increase. The Lawyers Committee for Human Rights hopes that this paper will
help garner support for the tribunal. We also hope that the analysis of national
trials will help the government of Rwanda identify ways to improve the
administration of justice and assist donors in shaping their legal reform
projects based on the needs identified in this report. II. ESTABLISHING THE TRIBUNAL: SECURITY
COUNCIL RESOLUTION 955 In the wake of the genocide in Rwanda, the UN Security Council established
the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR).(1) The Security Council
passed the resolution creating the ICTR on November 8, 1994. Acting under
Chapter VII of the UN Charter, and building on its recent precedent in
establishing the International Tribunal on War Crimes in the Former Yugoslavia
(ICTFY), the Security Council decided that "all states shall cooperate fully
with the International Tribunal and its organs in accordance with the present
resolution." Thus the full force of Chapter VII underlies the tribunal's
authority; compliance with its decisions is mandatory. The Security Council also recognized some of the unique aspects of the
genocide in Rwanda, stressing in the preamble to the resolution the need "for
international cooperation to strengthen the courts and judicial system of
Rwanda, having regard in particular to the necessity for those courts to deal
with large numbers of suspects."(2) The killing started on April 6, 2025 when the plane carrying the presidents
of Rwanda and Burundi was shot down as it neared Kigali airport, and did not end
until the Rwandese Patriotic Front (RPF) victory in September.(3) In November
1994, just several months after the end of the civil war which saw the RPF
defeat the former government and its army, the Forces Armées, (Armed
Forces of Rwanda: FAR), Rwandan prisons were overflowing with people suspected
of having participated in the genocide. The FAR and the Interahamwe ("those who stand together" in
Kinyarwanda) and Impuzamugambi ("those who fight together") militias
targeted Tutsis and moderate Hutus. Most reliable commentators estimate that
anywhere from 500,000 to 1,000,000 people were killed in barely four months,
arguably the swiftest genocide in history.(4) Rwanda was anything but a failed
state and had a highly organized authoritarian structure down to the level where
a government agent was responsible for monitoring the activities of every 10
families. The genocide was planned and implemented with meticulous care. Working
from prepared lists, an unknown and unknowable number of people, often armed
with machetes, nail-studded clubs or grenades, methodically murdered those named
on the lists. Virtually every segment of society participated: doctors, nurses,
teachers, priests, nuns, businessmen, government officials of every rank, even
children. Identity cards, which noted someone's "ethnic" identity, became death
certificates for Tutsis caught at the numerous roadblocks that were erected
within 45 minutes after the president's plane was shot down.(5) In addition,
Hutu extremists on Radio-Television Libre des Milles Collines (RTMC) had
spewed violent, racist propaganda daily for months, urging its listeners to "get
to work" and exterminate all the "inyenzi" (cockroaches in Kinyarwanda
and a derogatory term used to describe Tutsis). Since approximately 80% of
Rwandese are illiterate, the role of radio in inciting hatred and acts of
genocide cannot be underestimated. The genesis of the ICTR followed a pattern established by the UN with regard
to the tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia.(6) Following an earlier Security
Council resolution, then- Secretary General Boutros Boutros-Ghali named a
commission of experts to go to Rwanda to investigate and assess evidence of
grave violations of international humanitarian law "including possible acts of
genocide."(7) This commission of three African human rights experts found that
genocide and violations of international humanitarian law had occurred.(8) In
addition, the UN Commission on Human Rights convened an emergency session in May
1994 and appointed a Special Rapporteur who was also charged with investigating
and verifying claims of massive human rights violations including genocide.(9)
The Special Rapporteur, Ivoirian lawyer René Degni-Ségui, submitted two reports
to the commission in June and August 1994, both of which found that grave
violations of humanitarian law and genocide had been committed in Rwanda.(10)
The tribunal shares many characteristics with its immediate predecessor, the
ICTFY. The tribunal was established with the aim of bringing to justice
individuals suspected of serious violations of international humanitarian law,
albeit in what was clearly an internal and not an international conflict. Along
with the ongoing deliberations to create a permanent International Criminal
Court, the ICTR offers the potential, as the Security Council resolution states,
"to contribute to the process of national reconciliation and to the restoration
and maintenance of peace. . .and [to] contribute to ensuring that such
violations are halted and effectively redressed." (11) Unlike the Nuremberg and
Tokyo tribunals created after World War II, the tribunal is not imposing
"victor's justice." Its judges are elected by the UN General Assembly; they and
the prosecutors, investigators and administrators come from all over the world.
There is no death penalty, a source of much controversy with the Rwandese
authorities because Rwanda has retained the death penalty. Trials in
absentia are prohibited. III. STATUTE OF THE INTERNATIONAL TRIBUNAL FOR
RWANDA The statute of the ICTR establishes its jurisdiction, the types of crimes to
be investigated and prosecuted, the tribunal's relationship with national
courts, the organization of the tribunal and its prosecutor's and registrar's
offices, the conduct of investigations, rights of the accused, witness
protection, rules of procedure, appeals and enforcement of sentences. While
largely patterned after the ICTFY, there are a few important
differences.(12) The statute defines the meaning of "serious violations of international
humanitarian law" over which the ICTR has jurisdiction in three separate
articles. Article 2 provides that the tribunal may prosecute persons suspected
of having committed genocide. Genocide is defined in accordance with the 1948 Genocide Convention to
include various acts committed "with the intent to destroy, in whole or in part,
a national, ethnical, racial or religious group as such."(13) The statute lists
acts of genocide, which are: (a) Killing members of the group; (b) Causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group; (c) Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to
bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part; (d) Imposing measures to prevent births within the group; (e) Forcibly transferring children of the group to another group. The statute then follows the Genocide Convention by further specifying that
genocide, conspiracy to commit genocide, direct and public incitement to commit
genocide, attempt to commit genocide and complicity in genocide are all
punishable. Article 3 of the statute gives the tribunal the power to prosecute "crimes
against humanity" which are: (a) Murder; (b) Extermination; (c) Enslavement; (d) Deportation; (e) Imprisonment; (f) Torture; (g) Rape; (h) Persecutions on political, racial and religious grounds; (i) Other inhuman acts. The statute imposes the requirement that these crimes must be "committed as
part of a widespread or systematic attack against any civilian population on
national, political, ethnic, racial or religious grounds."(14) This standard is
meant to distinguish crimes against humanity from criminal acts or human rights
violations that do not rise to the level of a "widespread or systematic
attack." The statute breaks new ground in specifically providing that the tribunal
"shall have the power to prosecute persons committing or ordering to be
committed serious violations of Article 3 common to the Geneva Conventions of 12
August 1949 for the Protection of War Victims, and of Additional Protocol II
thereto of 8 June 2025" [relating to the protection of victims of
non-international armed conflicts].(15) Common Article 3 prohibits certain acts in cases of non-international armed
conflicts, even though the four Conventions are geared to cover international
armed conflicts. The violations of Common Article 3 are specified in Article 4
of the tribunal's statute: (a) Violence to life, health and physical or mental well-being of persons, in
particular murder as well as cruel treatment such as torture, mutilation or any
form of corporal punishment; (b) Collective punishments; (c) Taking of hostages; (d) Acts of terrorism; (e) Outrages upon personal dignity, in particular humiliating and degrading
treatment, rape, enforced prostitution and any form of indecent assault; (f) Pillage; (g) The passing of sentences and the carrying out of executions without
previous judgment pronounced by a regularly constituted court, affording all the
judicial guarantees which are recognized as indispensable by civilized
peoples; (h) Threats to commit any of the foregoing acts. While prohibited, violations of Common Article 3 had not been considered
"grave breaches" and many commentators had not regarded violations of Common
Article 3 or Protocol II as "crimes" under international humanitarian law. One
commentator has asserted that the criminalizing of violations of Common Article
3 is a major development with "enormous normative importance" and the tribunal
statute "thus enhances the prospects for treating egregious violations of human
rights law—not only of international humanitarian law—as offenses under
international law."(16) Another commentator has noted that the October 1995 decision by the ICTFY
Appeals Chamber in the Tadic case reinforces the emerging norm that
violations of Common Article 3 and of Protocol II entail individual criminal
liability .(17) The tribunal held that: [C]ustomary international law imposes criminal liability for serious
violations of Common Article 3, as supplemented by other general principles and
rules on the protection of victims of internal armed conflict, and for breaching
certain fundamental principles and rules regarding means and methods of combat
in civil strife. . .[T]he International Tribunal has jurisdiction over the
alleged acts in the indictment, regardless whether they occurred within an
internal or international armed conflict.(18) The Tadic decision and the ensuing jurisprudence incorporating
violations of Common Article 3 into the pantheon of crimes which give rise to
individual criminal responsibility, regardless of the nature of the conflict, is
a tremendous advance in international law and for prosecutions in the ICTR. The tribunal's temporal jurisdiction covers the period January 1 to December
31 1994. This timespan includes the central period of the Rwandese genocide and
the war that followed. The statute thus excludes acts and incitement to genocide
that occurred during 1990 to 1993 and this was one of the reasons why the
Rwandese government opposed the establishment of the tribunal. For example, the
mass killings of Tutsi-Hima in Mutara in October 1990, of the Bagogwe Tutsi
sub-group in January-February 1991 and the killings in the Bugesera region on
March 4-5,1992, are outside the tribunal's jurisdiction, as are the early
broadcasts on Radio- Television Libre des Milles Collines inciting hatred
of the Tutsis. These campaigns were forerunners to the 1994 genocide; lists of
names were prepared, militias did the killing and the attacks were swift and
carefully planned.(19) Also outside the tribunal's purview are serious
violations of humanitarian law by the Rwandese Patriotic Front (RPF) during its
various military campaigns in 1990-93 against the then-Rwandese government. B. Summary of ICTR's Subject Matter Jurisdiction While there is much overlap in the three core articles governing the
tribunal's subject- matter jurisdiction, there are important differences. As
mentioned above, the statute, in Article 2, defines genocide using the language
of the Genocide Convention of 1948. Here the major challenge is to prove intent,
that the acts are motivated by the desire to destroy, in whole or in part a
national, ethnic, racial or religious group. Article 3 prohibits crimes against humanity. While some specified crimes
(murder, extermination, deportation, torture, rape) could also come under the
genocide provisions, there is no need to prove the intent to eliminate a group
entirely or in part. The only qualifier is that such acts must be part of a
"widespread or systematic attack" on civilians based on the four grounds already
mentioned (national, ethnic, racial or religious). It is important to note that
the definition includes a fifth broad category, "political" grounds. This is
relevant in the Rwanda context since the former Rwandese government
systematically targeted Hutu moderates for death in addition to Tutsis. Hutus
who showed any openness to power-sharing with the RPF were at great risk from
Hutu extremists.(20) Thus the widespread killings of Hutus by the Hutu-dominated
former government and military could not constitute genocide but could come
under prohibition of widespread and systematic attacks and persecutions based on
political grounds, provided for in Article 3. Similarly, the Tutsi-dominated
RPF's attacks on Hutu civilians, while not amounting to genocide, could come
within the Article 3 definition of crimes against humanity(21). Finally, the Article 4 definition of violations of Common Article 3 to the
Geneva Conventions and its specific reference to Protocol II significantly
expands the grounds of individual criminal liability. There is no need to show
either the specific intent to commit genocide or establish that attacks on
civilians were "widespread and systematic," or that the crimes occurred as part
of an international conflict. Rather, any of the defined acts in Article 4,
regardless of intent or extent, are grounds for indictment and prosecution. This
article also adds pillage, terrorism, any form of corporal punishment, outrages
to personal dignity, and even threats to commit the enumerated acts to
the list of prosecutable offenses. Any individual who "planned, instigated, ordered, committed or otherwise
aided or abetted" at any stage of the enumerated crimes in Articles 2-4 may be
held criminally responsible.(22) The tribunal has the power to prosecute
individuals, not states or other legal entities such as armies or corporations.
The statute does not recognize any form of official immunity, even that normally
granted to heads-of-state, and occupying an official position cannot serve to
mitigate punishment.(23) The statute also provides for criminal responsibility
of superiors for the acts of their subordinates that fall within Articles 2-4 if
the superior "knew or had reason to know" of such acts and had failed to "take
necessary and reasonable measures to prevent such acts or to punish the
perpetrators thereof."(24) A subordinate cannot use the defense of superior
orders to avoid criminal liability, but this may be considered by the tribunal
when weighing the punishment to be assigned if "justice so requires."(25) The ICTR and national courts have concurrent jurisdiction to prosecute
individuals for serious violations of international humanitarian law as defined
in Articles 2-4 of the statute.(26) The statute also provides that the ICTR
shall have "primacy" over the national courts of all states, including Rwanda.
