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Today's Paper | May 16, 2024

Published 08 Apr, 2024 07:04am

‘Never forget’: World remembers 30 years since genocide in Rwanda

KIGALI: Rwanda on Sunday marked 30 years since the 1994 genocide that killed more than 800,000 men, women and children, mainly Tutsis but also moderate Hutus.

Here are some of the notable quotes as the tiny African nation commemorated the mass slaughter orchestrated by Hutu extremists targeting the Tutsi minority over 100 bloody days in 1994.

Rwandan President Paul Kagame

“Rwanda was completely humbled by the magnitude of our loss. And the lessons we learned are engraved in blood.” “It was the international community which failed all of us, whether from contempt or cowardice”, President Kagame said addressing an audience that included several African heads of state and former US president Bill Clinton, who had called the genocide the biggest failure of his administration.

US President Joe Biden

“We will never forget the horrors of those 100 days, the pain and loss suffered by the people of Rwanda, or the shared humanity that connects us all, which hate can never overcome.”

UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres

“This year, we remind ourselves of genocide’s rancid root: hate. To those who would seek to divide us, we must deliver a clear, unequivocal and urgent message: never again.”

AU Commission head Moussa Faki Mahamat

“No one, not even the African Union, can absolve itself of its inaction in the face of the chronicle of a genocide foretold. Let us have the courage to recognise this, and to take responsibility for it.”

French President Emmanuel Macron

“We have all abandoned hundreds of thousands of victims to this infernal closed door. “When the phase of total extermination against the Tutsis began, the international community had the means to know and act. “France, which could have stopped the genocide with its Western and African allies, did not have the will.”

EU Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen

“Today we mark 30 years since the genocide against the Tutsi. We honour the victims. And we praise Rwanda’s journey from darkness to hope, and from pain to progress. It’s an example for the world.”

UN human rights chief Volker Turk

“The Rwanda genocide against the Tutsi was a clear reminder: Genocide doesn’t erupt from thin air — it follows years of normalised fear-mongering, hate and dehumanisation. “Governments must do everything in their power to combat hate, discrimination and other root causes before it’s too late.”

HRW executive director Tirana Hassan

“The genocide in Rwanda remains a stain on our collective conscience and, 30 years later, lessons can still be drawn from the actions — or lack thereof — of world leaders in the face of ongoing atrocities.”

Published in Dawn, April 8th, 2024

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