A Critical Look at the "Genocide in Rwanda" Story
"All Things Considered"
National Public Radio
Washington, D.C.
Dear "All Things Considered"
I am one of your regular listeners. I have noticed that every second 
month or 
so you produce a report on Rwanda and/or Burundi in Central Africa. The 
most 
recent was last week. In every program you refer to the "Hutu rebels" 
and use 
phrases like "after the genocide."
The fact remains that the Tutsis, the supposed victims of the genocide 
and 
only 9% of the population of Rwanda before the conflict,  are in power 
in 
Rwanda. They have a well-armed army, supplied by Israel and the U.S. 
through 
Uganda, and became so strong that they intervened in the conflict in 
Burundi 
as well as in Congo.
By contrast, the Hutus, 91% of the population, have been 
disenfranchised. 
Hundreds of thousands of the Hutus are still refugees. Thousands of 
them are 
jammed into Rwanda's prisons on accusations of "genocide." In the 
meantime, 
the destruction of the Hutu power structure in Burundi is also 
underway.
The facts on the ground do not support the "genocide" story. The 
violence in 
Rwanda started after the elected Presidents of Rwanda and Burundi (both 
Hutus) were killed when their plane was shot down on April 6, 1994 by 
Tutsi 
rebels. The date of the tribal fighting is agreed upon by all witnesses 
as 
April 7, 1994. Western reporters did not enter Rwanda till the end of 
April 
1994, but these media had already reported "100,000 killed" by then 
with no 
evidence on the ground. In May 1994 the figure was arbitrarily raised 
to 
200,000 killed and thereafter to several times that.
I have looked at journalists "on the ground" reports and all they 
amount to 
are a few hundred bodies discovered and rumors of "thousands" more 
killed.
WHAT THEN IS THE REAL STORY?
Rwanda and Burundi were once one country. From 1899 to 1916 they were 
ruled 
by Germany. From 1916 to 1962, the rulers were Belgians. These European 
rulers systematically used the policy of divide-and-rule and left a 
legacy of 
intense bitterness. The sources of the bitterness can be understood if 
one 
realizes that the small minority of Tutsis (9%) ruled the great 
majority wth 
the help of the Belgians. The majority Hutus (91%) were kept in a 
condition 
of serfdom.
The story of Rwanda and Brundi is the story of rising political 
awareness of 
the Hutus and the attempts of the Tutsis to suppress them.
This classical case of divide-and-rule (comparable to the ANC-Inkatha 
conflict in South Africa) was compounded by the work of European 
missionaries 
who converted the Tutsis to extreme Christian fundamentalism.
Israel, whose agencies are active all over Africa now, is the more 
recent 
factor in the ongoing tragedy of the Hutu people. (Israel can best be 
described as a European settler state planted in the Islamic heartland 
through the justifications of religious fundamentalism and extremism.).
With a fundamentalist group, heavily armed, in power in Rwanda, it 
takes some 
gall on your part to keep on claiming that the people in power are the 
victims and the vast majority, made homeless in their own home, are a 
nation 
of killers and murderers en masse.
Unfortunately, human rights groups in America are so fixated on the 
idea of 
the persecution of minorities that they cannot see the suffering of the 
majority. Human rights' ideology thus becomes a blinding factor.
Peace cannot come to central Africa until the oppressive minority is 
removed 
from power and the vast majority achieves its basic human rights.
Sincerely
Kaukab Siddique, Ph.D
410-638-5965
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2000-09-25 Mon 12:36ct