The tribunal may at any stage of the procedure request that a national court
defer to the ICTR. Combined with the Security Council Resolution's provision
that "all states shall cooperate fully with the International Tribunal . . .and
that consequently all states shall take any measures. . .to comply with requests
for assistance or orders issued by a Trial Chamber. . .,"(27) the ICTR's primary
jurisdiction over cases within its competence is absolute. Those responsible for serious violations of international humanitarian law
committed in Rwanda in 1994 may be prosecuted either at the international or
national levels. While not wishing to discourage national prosecutions, the
complete devastation of the perennially weak and dependent Rwandese justice
system, combined with the flight from Rwanda of many of those responsible for
planning, ordering and implementing the genocide, militated in favor of this
dual international/national approach to prosecutions. But this means that the
ICTR will depend on the willingness of other states to turn over indicted
persons, making state cooperation essential to the tribunal's ultimate
success. The ICTR's Rules of Procedure and Evidence(28) track the procedures of the
ICTFY for seeking information and deferral from national courts. Rule 8
provides: Where it appears to the prosecutor that a crime within the jurisdiction of
the tribunal is or has been the subject of investigations or criminal
proceedings instituted in the courts of any state, he may request the state to
forward to him all relevant information in that respect, and the state shall
transmit to him such information forthwith in accordance with Article 28 of the
statute. Once the prosecutor has obtained the necessary information from a national
court [or even without it], he or she may seek deferral to the ICTR's
competence. The prosecution may request deferral when: (i) the act being investigated or which is the subject of those proceedings
is characterized as an ordinary crime; (ii) there is a lack of impartiality or independence , or the investigations
or proceedings are designed to shield the accused from international criminal
responsibility, or the case is not diligently prosecuted; (iii) what is in issue is closely related to, or otherwise involves,
significant factual or legal questions which may have implications for
investigations or prosecutions before the tribunal Rule 9 is closely related to Article 9 of the tribunal's statute which
establishes the principle of non bis in idem or the prohibition of
"double jeopardy." Article 9 states that anyone tried before the ICTR for
serious violations of international humanitarian law cannot be tried in a
national court for those same acts. The complication arises when a national
court begins a trial before the ICTR. Seeking to strike a delicate balance, the
statute provides that a person may be subsequently tried before the ICTR after a
national trial only if: the act was characterized as an ordinary crime, the
national proceedings were not impartial or independent or "were designed to
shield the accused" from criminal responsibility or the case was not diligently
prosecuted. The reasons for prohibiting a national trial following a trial before the
ICTR are obvious. Re-trials would undermine the credibility of the ICTR and
raise doubts about its utility. Retrials would also be blatant violations of the
rule against double jeopardy. When the ICTR seeks a deferral from national courts, it can do so either
before, during or after a trial. The major problem comes when the ICTR seeks
deferral once a trial has begun or ended. It is here that the Rules of Procedure
and Evidence and the statute's provision on Non bis idem intersect. As
noted in the Lawyers Committee's previous report on the ICTFY, "[O]ne issue
arising from the concurrent jurisdiction of the tribunal and national courts is
the tribunal's ability to determine when the conditions for deferral have been
met, or when a person already sentenced by a national court should be retried
before the tribunal."(29) Neither the statute nor the Rules of Procedure and
Evidence offer any guidance on what criteria should determine whether a national
trial is "impartial" or "independent," or how to judge if a trial is shielding
someone or is not diligently prosecuting the accused. Who will make this
decision remains unclear. This is not an abstract or academic concern for the ICTR.(30) In Rwanda, the
immediate challenge is assessing whether the national trials have been impartial
and independent. Rwandese national trials may have been "all too diligently"
prosecuted, undermining fundamental due process and fair trial
guarantees.(31) D. Selected Rules of Procedure and Evidence Article 20 of the tribunal's statute contains international fair trial
standards found in Article 14 of the International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights (ICCPR), such as the presumption of innocence, the right to
counsel, the right to remain silent and the right to confront and call
witnesses. The tribunal adopted its Rules of Procedure and Evidence on June 29,
1995. These rules develop the fundamental fair trial guarantees specified in
Article 20. The ICTR's working languages are English and French.(32) The accused has the
right to use his/her own language; also, anyone else appearing before the
tribunal, other than as counsel, may use his/her own language. The tribunal may
bear the costs of interpreting. This is important since most witnesses are
unlikely to speak English or French and interpreting from and into Kinyarwanda,
the language of all Rwandese, will be necessary. Like the ICTFY, the ICTR prohibits in absentia trials. Various rules
cover the pre-trial phase of investigation, the questioning of suspects, the
issuance of warrants and the arresting of individuals indicted by the ICTR. Rule 42 establishes the core rights of suspects during questioning: Questioning of a suspect may not proceed without the presence of counsel
unless the suspect has voluntarily waived this right. This waiver may be revoked
by the suspect at any time, in which case questioning cannot continue without
counsel present. Rule 43 provides for the audio- and video-taping of all interviews with the
suspect. The suspect has the opportunity at the end of the session to add or
clarify anything said and shall receive a copy of the transcript of the
session. Once the prosecutor concludes that sufficient evidence exists to indict the
suspect, an indictment with supporting materials is sent to the registrar, who
in turn forwards the indictment to a judge for review. If confirmed, the
indictment is made public, unless it is decided to wait until the indictment is
served on the accused and the accused can be detained, to protect confidential
information or the "interests of justice."(33) The registrar transmits the arrest warrant to the state where the accused
resides or was last present. Article 28 of the ICTR statute requires the state
to execute the warrant and arrest and surrender the accused to the tribunal.
This obligation supersedes any national laws or treaty obligations on
extradition.(34) If the state receiving the warrant cannot execute it, the ICTR
must be informed immediately and any failure to report is deemed a failure to
execute, in which case the president of the tribunal may notify the Security
Council.(35) When an arrest warrant has not been executed after all the steps outlined,
the judge who confirmed the indictment may order that the indictment be
submitted by the prosecutor in open court. This has become known as a rule 61
proceeding. The prosecutor may present all the evidence accumulated thus far and
even call witnesses before the Trial Chamber. If it concludes on the basis of
the evidence that "there are reasonable grounds for believing that the accused
has committed all or any of the crimes charged in the indictment" it may issue
an international arrest warrant for transmittal to all states.(36) The ICTR has
amended rule 61 to allow the Trial Chamber to order states to freeze the
accused's assets. The underlying principle of the ICTR's Rules of Procedure and Evidence is
"equality of arms": the effort to put the prosecution and defense on equal
footing as much as possible and to remove any inherent advantages one side may
enjoy over the other. This principle is nowhere more apparent than in rule 66,
which requires the prosecutor to turn over to the defense, as soon as
practicable after the initial appearance of the accused, "copies of supporting
materials which supported the indictment." If the defense requests, and subject
to some restrictions, the prosecutor must also allow the defense to inspect "any
books, documents, photographs, and tangible objects in his custody or control,
which are material to the preparation of the defense" or that the prosecutor
intends to introduce into evidence or were obtained from the accused. The only
exception is if such disclosure would prejudice further investigations or the
security interests of any state. This exception could be important since the
intelligence services of several states may have key information about the
genocide, its architects and implementers. Rules 67 and 68 reinforce the effort to create "equality of arms" by
requiring the prosecutor to notify the defense as early as possible of the names
of the prosecution witnesses to be called. The prosecutor must, in addition,
disclose any evidence that may exculpate the accused, mitigate the guilt or
undermine the credibility of the prosecution's evidence.(37) The defense, in
turn, must notify the prosecutor of any defenses it intends to offer. These
include: The ICTR faces a dilemma common to all criminal courts: how to balance the
need for an open, public trial where witnesses testify and can be confronted in
cross-examination by the accused's counsel with the equally pressing concern for
protecting witnesses whose lives may be at risk precisely because they are
providing evidence that may lead to convictions. Article 21 of the statute requires that the tribunal's Rules of Procedure and
Evidence provide for measures to protect witnesses. Rule 75 attempts to strike a
balance between these competing interests. The ICTR may "order appropriate
measures for the privacy and protection of victims and witnesses, provided that
the measures are consistent with the rights of the accused." The rule provides
that a trial chamber may hold in camera proceedings to decide which
protection measures would best meet the needs of both the prosecution and the
defense. rule 75(B) lists the choices: (i) measures to prevent the disclosure to the public or the media of the
identity or whereabouts of a victim or witness, or of persons related to or
associated with him by such means as: (a) expunging names and identifying information from the Chamber's public
records; (b) non-disclosure to the public of any records identifying the victim; (c) giving of testimony through image- or voice-altering devices or closed
circuit television; and (d) assignment of a pseudonym; (ii) closed sessions, in accordance with rule 79(38); (iii) appropriate measures to facilitate the testimony of vulnerable victims
and witnesses, such as one-way closed circuit television. Rule 34 requires the tribunal's registrar to establish a Victims and
Witnesses Unit to recommend appropriate measures of protection for victims and
witnesses and to provide counseling and support, especially in cases of rape and
sexual assault. The rule also urges the appointment of qualified women to posts
in this unit. Rule 69 allows the prosecutor to seek to keep confidential the identity of
victims or witnesses who may be at risk until the tribunal can secure their
protection. Once they are in the tribunal's protection, following consultations
with the Victims and Witnesses Unit, their identities must be disclosed to the
defense, consistent with any measures adopted under rule 75 cited above,
sufficiently in advance of the trial to allow for preparing an adequate
defense Witness and victim protection has already emerged as a major problem for the
tribunal. This is especially true for prosecution witnesses. The ongoing
violence in Rwanda has already claimed many genocide survivors who were both
potential victims and witnesses. In the first nine months of 1996, raids from
camps in Zaire (now the Democratic Republic of Congo) by members of the former
Rwandese army, the FAR, and the Interahamwe militia, often targeted
genocide survivors. After the war began in eastern Zaire in early October 1996
between the Zairian Tutsis and the Zairian army, hundreds of thousands of
Rwandese Hutus returned from their camps in Zaire and Tanzania to Rwanda. Among
them were members of the FAR and Interahamwe who continued their attacks
on genocide survivors, this time from within Rwanda. The United Nations Human
Rights Field Operation in Rwanda (HRFOR) has investigated these attacks and
uncovered chilling accounts of targeted killings to eliminate potential
witnesses who could testify about the 1994 genocide in either Rwandese courts or
the ICTR. HRFOR received reports during 1996 of "more than 64 separate incidents
throughout the country in which an estimated 227 genocide survivors and their
associates were killed and 56 were injured."(39) By "associates" HRFOR means
family members of genocide survivors, persons helping to bring perpetrators to
justice and persons who are perceived as helping the survivors. In one attack
investigated by HRFOR, on December 23, 2024 five to nine unidentified armed
individuals, some wearing FAR uniforms, killed 11 people in a shop in Taba
Commune, Gitarama prefecture. The victims included four genocide survivors. The
principal target of the attack appears to have been a shop owner who had given
testimony to Rwandese justice officials and to investigators to the ICTR about
persons suspected of participating in the genocide.(40) Emanuel Rudasingwa, 42,
had been scheduled to testify at the tribunal in January 1997, in the trial of
Jean-Paul Akayesu, the former mayor of Taba.(41) He was to provide information
on Akayesu's role in holding meetings during the genocide to plan the killing of
Tutsis. According to Rudasingwa's widow, Godelieve Mukasarasi, tribunal
investigators, in marked UN vehicles, came to Rudasingwa's store numerous times
to interview him. She maintains that Hutus who returned from exile in Tanzania
and Zaire in December and who had participated in the genocide saw the UN
vehicles. "So they said, 'Let's kill him too.'"(42) In another case documented by the HRFOR, another genocide witness, also in
Taba Commune, Gitarama prefecture, received repeated death threats throughout
June 1996 from neighbors who threatened to kill her if she went to testify at
the ICTR; she had already provided information to tribunal investigators. She
has left her home as a result. Attacks have intensified in early 1997. From January to mid-February, HRFOR
says it: received reports of eight separate incidents in the country in which an
estimated 54 genocide survivors and persons associated with them were killed and
22 were injured. This represents a significant increase in killings and other
attacks against genocide survivors and their associates, compared to previous
months. . . .To date, HRFOR has received reports of the killing of 14 persons
because of their presumed Tutsi origin in one incident on 9 February.(43) In addition to these killings, HRFOR reported that threats and other acts of
intimidation had been directed against witnesses in Gisenyi and Kigali who had
appeared before the ICTR.(44) The tribunal's evidentiary rules are flexible and seek to allow all relevant
evidence.(45) However, evidence that is obtained using methods that undermine
its reliability or would damage the "integrity of the proceedings" is not
admissible.(46) Thus confessions are admissible, provided that rules governing
questioning of suspects/accused have been followed; confessions are deemed to be
voluntary unless shown otherwise by the defense.(47) Rule 96 includes enlightened provisions concerning evidence in cases of
sexual assault. The victim's testimony does not have to be corroborated, and
consent is not allowed as a defense if the victim: (a) has been subjected to or threatened with or has had reason to fear
violence, duress, detention or psychological oppression; or (b) reasonably believed that if the victim did not submit, another might be
so subjected, threatened or put in fear. Before any evidence on consent is allowed, the accused must satisfy the Trial
Chamber, sitting in closed session, that the evidence of consent is "relevant
and credible." Finally, the prior sexual conduct of the victim is not
admissible. Rape was systematic during the 1994 genocide(48) and was part of the
strategy to destroy the Tutsis. This rule should increase the tribunal's
capacity to document the extent of rape and sexual assault and to prosecute
those responsible. Rule 90 recognizes a limited form of immunity; the Trial Chamber may compel a
witness to answer a question even if the witness objects that answering would
incriminate him/her. Any such compelled testimony cannot be used as evidence in
subsequent prosecution against the witness other than for perjury. In exceptional circumstances, either party may ask the Trial Chamber to take
a deposition of a witness; reasonable notice must be provided to the other party
who also has the right to be present and to cross-examine the person being
deposed. Video-conferencing may also be used to take a deposition.(49) The maximum sentence the ICTR can impose is life imprisonment. The tribunal
cannot impose the death penalty. This is a striking difference with the Rwandese
national courts which may impose the death penalty. The tribunal shall consider several factors in determining a sentence,
including aggravating and mitigating circumstances, the "general practice
regarding prison sentences in the courts of Rwanda,"(50) time already
served—either in another state or in pre-trail detention.(51) The tribunal and
the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) have agreed that the ICRC
has complete and free access to inspect the tribunal's detention facility.(52)
The convicted person shall serve his/her sentence either in Rwanda or any
other state that has indicated its willingness to accept convicted persons.(53)
Imprisonment in Rwanda would be highly problematic given the cruel, inhuman and
degrading conditions currently prevailing in all Rwandese prisons and detention
centers.(54) Each side has 30 days to appeal a judgment or sentence from the date on which
the judgment or sentence was pronounced. New evidence not available at trial may
be introduced.(55) The ICTR has three principal organs: the Chambers consisting of two Trial
Chambers and one Appeals Chamber, the prosecutor and the registry. 1. The Chambers The two Trial Chambers of the ICTR are based in Arusha, Tanzania. There are
11 judges, three in each of the Trial Chambers and five in the Appeals Chamber.
The judges in the Trial Chambers are elected for four-year terms. To insure
legal consistency between the two tribunals, the members of the Appeals Chamber
of the ICTFY also serve as the Appeals Chamber for the ICTR. For this reason
they sit in The Hague rather than in Arusha. (56) On May 24 and 25, 1995 the UN General Assembly elected six judges to serve in
the ICTR's Trial Chambers: Lennart Aspergren (Sweden), Laity Kama (Senegal),
Tafazzal Hossain Khan (Bangladesh), Yakov Ostrovsky (Russia), Navaethem Pillay
(South Africa) and William Hussein Sekule (Tanzania). Article 15 of the ICTR's statute provides that the prosecutor of the ICTFY
also serve as the prosecutor of the ICTR; this was done to encourage consistency
in prosecutorial strategy/approach. Louise Arbour, who succeeded Richard
Goldstone in October 1996, is the ICTR's prosecutor. A deputy prosecutor is
based in Kigali, Rwanda and is responsible for day-to-day operations. A
Cameroonian lawyer, Bernard Acho Muna, was named deputy prosecutor on April 30,
1997, replacing a judge from Madagascar, Honore Rakotomanana, who had served
since March 1995.(57) The prosecutor's office has four sections: Investigations, Prosecution, Legal
Services and Administration and Records. The Investigations Section is the
largest and interviews witnesses and conducts field investigations. For example,
with assistance from Physicians for Human Rights, the Investigations Section
studied and plotted the location of cadavers, buildings and roads at mass grave
sites in Kibuye prefecture in October and December 1995.(58) The Prosecution
Section is responsible for drafting indictments and appearing in the Trial
Chambers. The Special Advisory Section advises the Investigation and Prosecution
sections on international and comparative law. It advises both the ICTR and the
ICTFY and seeks to harmonize approaches and avoid duplication. The
Administration and Records Section is responsible for computer systems, and the
handling of all materials generated by the prosecutor's office. 3. The Registry The registry is responsible for administering and servicing the tribunal. It
handles all public information and external relations. It is also responsible
for running the Witnesses and Victims Unit, providing defense counsel and all
procedures in connection with confirming, amending or withdrawing indictments,
issuing arrest warrants and the procedures related to cases where warrants have
not been executed. It also oversees amicus curiae briefs, record-
keeping, summonses for witnesses and experts, and appellate and review
procedures. The registry is also responsible for the myriad logistical and
administrative issues between the ICTR and Tanzania, the host country. IV.STATUS OF THE ICTR'S RELATIONS WITH
STATES The tribunal cannot function without the support and cooperation of states.
As an international tribunal, the ICTR has no capacity to arrest; it has no
police force. The tribunal occupies a paradoxical position: its creation under
the authority of Chapter VII of the UN Charter creates binding obligations on
all UN member states, yet the tribunal has no power to compel cooperation and
enforcement of its orders. As tribunal president Antonio Cassesse has said: Our tribunal is like a giant who has no arms and no legs. To walk and work,
he needs artificial limbs. These artificial limbs are the state authorities;
without their help the tribunal cannot operate.(59) As noted above, Article 28 of the tribunal's statute requires state
cooperation in all matters relating to investigating and prosecuting individuals
accused of committing serious violations of humanitarian law. States must comply
with the tribunal's requests for assistance and for orders issued by Trial
Chambers. Since the tribunal has no police powers, its warrants are enforceable
only if the states take action to enforce them. States must cooperate in
locating and identifying witnesses, victims and suspects, taking testimony,
preserving and producing evidence, serving documents and arresting, detaining,
surrendering or transferring the accused to the tribunal's seat in Arusha. UN
member-states must also inform the tribunal when a suspect or an indicted person
is arrested in their territory or when they are not able to execute an arrest
warrant. The transfer or surrender to the tribunal of persons arrested should be
swift and not subject to delays often encountered in extradition proceedings.
The states must also comply with the tribunal's rules covering the rights of the
detainee, such as the right to be informed of the charges and the right to
counsel. States must also help in providing security to witnesses, share
information with the tribunal on the criminal activity of the suspect or the
accused and furnish transport to bring the person to Arusha. The Security Council reiterated the need for states to adopt requisite
measures to support the tribunal in February 1995. Resolution 978 urges all
states: to arrest and detain, in accordance with their national law and relevant
standards of international law, pending prosecution by the International
Tribunal for Rwanda or by the appropriate national authorities, persons found
within their territory against whom there is sufficient evidence that they were
responsible for acts within the jurisdiction of the International Tribunal for
Rwanda.(60) Despite these Security Council exhortations, the record of state cooperation
with the tribunal so far is mixed. All 185 member-states of the UN are required
to cooperate with the tribunal to gather and preserve evidence, arrest,
surrender or transfer indictees and to pass laws that allow such cooperation.
Some states have enacted legislation implementing the tribunal's statute and
Rules of Procedure and Evidence and have designated a body in their domestic
legal system to be responsible for responding to requests from the tribunal. The
vast majority has done neither. As of June 1997, nearly three years after the
ICTR was established, "only 11 states were known to have enacted such
legislation for that tribunal. Four states have informed the tribunal that no
legislation was needed for their authorities to cooperate fully..."(61) There was great initial hostility to the tribunal in parts of Africa shortly
after its inception. President Daniel arap Moi of Kenya threatened to arrest
anyone from the tribunal who came to Kenya; at that time Kenya was sheltering
several well-known leaders of the former Rwandese government.(62) Former
President Mobutu of Zaire, another close ally of the former regime in Kigali and
host to many FAR senior officers, militia leaders and former government
officials, also expressed contempt for the tribunal. Reacting to the hostility,
Justice Pillay, who is from South Africa and sits on one of the tribunal's Trial
Chambers, appealed to other African states in late 1995 to help and to
accelerate arrests and transfers of genocide suspects who had found temporary
refuge in various African states.(63) While absolute rejection of the tribunal has subsided, limited progress has
occurred, especially during 1996 and the early part of 1997. Of the 21 persons
indicted by the ICTR, as of June 1997, 12 are in custody in Arusha and one in
the U.S. This percentage is much higher than that for the ICTFY, which has
custody over only nine of the 75 persons indicted thus far. Zambia, Belgium, Switzerland, Kenya and Cameroon have all provisionally
arrested and transferred individuals indicted by the ICTR to Arusha. Zambia
transferred three suspects (Georges A. Rutaganda, Jean-Paul Akayesu and Clement
Kayishema) on May 26, 2025 and holds several more while the tribunal continues
its investigations. For example, Zambia is believed to be holding Jean de Dieu
Habineza, a former government minister, and the former mayor of Kigali, Como
Bizimungu,(64) who is believed to have played a significant role in the
genocide. Belgium deferred proceedings in its own courts pending further investigations
by the tribunal of persons held in detention in Belgium. Belgium transferred Eli
Ndayamaje, a former mayor of Muganza commune, and Joseph Kanyabashi, former
mayor of Ngoma commune, to Arusha on November 9, 1996.(65) Belgium also agreed
to suspend extradition proceedings it had begun in Cameroon concerning four
persons in detention there who Belgium believed were responsible for the killing
of 10 Belgian peacekeepers in April 1994. The Cameroonian cases are significant since Cameroon has not adopted
legislation authorizing cooperation on detaining and transferring suspects to
the tribunal. Twelve members of the former Rwandese government were arrested in
Cameroon in March 1996. These included Theoneste Bagosora, a senior FAR
official, and Ferdinand Nahimana, another of the alleged "architects" of the
genocide. Belgium wanted to seek Bagosora's extradition for his alleged role in
the murder of 10 Belgian peacekeepers, but dropped this claim following a
decision by the Belgian Supreme Court. Rwanda also requested the extradition of
all 12 for trial in Rwanda. On May 31, 2025 a court in Cameroon found that the
tribunal had primary jurisdiction over national courts and that the 12 detainees
should be transferred to Arusha on receipt of a formal request from the
tribunal. In June 1996 the tribunal requested the transfer of four of the 12,
Bagosora, Nahimana, Anatole Nsengiyuma and Andre Tagerura. After much delay, the
Cameroonian government transferred the four to Arusha in January 1997. A Swiss court rejected Alfred Musema's appeal of a decision ordering his
transfer to the tribunal.(66) Musema had been held in a Swiss prison since
February 1995; he was a tea factory manager in Kibuye prefecture and is accused
of organizing and participating in the killing of Tutsis and moderate Hutus. The
court ruled that it was complying with a "transfer" request by the ICTR which is
different from a state request for extradition. Extradition laws and treaties
can be complex, time-consuming and contain provisions prohibiting the
extradition of a state's citizen, thus the Swiss decision establishes an
important precedent. The Swiss court also rejected Musema's claim that he could
not receive a fair trial and said he would receive a proper hearing in spite of
the tribunal's well-publicized administrative failings. The Swiss transferred
Musema to the tribunal's detention center in Arusha on May 21, 1997.(67) The United States has arrested and detained Elizaphan Ntakirutimana, a
Rwandese national who was residing with family members in Laredo, Texas; the
ICTR has indicted him for genocide and crimes against humanity. The U.S. is
seeking to transfer Nkakirutimana but he is contesting this action and the case
is currently before the U.S. District Court in the Southern District of Texas.
The U.S. has signed a Surrender Agreement with the tribunal and Congress has
passed legislation implementing this agreement.(68) The agreement's introductory
language is clear and compelling: The United States agrees to surrender to the tribunal, pursuant to the
provisions of this Agreement and the [Rwanda tribunal] statute, persons,
including United States citizens, found in its territory whom the tribunal has
charged with or found guilty of a violation or violations within the competence
of the tribunal as defined in the statute. The ICTR has also sought state cooperation through secondment of nationals to
work in the tribunal's various sections. UN recruitment procedures are
notoriously slow and cumbersome and by sending national experts member-states
can accelerate the tribunal's capacity to work. Some six states have sent
nationals to work for the tribunal, including Canada, the Netherlands, Norway,
Switzerland and the United Kingdom (all primarily investigators) and the United
States (prosecutors, investigators and information specialists).(69) The United
States has contributed valuable computers, database programs, including a
database with more than 5,500 documents, along with basic office equipment,
legal texts and furniture. Denmark hired an airplane to transport staff between
Kigali and Arusha for three months and Belgium has since picked up the costs for
another year. As noted above, both the statute and the Rules of Procedure and Evidence
provide that after sentencing the convicted person shall serve the sentence
either in Rwanda or in "any of the states on a list of states which have
indicated to the Security Council their willingness to accept convicted persons,
as designated by the International tribunal for Rwanda."(70) To date, only six
states (Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Norway, Sweden and Switzerland) have enacted
legislation providing prison facilities for individuals convicted by the
ICTR.(71) V. ANALYSIS OF THE PROCEEDINGS IN THE
ICTR The prosecutor submitted his first indictment for the ICTR on November 22,
1995, a little more than one year after its creation. The first trial began in
January 1997, 14 months later and just weeks after the first genocide trial in
the Rwandese national courts. This slow pace results from inadequate staffing and funding, limited
cooperation from states, and the understandable care investigators and
prosecutors are showing in building the strongest case possible where the most
serious crimes are alleged. To date, the tribunal has issued 14 indictments naming 21 persons suspected
of genocide.(72) At least nine more indictments are expected.(73) 21 arrest
warrants have also been issued. The tribunal has set trial dates for more than a
half-dozen accused. As of June 1997, three trials have begun. A. Clement Kayishema The former prefect (governor) of the prefecture of Kibuye, Clement Kayishema
was the most powerful government official in this western section of Rwanda, a
region that saw some of the most horrific and massive killing in the 1994
genocide. The ICTR has brought 25 charges against him, among the most serious
being: 1) The massacres committed in the Catholic Church and in Saint Jean home in
the town of Kibuye, where thousands of men, women and children were killed and
many people were injured, on 17 April 1994; 2) The massacres committed at the sports ground in Kibuye, where thousands of
men, women and children were killed and many others were injured, on April 18
and 19, 1994; 3) The massacres committed in the church in Mubuga, where thousands of men,
women and children were killed and many others persons were beaten up, between
April 14 and 17, 1994; 4) The massacres committed in Bisesero region, in which thousands of men,
women and children were killed and many other persons were injured on June 18
and 30, 1994.(74) When arraigned before the tribunal on May 31, 1996, Kayishema pleaded not
guilty to all 25 charges. In early April 1997, the tribunal announced that it
would try Kayishema and Obed Ruzindana jointly. Ruzindana, 38, was a businessman
and is also accused of organizing massacres in western Rwanda. Kenyan police had
arrested Ruzindana in September 1996; it was Kenya's first arrest of a genocide
suspect. Ruzindana was later transferred to Arusha. The prosecution applied for a delay to allow consolidating the indictments
while the defense said they were ready for trial. The Trial Chamber ordered the
prosecution to revise the indictments and be ready by April 11. Then on May 8,
the Trial Chamber inexplicably adjourned the trial after a closed session. The
trial will resume on a date agreed to by the defense and the prosecution. Before
adjourning, the tribunal heard testimony from a witness named "L" who stated
that Kayishema visited the Kibuye stadium where many Tutsis had gathered and
ordered "a white man to stop giving them food."(75) The witness then testified
that Kayishema ordered the military police to shoot the Tutsis. Fourteen
witnesses have testified against Kayishema so far and none against Ruzindana.
On Thursday, May 30, 1996, Georges Rutaganda, 38 years old, appeared before
the ICTR and pleaded not guilty to eight counts accusing him of genocide, crimes
against humanity and violations of Common Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions.
Rutaganda is from Gitarama, the scene of much killing and was transferred from
Zambia on May 21, 1996. The indictment charges that he was a senior official in
the party of assassinated president Juvenal Habyarimana and, as vice-president
of the Interahamwe militia, helped arm the militia in Kigali, placing
militia members at roadblocks and ordered them to round up and kill Tutsis. The
indictment also alleges that he was a shareholder in Radio Télévision Libre
des Milles Collines which regularly broadcast incitements to commit
genocide. Rutaganda was represented at this hearing by Belgian lawyer Luc de
Temmerman who said he was retained by the Rally for Defense of Democracy, a Hutu
refugee group based in Kenya.(76) Rutaganda was accused of directing men under his control to take 10 Tutsi
detainees to a deep hole and then ordering them to be killed. The 10 Tutsis were
killed with machetes and their bodies then thrown into the hole. Rutaganda's trial began on March 18, 1997. Two lawyers, Tiphaine Dickson of
Canada and de Temmerman of Belgium, represent Rutaganda. The prosecution
initially planned on calling 35 witnesses. His lawyers maintain that he was an
ordinary businessman and that his position as a senior officer of the
Interahamwe was a mere formality. Another defense offered on Rutaganda's behalf underscores the importance of
the tribunal's role in establishing not only individual guilt but also the
historical record. De Temmerman stated in his opening argument that he will show
that no genocide took place but rather the Hutus were simply defending
themselves from Tutsi attacks. "We must examine the role of the
Interahamwe and examine whether the massacres were planned or not."(77)
"It will come out clearly that it is not Hutus who are guilty. . . .There was no
genocide. It was a situation of mass killings in a state of war where everyone
was killing their enemies."(78) The RPF undoubtedly committed serious violations of international
humanitarian law, yet this must not obscure the 1994 genocide. The tribunal's
investigators have already compiled evidence to refute the myth of an ethnic
war. Forensic scientists found mass graves in Kibuye showing that 45% of the
dead were under 18 and two-thirds were women and children. Most died from blows
from blunt instruments or machetes. There were few wounds to the hands or arms
meaning that most offered little or no resistance. One investigator noted "The
kind of evidence we are collecting will disallow this revisionist idea that
there was no genocide, that it was war. . .If this was a war, then the infants
were vicious infants."(79) The challenge for the tribunal is to link specific
individuals with this evidence. The Trial Chamber had twice adjourned Rutaganda's trial and it finally began
in early June 1997. For the first time, the tribunal heard testimony from a witness in
closed session since the court determined that part of the testimony may
compromise his safety.(80) Another witness, identified as "B", testified that
French soldiers had taught Hutu extremist militias how to kill.(81) This is a
frequent allegation which the tribunal's investigations and hearings may help
clarify. Jean-Paul Akayesu, the 43 year-old former mayor of Taba, a commune near
Gitarama, has been charged on 12 counts, including genocide and crimes against
humanity. The indictment alleges that he tortured people who hid Tutsis, that he
ordered the killing of eight Tutsis and that he oversaw the killing of five
schoolteachers.(82) He was arraigned on May 31, 1996. His trial was supposed to
have begun on September 27, but his lawyer requested a postponement because he
had not had the time or resources to prepare a defense; on two other occasions
Akayesu fired his lawyers just before the trial date. In what can only be
described as delaying tactics, Akayesu, on October 31, fired his Belgian
attorney, Johan Scheers, and named an American to replace him. The tribunal once
again postponed his trial to January 1997. Akayesu once again tried to fire his
lawyers but the presiding trial judge refused any further delay and allowed
Akayesu to cross-examine witnesses himself while the court considered his
request.(83) While the prosecution and the Rwandese government were understandably
frustrated by the delay, the tribunal clearly needed more time and resources to
mount an effective witness protection program before beginning the Akayesu
trial. The murder of a witness, her husband, their four children and three other
children on January 5, 1997, just days before she was to fly to Arusha to
testify for the prosecution, underscored the need for drastic action. The
tribunal still had no means to scramble voices, hide faces or otherwise protect
witnesses's identity. As an interim measure, the tribunal did not reveal the names of witnesses in
open court but identified them by letters of the alphabet. Also, the court
forbade anyone from filming, sketching or photographing witnesses while they
were at the ICTR. Finally, in mid-January, Akayesu's trial began, the first for
the ICTR. The court decided to allow him to represent himself temporarily.
Akayesu directly cross-examined the first few prosecution witnesses, who
included one 70 year-old woman who testified that he had beaten and tortured
her. Akayesu inspected in court the wounds of another witness, a fellow Hutu and
coffee farmer, who said that Akayesu had attacked him.(84) The confrontation of
accused and accuser was quite emotional at times; the 70 year-old at one point
screamed at Akayesu: "did you not want to crush me with that car? You told me to
lie on the ground and you were going to drive over me to crush me."(85) She
charged that Akayesu attacked her, a Hutu, because she would not tell him where
Tutsi were hiding. Akayesu subsequently agreed to accept Nicolas Tiangaye from the Central
African Republic as his counsel and Tiangaye cross-examined prosecution
witnesses. They provided vivid, at times emotional testimony about Akayesu's
role. Witness "D" described how he watched from a hiding place as Akayesu gave
the order to kill "D's" three brothers. Witness "V", a Tutsi teacher, told of
how Akayesu boasted of having a list of people who should be killed. As the trial entered its third week, Akayesu requested an adjournment because
of "headaches." A doctor examined him for possible malaria. The final
prosecution witness, "H", was a 26 year-old Tutsi woman, told how
Interahamwe militia had raped her and how "the militiamen told passing
men to come and pick young girls from where we were, register their names and
then the men could take them away, after which they were all killed. . .If
Akayesu wanted he could have prevented these events from taking place because he
was the mayor of the commune but by not protecting us from all these events he
participated in them."(86) The prosecution called 22 witnesses. In early March 1997, the tribunal postponed the trial until May to allow
Akayesu time to prepare a defense following completion of the prosecution's
case. When his lawyers missed their flight to Arusha for the May 21 proceedings,
the trial was delayed again. Finally, the trial was postponed until Sept. 29;
Akayesu's lawyer announced that he had been unable to find any defense witnesses
who would testify on his behalf.(87) D. Colonel Theoneste Bagosora The most senior official captured, arrested, indicted and transferred to the
tribunal so far, Col. Theoneste Bagosora, 56 years old, arrived in Arusha along
with three others surrendered by Cameroon to the tribunal on January 23, 2025 in
the midst of the Akayesu proceedings. Indicted by the tribunal on August 16,
1996, Bagosora finally appeared before the ICTR on March 7 and pleaded not
guilty to genocide, crimes against humanity and two counts of violations of
Common Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions. The court had set his original
hearing for February 21 but had to postpone it until March when his lawyer
failed to appear. Before hearing the charges against him, Bagosora's lawyer
requested the tribunal to provide information on the April 6, 2025 plane crash.
He was represented by defense lawyer Benjamin Ondingui of Cameroon but Bagosora
requested that de Temmerman represent him. Bagosora is undisputedly the "biggest fish" that the tribunal has managed to
apprehend so far. He is among the core group of a dozen or so people who
allegedly planned the genocide. Bagosora was known for his ferocious opposition
to any settlement with the RPF, and especially the power-sharing arrangement
embodied in the 1993 Arusha Accords. (88) According to the research conducted by
Filip Reyntjens as described in his study Rwanda: Trois Jours Qui Ont Fait
Basculer l'Histoire,(89) a reception two days before the plane carrying
Presidents Habyarimana of Rwanda and Cyprien Ntaryamira of Burundi was shot down
as they returned from a negotiating session in Dar-es-Salaam with the RPF,
Bagosora was reported to have said that the Arusha Accords offered no solution
and it was necessary to exterminate all Tutsis. He was reputed to be one of the
chief organizers of death squads that started operations in 1991, shortly after
the initial RPF incursion into northeastern Rwanda. A member of the "akazu" or the inner circle of Habyarimana's
in-laws and advisors from the Hutu stronghold of Ruhengeri/Gisenyi
in northwestern Rwanda, Bagosora occupied the key post of "chef de cabinet" in the Ministry of
Defense. Told at 9:00 p.m. on April 6, 2025 that the president's
plane had been shot down, he went immediately to a meeting of senior
military officers which he chaired.(90) The Army Chief of Staff was
killed in the plane crash and the Minister of Defense was out of the
country. Jumping over the heads of several actively serving FAR
officers, Bagosora took charge of a "Crisis Committee" and refused
any contact with the Prime Minister, the Hutu moderate Agathe
Uwilingiyimana, who, under the Arusha Accords, should have become
interim head of state. The meeting broke up at about 2:00, and as
Reyntjens notes: "from 2:00 to 7:00, this leaves a large gap in
accounting for Colonel Bagosora's activities. What was he doing
those five hours, during which the veritable 'killing machine' took
off?"(91) Reyntjens also cites witnesses who heard Bagosora order
several army officers on the morning of April 7: "Muhere aruhande" ("begin on one side")
which was immediately understood to mean to begin a systematic
killing operation.(92) The tribunal has not yet set a date for
Bagosora's trial. His trial should illuminate the planning,
structure and implementation of the genocide, and provide more
details on the murder of the Prime Minister and the Belgian
peacekeepers, as well as possibly revealing the roles of the other
senior "intellectual authors" of the genocide. Two of the others
transferred with him from Cameroon, Lt. Col. Anatole Nsengiyunva,
former military head in the northeastern city of Gisenyi, and
Ferdindand Nahimana, former director of Radio Télévision Libre des Milles Collines,
pleaded not guilty to charges on Febrary 20, 1997 that they had
presided over meetings ordering the killing of Tutsis and had
control over broadcasts designed to "achieve inter-ethnic hatred and
encourage the population to kill and commit other acts of violence,"
respectively.(93) Judge Laity Koma recently ruled that defense
lawyers would not be told the names immediately of witnesses
testifying against Nahimana and Nsengiyunva. Lawyers would learn
their identities later but still in time to prepare a
defense.(94) VI. THE ICTR'S FIRST TWO
YEARS: Although originally in favor of establishing
an international tribunal, the Rwandese ambassador to the UN, who
also sat on the Security Council, voted against the resolution
creating the ICTR. The ambassador cited the failure to include
within the tribunal's competence events from 1990 to 1994 that were
integral in planning and executing the genocide, the failure to
create a separate appeals panel and a separate chief prosecutor for
the ICTR, the refusal to include the death penalty and the location
of the tribunal outside Rwanda.(95) The Rwandese cite the anomalous
result of lower-ranking officials being executed after trials in
Rwanda while the more culpable planners of the genocide receive
medium-term prison sentences, possibly serving such sentences in
relatively comfortable prisons in Europe. Relations between the ICTR and Rwanda have
steadily deteriorated. In March 1996 RPA soldiers stopped a clearly
marked UN vehicle in downtown Kigali and beat three tribunal
investigators. More recently, a letter from the government to the
Security Council included unwarranted and personal attacks on the
new prosecutor, Louise Arbour and street demonstrators protested her
presence in Kigali during a working visit in May 1997.
Unfortunately, the tribunal's management and administrative failings
in 1995-96 provided much genuine grounds for criticism. Creating an institution from scratch is
never easy. Building a team of investigators, prosecutors,
administrators and support personnel in Kigali and Arusha, which
have limited infrastructure and where communications and travel are
difficult and expensive, only compounded the challenge. But the
management and administrative problems of the ICTR were allowed to
fester for far too long. A. Recruiting Personnel Finding qualified people who would work in
Kigali or Arusha was difficult enough but UN hiring rules compounded
the problem. Key posts in the deputy prosecutor's office and in the
investigative division were unfilled for months. For 1996, nearly
half of the professional posts budgeted for the ICTR were
vacant.(96) One major hold-up was that unlike the ICTFY, the ICTR did not have the
authority to appoint international staff and that two personnel
officers in New York dealt with personnel matters. The UN Budgetary
Committee had previously recommended granting the ICTR the necessary
authority, but as of April 1996 no action had been taken. Several states have generously loaned
specialists to the tribunal. Seconding nationals is faster than
going through normal UN recruiting but even this has taken too long
and many more investigators, lawyers and interpreters are needed.
Prosecutor Arbour found that 64 out of 160 investigator positions
were vacant when she took over in October 1996.(97) No wonder it has
taken more than two years for the tribunal to start the first
trials. B. Funding The tribunal's funding has been inadequate
and unpredictable since its inception. Dependent on voluntary
contributions and interim budgets, the tribunal operated with funds
appropriated by the General Assembly that were at levels
significantly below what the Secretary-General recommended for
1995-96.(98) The Secretary-General recommended that the
tribunal receive $46,732,700 for 1997, an increase of $10,238,000
over 1996 spending from the UN budget.(99) While this amount is a
bare minimum, the real concern about the ICTR is whether the money
previously allocated was well spent. C. Mismanagement The tribunal's most serious problem has been
mismanagement. Reports started to emerge in late 1995 and early 1996
of serious waste, inefficiency, patronage and corruption, especially
in the registry in Arusha. As early as February 1996, tribunal staff in
Arusha complained that they lacked vehicles necessary to carry out
investigations and communications equipment. A Witness Protection
Unit had still not been created and some tribunal investigators
rightly feared that their work was endangering people's lives.
Despite a $36 million budget for 1996, basic office materials such
as pens and paper were lacking while security officers lacked
guns.(100) The press office had one working telephone. In May 1996,
a tribunal investigator complained of favoritism in the registrar's
office amounting to fraud; hiring and contracts were awarded to
friends, relatives or lovers. Essential work such as forensic
investigations at mass graves were put on hold through lack of funds
and necessary equipment. Long and inexplicable delays in purchasing
vital equipment postponed the core work of the tribunal further
undermining its credibility, especially with its most important
audience, the Rwandese. For example, when Jean-Paul Akayesu's trial
was supposed to start in October 1996, there was no way to videotape
or film the proceedings even though money to purchase the equipment
had been available for four months.(101) Most criticism centered on the near absolute
control of former registrar Andronico Adede. Virtually every
decision had to pass through him and he was frequently on the road
in 1996; while away matters requiring his approval remained frozen.
In one internal document, a former chief transport officer wrote,
"If ICTR intends to have its vehicles running on a daily basis in
order to fulfill its mandate, then I implore the administration to
bring the appropriate staff on board."(102) Such complaints and
in-fighting increased while morale plummeted. Relations with the
prosecutor's office in Kigali worsened. Deputy Prosecutor Rakotomana was criticized
for his less than aggressive approach to investigations; his own
staff accused him of lacking any overall prosecutorial strategy and
their work seemed to be driven more by who had happened to be
arrested and transferred to the tribunal rather than by any
concerted attempt to identify and arrest the real planners of the
genocide. Even Chief Prosecutor Goldstone was criticized by staffers
in Kigali for neglecting the ICTR and spending much more time on the
Former Yugoslavia. Staff in Kigali felt slighted and demoralized.
"We're isolated. . .This is no way to run an international
tribunal," said Trial Chamber Judge Yakov Ostrovsky.(103) All this public criticism gave the Rwandese
authorities even more reason to denounce the tribunal, suggest that
international assistance could be better spent rebuilding the
Rwandese justice system and encourage non-compliance with the ICTR.
Foreign Minister Anastase Gasana said that the government would not
hand over the suspects held in Cameroon to the tribunal if they were
extradited to Rwanda and that he was disgusted with the lack of
progress. "Of course we'll refuse to hand them over to the tribunal.
These men committed genocide here and were arrested because of our
own efforts, not the tribunal's.(104) D. The UN Office of Internal Oversight Services
Report On February 12, 1997, the UN Office of
Internal Oversight Services (OIOS ) released a 33-page report
criticizing the administration and management of the ICTR. Largely
confirming the allegations that had been swirling for close to two
years, the report offered the tribunal its best chance of radically
changing the way it has operated and in so doing regaining the trust
and cooperation of the Rwandese government, the people of Rwanda and
the international community. In frank, hard-hitting language rarely seen
in UN documents, the OIOS found that "not a single administrative
area of the registry in Arusha "functioned effectively."(105) It
found there were no accounting or property management systems in
place, line of authority were poorly defined, unqualified personnel
occupied key positions, UN procurement rules were flouted and
internal controls ineffective. The OIOS also had harsh words for the
prosecutor's office in Kigali. Serious leadership, administrative,
personnel and operational weaknesses sapped morale and undermined
effectiveness. The office lacked all types of material essential to
investigating cases: vehicles, computers, phones, faxes, even the
proverbial pens and paper. In citing the enduring absence of
experienced senior criminal trial lawyers, the report observes: "It
would seem axiomatic that the most important criminal trials since
the Nuremberg trials would require a high level of expertise in
criminal law and procedures and significant relevant
experience."(106) The report lambastes the deputy prosecutor's lack
of a prosecution strategy, reiterating earlier criticisms that
investigations seem to be triggered by arrests of suspects outside
Rwanda. The report quotes one staff lawyer who concluded: "We have a
leadership void." E. Reactions to the UN Report In his first major management challenge,
Secretary-General Kofi Annan asked for and received the resignation
of both the registrar and the deputy prosecutor. Replacements were
appointed and Judge Arbour continued to dedicate substantially more
time than had her predecessor to the ICTR. The tribunal now has
three trials underway and a fourth to start soon. It has a second
chance to earn the trust and credibility it needs to fulfill its
mission. VII. SUMMARY OF THE TRIBUNAL'S
WORK The ICTR, after a slow start, has held
numerous hearings in the first half of 1997. These have included
confirming indictments, initial hearings for the accused to enter a
plea, and actual trials with witnesses. The ICTR's indictments clearly describe the
charges and are provided to the accused and defense counsel
promptly. The accused have had adequate time to prepare for trial.
In fact, in some cases the tribunal has agreed to lengthy
adjournments for medical reasons or to allow the accused to find or
change lawyers. Lawyers have ready access to their clients. Interpreters have assured that the accused
and the witnesses are able to understand the proceedings at all
times; all have been able to express themselves in the language of
their choice. The tribunal has assured the decorum required in a
court. All of the accused have lawyers, although
for part of his trial the court allowed Jean- Paul Akayesu to
represent himself. These lawyers are either paid directly by the
accused or are paid by the tribunal consistent with rules on
appointment of counsel adopted in 1996.(107) The tribunal has been slow to create an
effective witness protection program, and its Witness Protection
Unit did not function until early 1997. Belatedly, the tribunal
adopted some measures to conceal the identity of witnesses and
investigators in Rwanda took precautions such as not traveling to
rural communes in easily identifiable tribunal vehicles. The
security situation in Rwanda has deteriorated after the sudden and
massive return in late 1996 of Rwandese who had fled to Zaire and
Tanzania. This has hindered the tribunal's work, according to
Prosecutor Louise Arbour, because it "creates enormous concerns in
our office in respect to the security of our witnesses, to whom we
no longer have the free access that we had before the return of the
refugees."(108) The UN Human Rights Field Operation reported in late
February 1997 that 54 genocide survivors or people linked to them
had been killed in the first month and a half of the year. (109) An
international conference of western donors to the tribunal held in
Geneva in late May 1997 stressed the need for "beefing up witness
protection."(110) Another concern is the ability of the
prosecution to continue investigations in Rwanda and for defense
counsel to identify possible defense witnesses there. The tribunal's
ultimate ability to guarantee fair trials partly depends on security
conditions in Rwanda and close cooperation with the Rwandese
authorities. Rwanda started its own genocide trials in national
courts in December 1996, and the tribunal's work cannot be
understood or assessed without considering these national
trials. VIII. RWANDA'S JUSTICE SYSTEM AND NATIONAL
GENOCIDE TRIALS The justice system in pre-genocide
Rwanda—weak, dependent and corrupt—was virtually destroyed by the
1994 killings and the ensuing war.(111) Most judges, prosecutors and
criminal investigators (inspecteurs de police judiciaire or IPJ)
fled the country or were killed. Courts, records, all type of
equipment and supplies were destroyed or stolen. The Ministry of
Justice building had blown-out windows and smoldering case files,
while telephones had been ripped out and typewriters and computers
carried off. The devastation, both in personnel and property, was
nearly total. The UN Human Rights Mission, in a June 1996 assessment
of the justice system in Rwanda, noted that: The 1994 genocide and ensuing destruction
devastated the legal system and present a challenging array of
problems. The Government of Rwanda needs to end impunity, compensate
victims of the genocide, insure fair trials, provide humane
conditions for detainees, and train and equip virtually an entire
corps of judges, prosecutors, criminal investigators and prison
guards and administrators.(112) A. Overview of the Rwandese Justice
System Rwanda's justice system reflects its
colonial history; it is based on the Belgian system, which in turn
is largely based on the French Civil Law and the Napoleonic Codes.
The lowest level courts are the 145 Cantonal Courts; next up the
chain are the 12 First Instance Courts; finally there are four
Courts of Appeal. Because of the overwhelming demands created by the
genocide, the National Assembly passed a law in August 1996 creating
special chambers within the First Instance Courts to try people
accused of genocide. The Arusha Accords called for a reconfigured
Supreme Court which now has five sections, including the Cour de Cassation and the Constitutional
Court. The Constitutional Court has already struck down a law for
failing to comply with the constitution. Both prosecutors and judges are considered magistrats and were under the control of
the Minister of Justice. This created great scope for executive
interference. While the Minister of Justice retains overall
responsibility for the justice system, the Arusha Accords required
the creation of a High Judicial Council to oversee the nomination,
appointment and work of sitting judges. This would presumably
increase judicial independence. The High Judicial Council ,
comprised of 20 jurists, did not begin work until April 1996.
Prosecutors, the court clerks and the judicial police inspectors
continue to work directly under the ministry's supervision. There are also military courts which have
competence to try soldiers and, as a result of recent legislation,
civilians and soldiers jointly in certain cases. A traditional
system of justice known as gacaca covers
land disputes, family matters and small commercial disagreements;
its purpose is to resolve problems while promoting
reconciliation. B. Rehabilitating the Justice System The Government of Rwanda faced a dire
situation in the fall of 1994: everything was needed at once, the
justice system was in tatters, the number of prisoners was growing,
the genocide survivors were crying for justice, and the former
government had destroyed what it could not carry away. The
authorities, with important assistance from the international donor
community, have over the last two and one-half years implemented
numerous projects aimed at building a legal system. 1. Material assistance The government started to refurbish courts,
prosecutors' offices and the Ministry of Justice itself. "Holes in
roofs were plugged, walls and floors repaired and painted, windows
installed, water, electricity and telephone lines restored."(113)
The Irish NGO Trocaire provided $10,000 to a "justice working group"
in each prefecture. These groups, comprised of representatives of
the First Instance Court, the prosecutor, the national police, the
head of the prefecture and HRFOR, decided on how to spend the money
to meet local needs. Prosecutors and IPJ's needed transport to
investigate crimes and interview witnesses. The Ministry of Justice
did not have a single vehicle after the genocide. A variety of
states, including Finland, the Netherlands, Spain, Switzerland and
the U.K. provided funding for pick-up trucks and motorcycles and
fuel, although vehicle maintenance has become a problem. Law books had also been destroyed or stolen.
The few remaining judges and prosecutors lacked copies of the penal
code and code of criminal procedure. Even paper, pens, legal forms
and chairs and desks were rare. Donors have since provided
typewriters, copiers, office furniture, file folders, cameras, pens
and paper. Legal forms for warrants and other proceedings have been
printed and distributed. The Belgian NGO Citizens' Network, working
closely with Rwandese lawyers, compiled basic domestic laws on
arrest and detention which they distributed during training programs
in thousands of tri-lingual copies (Kinyarwanda, French and
English). Another tri-lingual handbook called "Prosecutions for the
Crime of Genocide and Crimes Against Humanity" which covers
international and Rwandese law was also distributed. By the end of 1996, while still short of
some necessities, the government had managed to provide most of its
legal officers with a decent place to work and the bare minimum of
the requisite equipment and furnishings. This is an enormous
achievement given the extent of the destruction. An even bigger
challenge lay in addressing the shortage of trained legal officers.
2. Recruiting and training legal
personnel The government has tried to harmonize
rebuilding the judicial infrastructure with revitalizing the
personnel who work within it. Here too the needs were overwhelming.
A small fraction of judges, prosecutors and IPJ's remained after the
genocide. The government began an intensive recruiting
drive in 1995. Since few people have had prior legal training, the
government soon realized that it would have to appoint "non-
jurists" to many posts that normally require legal training. During
1995 and 1996, approximately 700 people received training that
varied from several weeks to several months to become prosecutors,
judges, court clerks and secretaries. For example, the UN found that
as of May 1996, only a small minority of the 258 judges and
prosecutors then working had legal training.(114) Those selected to
be judges and prosecutors have typically received four months
training and the German government has funded the rehabilitation of
the Ecole de la Magistrature. Over 300 IPJ's have received three months
training. Some were selected to become assistant prosecutors because
of their excellent performance in the training session. Roughly
one-half have been assigned to communes and one-half to work
directly out of prosecutors' offices. Low salaries and poor working
conditions have led to many IPJ resignations. Several IPJ's have
been attacked and killed; others have gone into the private sector
where salaries are substantially higher. This led HRFOR to conclude
that "staffing levels for the justice system remained generally low,
particularly with regard to parquets, or prosecution departments
and inspectuers de police judiciaire
(IPJ's) deployed in the communes."(115) While there has been important progress in
strengthening the justice system's human resources, the shortfall in
quantity and quality remains great. The ministry estimates that it
needs 694 judges, yet only 448 are in place; this is still many
fewer than the 800 judges who worked before 1994 and the caseload is
now astonishingly high.(116) Moreover, few of the new judges are
jurists. "Only 20 or so, or less than one fourth, had received
adequate legal training; over 75% of the judges were trained on the
job."(117) Many grew up outside Rwanda and returned following the
RPF's victory, while others are genocide survivors. And the first
order of business for these hastily recruited and trained judges is
trying one of humanity's most serious crimes, one with tremendously
complicated facts and legal issues: the 1994 genocide. C. The Law on Prosecuting Genocide and Crimes
Against Humanity The summer of 1996 saw an emotional debate
in the Rwandese Transitional National Assembly on a draft law on
prosecuting genocide and crimes against humanity.(118) Rwanda's
penal code did not expressly punish genocide or crimes against
humanity, although Rwanda had ratified the 1948 UN Convention on the
Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide. The law's
preamble states that "as a consequence, the prosecutions must be
based on the Penal Code" and that this creates an "exceptional
situation in the country [which] requires the adoption of specially
adapted measures to satisfy the need for justice of the people of
Rwanda."(119) The most controversial "specially adapted
measure" in the law allows for a limited form of plea-bargaining. As
in most civil law legal systems, plea-bargaining until very recently
has been seen as a uniquely Anglo-Saxon, common law invention. Most
traditional civil law systems did not allow plea-bargaining and some
viewed is as distasteful if not immoral. For many genocide survivors
and their representatives in the National Assembly, any form of marchandage (the French term unfortunately
chosen as a translation of "plea- bargaining") with people guilty of
genocide was not acceptable. Finally, on August 9, 1996, the
Transitional National Assembly passed the law; the Constitutional
Court approved it and it took effect on September 1. The debate over the genocide law reflects a
fundamental dilemma facing the Rwandese authorities. Even if Rwanda
had the most efficient, well-equipped justice system in the world
with highly trained and skilled judges, prosecutors and hundreds of
defense lawyers, the sheer magnitude of the genocide and violence of
1994 would overwhelm the system. As HRFOR noted, "the genocide has
confronted Rwanda with the fact that the number of its citizens who
committed murder and criminal acts of the greatest gravity is
without parallel in the experience of other countries."(120) A legal
system as weak as Rwanda's cannot hope to cope with the staggering
number of people who participated in the genocide. The genocide law attempts to face this
reality head on. The law establishes degrees of culpability based on
several factors and then offers graduated sentences which can be
reduced, in many cases, if the accused admits guilt. The
government's goals are three-fold: (1) to reduce the number of
trials; (2) to encourage people to provide incriminating information
to facilitate other prosecutions or encourage others to admit guilt;
and (3) to enhance the reconciliation process through public
admissions of guilt. Article 2 of the law establishes four
categories based on the accused's acts during the period covered.
Category 1 encompasses those deemed most culpable. They are defined
as the planners, organizers, instigators, supervisors and leaders of
the genocide; people in positions of authority at levels from the
national to the cell (lowest administrative unit), or in political
parties, the army, religious groups or in a militia; "notorious
murderers"; and persons who committed sexual torture. This category
seeks to demarcate those who planned, instigated, ordered and
incited genocide from positions of authority and trust. Category 1
offenders cannot have their sentence reduced even if they admit
guilt before trial. Category 1 offenders receive the death penalty.
Category 2 is comprised of persons who are
"the perpetrators or accomplices of intentional homicide" or serious
assaults resulting in death. This category covers a potentially huge
number, the "foot soldiers" of the genocide. Articles 15 and 16 of
the law state that if a category 2 offender confesses and pleads
guilty before prosecution(121), the sentence will be between seven
and 11 years in prison. If the confession and plea come after the
prosecution, the sentence will be between 12 and 15 years. If the
category 2 offender refuses to confess or plea bargain and is found
guilty, the sentence is life imprisonment instead of the death
penalty which might otherwise apply. Category 3 comprises persons who committed
serious assaults. If they confess and enter a plea before
prosecution, the sentence is one-third of what would normally be
given and if the prosecution has already started, one-half of the
normal sentence. Category 4 covers crimes against property.
Penalties shall only be civil damages reached by agreement between
the parties. Article 6 describes the confession procedure
and requires a detailed description of the offenses covered by the
law (date, time, location, names of victims and witnesses,
information on accomplices, conspirators, an apology and an offer to
plead guilty). The Rwandese government, pursuant to Article
9 of the Genocide Law, published a list of category 1 offenders in
November 1996 that included 1,946 names. People confessing to acts
after the list's publication, even if the acts would place them in
category 1, will be placed in category 2. The Genocide Law also created Specialized
Chambers with exclusive jurisdiction over genocide and crimes
against humanity. These Chambers are part of the First Instance
Courts and the military courts. As with almost all Rwandese trial
courts, each panel in a Specialized Chamber has three judges; a
Chamber may have more than one panel sitting simultaneously. Article 36 provides that the accused have
the same right to defense as others facing criminal charges but not
at government expense. If convicted, the accused has 15 days to
appeal; an initial judgment can be overturned only on questions of
law or "flagrant errors of fact" (Art. 24) The government unleashed a broad public
education campaign at the time the Genocide Law was adopted to
explain how the law would work. Audiences include government
officials, the general public, judicial and prison personnel and the
detainees. Yet as of June 1997, it appears that few defendants have
used the law and there is great misunderstanding within the
judiciary about how the law should be applied.(122) Several cogent criticisms of the Genocide
Law may be made.(123) First, limiting the scope of review to
questions of law and flagrant errors of fact creates only a limited
review which violates Article 14(5) of the ICCPR which states that
"Everyone convicted of a crime shall have the right to his
conviction and sentence being reviewed by a higher tribunal
according to law."(124) The mandatory death sentence for category 1
defendants robs them of any chance to have mitigating factors
considered in their sentencing. This mechanical application of the
law violates Article 14 and is inconsistent with the practice of
both tribunals which allow mitigating factors to be considered. Also, a defendant may not seek appellate
review to determine whether confessions were not obtained by torture
or other forms of duress. As confessions play an integral role in
the law's plea-bargaining scheme, the potential for abuse is great.
If the trial court refuses to investigate such claims, which has
already happened in several cases, the Court of Appeal will not take
up the matter. Finally, criminal liability must be
determined by an individual defendant's acts, not on his or her
membership in a defined class. Thus the effort to distinguish
between degrees of culpability for the genocide by the defendant's
position in government or society must never obscure the necessity
of proving that the defendant actually committed crimes punishable
by the law. D. The Law on Arrest
and Pre-Trial Detention Law 9/96, adopted on September 8, 1996,
retroactively legalizes arrests and extensive pre-trial detention
periods starting on April 6, 1994, the day the genocide began. The
law extends the time allowed for every stage of arrest and pre-trial
detention from the period prescribed in the Code of Criminal
Procedure. For example, the Code sets time limits for drawing up an
arrest report, issuing an arrest warrant and a pre-trial detention
order. The law also bans appeals from adverse decisions, taking away
a right that otherwise exists in Rwandese Criminal Procedure. The new law extends the periods based on
three categories. First, for those already in detention when the law
was enacted (about 80,000 people in September 1996), the authorities
have 18 months (until the end of 1997) to compile an arrest report
and issue an arrest warrant. The validity of a pre-trial detention
order is extended from 30 days to six months and the right to appeal
is abolished. For people in the second category, those
arrested between the publication of the law and the end of 1997
(currently about 30,000 people and virtually sure to increase), the
arrest report must be written in one month (extended from 48 hours);
the prosecutor has four months to issue an arrest warrant; pre-trial
detention is valid for six months (the code provides for 30 days).
After January 1998 all deadlines will be shortened, but will still
not be as short as the Code of Criminal Procedure requires and the
accused's right to appeal any adverse decision at any stage will
also continue to be eliminated. The government relies on the derogation
provision in the ICCPR to justify this curtailment of rights
guaranteed elsewhere in the Covenant, especially the provisions of
Article 9, under which: "Anyone arrested or detained on a criminal
charge shall be brought promptly before a judge or other officer. .
.and shall be entitled to trial within a reasonable time or to
release." Article 4 of the Covenant states that: "In
time of public emergency which threatens the life of the nation and
the existence of which is officially proclaimed" a state may suspend
some of the rights found in the Covenant, including Article 9. Any
suspensions must "be strictly required by the exigencies of the
situation" and not "inconsistent with their other obligations under
international law." The government's reliance on Article 4 is
misplaced in the current situation. While such a suspension of
fundamental liberties may have been warranted for a period in 1994,
1995 or even up to early 1996, when the law was passed in September
1996 Rwanda was not "experiencing a public emergency which threatens
the life of the nation." Rwanda's judiciary was hardly functioning
and the prisons and detention centers were overflowing right after
the war ended, but this does not justify extending the time now for
pre-trial detentions and retroactively legalizing arrests that
occurred more than two years ago. This response to an "emergency" is
not strictly tailored. The law justifies the deprivation of liberty
and suspends the right to a hearing on the legality of the detention
without delay, the right to a trial without undue delay and the
state's obligation not to treat people differently who are charged
with the same acts. The "emergency' stems from the horrendous prison
overcrowding which must be resolved in a way that does not
exacerbate human rights violations in Rwanda. E. Prisons No criminal justice issue has generated more
controversy than the state of Rwanda's prisons and detention
centers. Newspapers all over the world have carried pictures of
people crammed into cells, some with three tiers of sleeping mats
jerryrigged right up to the ceiling. The overcrowding and resulting
inhumane conditions are one of Rwanda's most pressing human rights
problems. The overcrowding stems from the nature of
the 1994 genocide and the attendant destruction of the judicial
system and criminal investigative capacity. The quick and massive
killing of so many people depended on the participation, active and
passive, of a huge number of Rwandese. With the disappearance of
police investigators and prosecutors following the RPF's victory in
the fall of 1994, the military assumed the role of policing. The
soldiers, who had no training or knowledge of the law or how to
investigate crimes, arrested people, sometimes on the basis of a
single denunciation. The prisons started to fill up rapidly. Before the genocide, Rwanda had 20 prisons
and several "Centers of Reeducation and Production." The official
estimate of capacity in these prisons was between 13,000 and 15,000.
In addition to prisons, there are approximately 182 communal
detention centers similar to a police lock-up called a cachot; even smaller detention centers,
called amigos exist in many communes.
Detainees are sometimes kept in Gendarmerie brigade centers and on military
bases; no international organization has access to these detention
centers. Cachots and amigos are often merely rooms with a door
that can be locked; they are small and were never intended to hold
people for very long. Conditions are horrendous and there is no
regular provision of food, water or medicine. While reports of
torture and beatings have declined for the central prisons,
mistreatment is still frequent in the communal detention centers.
Few prisons or cachots emerged unscathed
from the genocide and war in a state to hold prisoners, yet the
numbers of prisoners grew steadily during 1995-96 and keep
increasing. Women are usually detained in separate
sections from men; some have nursing infants. Minors are often
detained with adults. The Gitigata Reeducation and Production Center
holds 197 minors (all boys) between the ages of 7-17, who were
initially arrested for participating in the genocide. In August 1996
the government recognized that they were not criminally responsible
for genocide because of their age. The Centre was transferred from
the Ministry of Justice to the Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs,
which is responsible for educating and training the 197 minors. The combination of an increase in detainees
with the inability of the prisons to provide minimally acceptable
conditions led to a shockingly high prison mortality rate in 1995.
In the worst prison, Gitarama, there were eight to nine deaths per
day between February and May 1995 and a total of 867 prisoners died
in Gitarama from December 1994 to June 1995.(125) Most died from
dysentery, tuberculosis, malaria and other infectious diseases.
Others had to have lower limbs amputated because of edema. The government created an inter-ministerial
commission on prisons in May 1995 to identify new sites for prisons
and to build additions to existing prisons. The ICRC participated in
the commission's early stage to help recommend ways to relieve
prison overcrowding. Warehouses were converted into prisons in
several cities, extensions built to existing prisons in Nyanza,
Kigali, Butare, Gitarama and Cyangugu and a new prison built at
Nsinda.(126) Yet the rate of arrests has held steady with
substantial upward spikes in the summer of 1996 during a census and
more recently with the return of people from the camps in Zaire and
Tanzania. As fast as new prisons were built or extensions completed,
they quickly filled. While the increased prison capacity has reduced
the extreme overcrowding and high mortality rates in central
prisons, the "overcrowding remains by any standards acute."(127) The
UN Special Rapporteur on Rwanda noted that "Rwandan prisons and
detention centers are all more or less equally overcrowded. The
difference lies not in the type, but in the degree, of
overcrowding."(128) The situation in the cachots remains dire. No official figures
exist for the capacity of detention centers. Observers from the
HRFOR regularly visit and consistently report gross overcrowding and
inhumane conditions. In May 1996, the observers found that 42
communes held more than 200 detainees each and that one commune in
Kigali Rurale prefecture held 700; it is no surprise that also in
May, 79 detainees died from malaria, diarrhea and respiratory
diseases, while 23 died in a detention center in Kibuye prefecture,
six from suffocation and 17 who panicked and fought over lack of
air.(129) A similar incident occurred in October 1996, when 16
detainees died after a night of panic from extreme overcrowding in
the cachot in Gitesi commune, Kibuye
prefecture. At least 120 detainees were held in a cell measuring 20
square meters (six people per square meter) that had three small
windows and a corrugated iron roof; panic erupted around 11:00 p.m.
and survivors stated that there was insufficient fresh air.(130) The rapid influx of returnees from Zaire and
Tanzania complicated an already grave situation. As of January 15,
1997, the UN human rights mission reported that over 7,600 returnees
had been arrested, greatly exacerbating problems of overcrowding in
certain local detention centers; most arrests had been made by
authorities with no legal competence to make an arrest.(131) In some
areas local officials have reacted by releasing detainees without
case files or ordering that only people who fall into category 1 of
the Genocide Law should be arrested.(132) Releases of people charged
with common crime have also become more common. Recent figures indicate that as of May 1997
at least 108,000 detainees are held in central prisons and cachots with an unknown number in military
custody. Of the total, about 42,000 are held in communal detention
centers. Surveys conducted by the UN human rights field officers
during 1996-97 indicate that most detainees have no case files. In
many prefectures unauthorized government officials make arrests.
Arrest warrants are rare, supporting documents and investigation
reports rarer; many detainees in some communes do not know the
reason for their arrest.(133) Prison directors in Ruhengeri, Gisenyi
and Byumba started to demand arrest warrants before admitting new
detainees from the communal detention centers.(134) This has
alleviated overcrowding in these prisons and has encouraged
prosecutors and IPJ's to conduct investigations but has also meant
continued overcrowding in communal detention centers as arrests
continue. RPA soldiers guard prisons and detention
centers. They have received little or no training to perform this
work. Soldiers usually kill anyone who tries to escape; the legality
of using deadly force in such cases is dubious. Five detainees were
killed attempting to escape in August 1996 and 13 in July. The
government apparently took no action against the soldiers in these
cases. In contrast, an army guard who shot and killed 10 people
attempting to escape from a detention center in Maraba, Butare
Prefecture on May 9, 2025 was arrested.(135) The government created Commissions de Triage (screening
commissions) in March 1995 for each prefecture in response to the
prison overcrowding and the absence of a functioning legal system.
These commissions were supposed to review detainee case files
rapidly and identify individuals eligible for provisional release.
Representatives from the prosecutor's office, the military, the Gendarmerie and the Prime Minister's
intelligence service comprised the commission. Later, commissions
were formed at the communal level and some "technical"
sub-commissions also were named. The screening commissions were entirely
extra-legal; Rwandese law has no provisions to establish such
commissions. Their working methods and the criteria used to assess
eligibility for release were unclear. Few commissions worked in
1995-96; the number of releases was minuscule compared to new
arrests. Their overall impact has been minimal; the Director General
of the Ministry of Justice recently admitted that the commissions
will be abolished.(136) The quandary facing the Rwandese authorities
is how to distinguish between cases where incriminating evidence
exists justifying ongoing detention and those cases lacking such
evidence among the more than 100,000 in detention. To end impunity,
those responsible must be held accountable, yet to avoid laying the
groundwork for another round of violence, the process to apportion
guilt and innocence must be fair and not seen as retributive or
"victors' justice." Holding trials for 100,000 is clearly
impossible. Gerard Gahima, Deputy Justice Minister, admits that "If
we had to try all the suspects, it would take thousands of
years."(137) But Rwanda must insure that the trials it does hold are
fair, and promote justice. This is as important for the genocide
survivors as it is for the innocent. F. Genocide Trials in Rwanda's Courts 1. Overview of Some of the Early Trials On December 27, 1996, two and one-half years
after the start of the 1994 genocide, a court in Kibungo opened the
first trial for genocide and crimes against humanity committed in
Rwanda. Deogratias Bizimana, a former medical assistant at Kibungo
Hospital, and Egide Gatanzani, a former local bureaucrat, faced
charges under the Genocide Law in the Special Chamber of the Kibungo
First Instance Court. The accused had no lawyers, nor did it appear
that they had been informed of their right to counsel. They also did
not have copies of their case files at the hearing and had to
remember their contents based on a brief reading during the short
time they had access to the files. Bizimana stated that he had only
seen the file the day before the trial.(138) Bizamana's request for
an adjournment so that he could study the charges more carefully was
denied while his co-defendant said he could not follow the
proceedings. Neither accused presented defense witnesses
and again it is not clear if they knew they could have done so.(139)
The prosecution witnesses did not provide oral testimony so cross-
examination was impossible, although the defendants could respond to
allegations and questions from the trial panel. The defendants claimed that they had been
tortured during interrogation and had been forced to sign their
statements. The judges put the burden of proof on the defendants to
show that they had been tortured and did not seriously attempt to
determine whether their allegations of torture were true. The trial
lasted only four hours. Bizimana asked to speak in French but the
court refused—even though French is one of Rwanda's three official
languages. There were also reports that courtroom decorum was
lacking; those attending reportedly booed the defendants and cheered
the prosecution.(140) The court found both Bizimana and Gatanazi
guilty on January 3, 2025 and sentenced them to death. They appealed
the judgment within the 15 days allowed by the Genocide Law. The next trial began on December 31 in
Byumba, where a former teacher, François Bizumutima, who was also
the Byumba president of the Hutu extremist group Comité de la Défence de la République
(Committee for the Defense of the Republic), was charged with
genocide. It was alleged that he had incited participation in
massacres. Bizumutima appears on the November 30, 2024 government
list of category 1 offenders. He did not have a lawyer and the court
granted his request for an adjournment so that he could find one.
The trial resumed on January 9. Bizumutima still had no lawyer but
stated he was prepared to proceed without counsel. He had submitted
a request in writing that several witnesses appear on his behalf but
the court did not fulfill his request and no defense witnesses
appeared. The court convicted him and sentenced Bizumutima to death
on January 17.(141) The trial of Froduald Karamira, a category 1
defendant and widely believed to have played a leading role in the
genocide, began in Kigali on January 14. Karamira was represented by
a lawyer from Benin provided by a Belgian NGO Avocats sans Frontieres. The court granted
his lawyer's request for an adjournment to study the case file and
prepare a defense. Although the judges ordered those jammed into the
courtroom not to jeer, clap or laugh, those attending ignored the
order.(142) The trial lasted three days and on February 14, 1997,
Karamira was sentenced to death. He was also ordered to pay 1.1
billion Rwandan francs in civil damages. He appealed the sentence.
Of all the cases held so far, Karamira's provided the most
substantive due process protections. Other cases proceeded from January-March in
various cities, including Gitarama, Gikongoro, Butare, Kigali and
Byumba. As of April 30 1997, judgments have been entered for 56
defendants in 22 trials. Courts have convicted and sentenced to
death 35 people and two people have had their death sentences upheld
on appeal. 14 people have been sentenced to life imprisonment, three
received prison sentences from one to five years and four have been
acquitted.(143) In May, the government announced it had adopted an
order governing the details of executions; these will not be public
and may be neither filmed nor photographed.(144) One woman, Virginie
Mukankusi, was convicted and sentenced to death in Gitarama on
February 28.(145) Jérémie Gatorano attempted to use the
plea-bargaining feature of the Genocide Law to obtain a reduced
sentence, but the court found that he had not identified accomplices
to the murder of two children and he received a life
sentence.(146) 2. Flaws in the Trials Given the utter devastation of Rwanda's
justice system, the scale of the crimes committed and the slow pace
early on of international assistance, it is a significant
achievement that trials are taking place. The government of Rwanda
should be commended for its effort to end impunity and to hold
accountable those responsible for genocide and crimes against
humanity. Yet the very gravity of the crimes requires proceedings
that rigorously uphold international and national guarantees of fair
trial. It is a disservice to the victims and survivors to do less.
The trials held so far contain shortcomings that undermine the
effort to render justice, but some improvements have occurred
recently, including more prosecution witnesses appearing in court to
testify, greater access to and improved conditions for the accused
to study their case files, greater access to lawyers and more
frequent allowances for reasonable requests for adjournments.(147)
This shows that even with enormous logistical weaknesses and
shortages of trained personnel, Rwanda can provide trials that meet
or approach minimum guarantees of fairness and due process. a. Defense counsel The biggest obstacle to fair trials so far
is the lack of defense counsel. Rwanda has only 16 practicing
lawyers, who mostly refuse to represent defendants in genocide
trials.(148) The government anticipated this problem and in early
1996 created a working group comprised of representatives from the
Ministry of Justice, the international donors and UN agencies
(including the UN human rights mission) to identify solutions. The
working group met regularly and suggested several possibilities,
including bringing in foreign lawyers and training recent graduates
of the law faculty at the National University in Butare in criminal
defense. Providing pamphlets to the accused on the rights of a
defendant and how to conduct a defense in the absence of a lawyer
also was raised. Lawyers are also needed to represent civil
claimants who seek damages from the defendant; under Rwandese law
civil claimants may participate in criminal proceedings. The
government was open to various suggestions as long as it did not
have to pay for legal defense. Some government officials argue that in
pre-genocide Rwanda criminal defendants rarely had lawyers and that
the fair trial standards demanded now by the international community
are themselves unfair given the current situation in Rwanda. This
argument simply does not hold water. Cases involving charges of
genocide and crimes against humanity demand a higher standard and
the government cannot use the lax standard of its predecessors as an
excuse. To their credit, the current Rwandese authorities would
never accept being held to the standards of the previous regime in
any other sphere and should not do so when it comes to providing
fair trials. Where defendants face the death penalty, the
court must guarantee the highest standards of fairness. Rwandese law
(Article 14 of the Constitution), Article 14 of the ICCPR and the UN
Safeguards Guaranteeing Protection of the Rights of Those Facing the
Death Penalty (Article 4) all guarantee the right to defense. As
Amnesty International noted: "In cases where the accused have been
allowed a defense lawyer and where sufficient time has been allowed
for the lawyer to prepare the defense, trials were characterized by
greater respect for proper procedures."(149) In most of the trials to date the accused
were not represented by lawyers. Some requested lawyers but were
refused; others may not have been aware they had the right to legal
representation. Having a lawyer and adequate time to consult the
case file and prepare meant that the other elements of a fair trial
are more likely to be observed. This includes effective responses to
the charges, more thorough cross-examination of witnesses and
compiling exculpatory evidence. The UN Human Rights Mission has
urged the government to implement quickly a proposal by the Rwandan
and Foreign Lawyers Initiative to train Rwandan and foreign legal
counsel to represent defendants in every prefecture.(150) This
proposal, with an estimated cost of $1,750,000, would train recent
law graduates and Rwandese lawyers to represent both criminal
defendants and civil claimants. An effort to train Rwandese defense
lawyers must begin soon. Rwanda cannot depend on the international
community, acting through NGO's such as Avocats sans Frontières, to continue to
provide defense counsel, even for the nearly 2,000 category 1
defendants let alone even a small portion of the more than 100,000
people in detention, should the government decide to try them. The government can improve the quality of
the trials by adopting several measures that are easy and
inexpensive to implement. Reasonable requests for adjournments
should be granted. Defendants and their lawyers should have early
access to case files to provide adequate time to prepare a
defense.(151) Requests to use one of Rwanda's three national
languages should automatically be granted. Judges should strictly
monitor courtroom behavior and quickly expel anyone who violates
basic rules of decorum. Information should be provided to all
detainees about their rights to a fair trial; judges should take
time at the beginning of a trial to explain carefully to the
defendant that s/he has a right to counsel, to call witnesses, to
cross-examine prosecution witnesses and to introduce exculpatory
evidence. Judges should order immediate investigations into
allegations made by any defendant of torture or mistreatment,
especially if any confessions or statements by the defendant used as
evidence by the prosecution were allegedly coerced. Statements or
confessions made under duress or coercion should not be admitted
into evidence by the court. Given the justifiable anger following the
genocide, the population at large may not understand why it is so
important that people accused of such grave crimes merit certain
protections like legal representation. A massive public education
campaign, explaining the importance of fair and open trials is
essential. One of the best campaigns has already happened. The trial
of Froduald Karimara was broadcast live on Radio Rwanda. Huge crowds
gathered outside the courtroom. His lawyer conducted a strong
defense. Karimara's trial could prove pivotal in helping Rwandese
understand that the presumption of innocence, the right to confront
witnesses and the right to have a lawyer are integral to finding the
truth, ending impunity and thus enhancing reconciliation. Another
reason for optimism is the population's reaction to the trials where
the defendants were found not guilty. To date, the judges,
defendants or others participating in these trials have not suffered
any reprisals, which shows that the population will accept
acquittals as long as the trial is fair. b. Threats and intimidation of jurists Some jurists who have attempted to apply the
law fairly have suffered from threats, arrest and worse. Two
prosecutors have been arrested and charged with genocide. Former
Kigali deputy prosecutor Silas Munyiagishali was arrested in
February 1996. He had previously been cleared of allegations of
participating in the genocide.(152) He had criticized the screening
commission shortly before his arrest. The original reason given for
his arrest was mismanagement and corruption; some suspect that the
real reason may have been his refusal to arrest people on genocide
charges when there was little or no supporting evidence.(153) Célestin Kayinbanda was arrested on May 2,
1996 in Butare, where he was the acting prosecutor.(154) Charged
with genocide and crimes against humanity, Kayibanda had publicly
criticized interference by the military, the local mayors (bourgmestres) and other local officials in
the administration of justice. In particular, mayors, their
counselors and others with no legal competence to make arrests were
in fact making many arrests in the district, often on the merest
denunciation and without any investigation. Mr. Kayibanda and
several Judicial Police Inspectors also had disagreements with the
prefecture and several communal mayors over their respective
responsibilities and the functioning of the screening commission.
Prosecutor Fidèle Makombe, the chief
prosecutor in Kibuye, was dismissed from his post, beaten by an army
officer and forced to flee to Kigali in May 1996.(155) The
prosecutor had a series of disagreements with the Préfet, the senior representative of the
executive branch in the prefecture. The
prosecutor charged that the Préfet
wanted him to arrest certain people for having participated in the
genocide but the prosecutor refused to make any arrests until his
office could investigate. Mr. Makombe then gave an interview to Radio France Internationale, describing his
differences with the Préfet and the
beating. He was suspended from his post on May 10, 1996. Innocent Murengezi, one of the few Rwandese
lawyers willing to represent the accused and civil claimants in
genocide trials, disappeared on January 30; there were reports that
he had been arrested but his whereabouts remain unknown.(156) c. Military trials In a trial largely overlooked by the
international media, Lt. Col. Fred Ibingira of the RPA was charged
with failing to prevent the massacre of Hutu refugees in the
displaced persons camp in Kibeho in April 1995. His court-martial
began in December 1996, just days before the first genocide trial.
Represented by a military lawyer, who requested more time to prepare
a defense, Ibingira was found guilty as charged in February and
sentenced to 18 months in prison with credit for time already
served. Several other soldiers have been tried for killing civilians
and there have been reports that some were executed following trials
in the military courts.(157) HRFOR observers report that members of the
RPA have executed civilians following a form of public "hearing"
since the return of Rwandese from the camps in Zaire and Tanzania.
For example, a returnee from Zaire who was accused of killing a
genocide survivor was executed by RPA soldiers following a "public
meeting" on December 21, 2024 in Gikongoro prefecture, organized by
senior army officers and civilian officials.(158) The government
should prosecute soldiers and civilian officials for these
violations of the right to life and the right to a fair trial. d. Summary Rwandese authorities have characterized
criticisms of their trials as "biased and uninformed" and have
stated that more progress could have been made in building an
independent judiciary if international resources had not been
"squandered" on the tribunal.(159) While criticism of the tribunal's
slow start and inefficient management during its first two years is
warranted, Rwanda's attempt to use the tribunal as a scapegoat for
its own slow pace of judicial reform is not. Yet such criticism
underscores the complex relationship between trials in Rwanda and
the tribunal and the necessity of improving the administration and
management of the tribunal if it is to be seen as a legitimate
complement to national prosecutions, and if it is to establish the
good working relations with the government of Rwanda which are
important to its prospects of success. Many countries emerging from conflict and
oppression struggle to achieve reconciliation and justice. In
Rwanda, as in most cases, reconciliation is impossible without
justice. The people of Rwanda have two fora to seek justice and they
are mutually dependent. But the ICTR carries a special burden for
two reasons. First, the UN and the international community failed
Rwanda at its moment of greatest crisis. The ICTR, as a creation of
the UN and its member-states, can never repair the damage of the
earlier failing, but it can help to insure that by ending impunity
it can help prevent another genocide. Second, the ICTR has the
potential to try those believed to have been the "intellectual
authors" of the genocide because they are precisely the people who
had the means and the contacts to escape from Rwanda. Fair and public trials of those deemed to
have been the most guilty could have a liberating effect inside
Rwanda. If there are fair trials that lead to convictions, the
authorities in Rwanda might become more flexible, the people more
convinced that the most responsible will pay a price, and this in
turn might lead to measured releases from the horrendous
overcrowding in Rwandese detention centers. As matters stand now,
the 108,000 detainees are virtual hostages to the ICTR's failure to
deliver justice. The government of Rwanda must dignify the
gravity of the charges and the incomprehensible suffering of the
genocide survivors by assuring that its trials meet national and
international standards of due process. Political will and strong
leadership are required because difficult choices loom. The
government simply cannot try more than 100,000 people and will have
to distinguish between those who must be tried, those who should be
provisionally released, and those to be unconditionally released.
The worst-case scenario would be if the ICTR
and the trials in Rwanda failed. As Rony Brauman, the former head of
Médecins sans Frontières wrote: "Could
anyone imagine the situation where the criminals who fled enjoy
impunity while the others receive expedited justice? A parody of a
trial or the absence of any process will only revive hatred and fear
in a country where every family has a militia member, a soldier or a
victim."(160) The ICTR and the government of Rwanda must
insure that the opposite happens: that the most culpable outside
Rwanda are brought to justice and those inside Rwanda, whose government must continue to receive
substantial international assistance to build its justice system,
also are brought to justice in trials that are fair. Otherwise, the
international community will once again have failed the people of
Rwanda with consequences that no one can say were unforeseen. In creating the ICTR, the UN assumed
responsibility for its effective operation. Thus all member states
are responsible for insuring that the tribunal has the resources and
political support necessary to bring to justice those responsible
for international crimes with the tribunal's jurisdiction. Based on obligations under both Rwandese law
and international human rights law ratified by Rwanda, the
government should insure that the follow measures are
implemented: Since 1978, the Lawyers Committee for Human
Rights has worked to protect and promote fundamental human rights.
Its work is impartial, holding each government to the standards
affirmed in the International Bill of Human Rights, including The Committee conducts fact-finding missions
and publishes reports which serve as a starting point for sustained
follow-up work within three areas: with locally-based human rights
lawyers and activists; with policymakers involved in formulating
U.S. foreign policy; and with intergovernmental organizations such
as the United Nations, the Organization of American States, the
Organization of African Unity and the World Bank. The Committee's Refugee Project seeks to
provide legal protection for refugees including the right to
dignified treatment and a permanent home. It provides legal
representation, without charge, to indigent refugees in the United
States in flight from political persecution. With the assistance of
hundreds of volunteer attorneys, the Project's staff also undertakes
broader efforts — including participation in lawsuits of potential
national significance — to protect the right to seek political
asylum as guaranteed by U.S. and international law. Endnotes (1)Security Council Resolution
955 (1994), S/RES/955 (1994), (November 8, 2024). The official name
is the International Criminal Tribunal for the Prosecution of
Persons Responsible for Genocide and Other Serious Violations of
International Humanitarian Law Committed in the Territory of Rwanda
and Rwandan Citizens Responsible for Genocide and Other Such
Violations Committed in the Territory of Neighboring States between
1 January 2025 and 31 December 1994. © 1997 by the
Lawyers Committee for Human Rights | |||||||||
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