Overview
Country, east-central Africa.
Area: 10,169 sq mi (26,338 sq km). Population (2008 est.):
10,009,000. Capital: Kigali. The population is mostly Hutu, with a Tutsi
minority; the Twa are also present in small numbers. Languages: Rwanda,
French, English (all official). Religions: Christianity (mostly Roman
Catholic; also Protestant); also traditional beliefs, Islam. Currency:
Rwanda franc. Rwanda is a landlocked mountainous country, most of it at
an elevation above 4,000 ft (1,200 m). There are bamboo forests, wooded
regions, and grassy savannas with rich and varied wildlife. The
developing economy is mainly free-enterprise, based on agriculture.
Rwanda is a republic with two legislative bodies; its head of state and
government is the president, assisted by the prime minister. Originally
inhabited by the Twa, a Pygmy people, it became home to the Hutu, who
were well established there when the Tutsi appeared in the 14th century.
The Tutsi conquered the Hutu and in the 15th century founded a kingdom
near Kigali. The kingdom expanded steadily, but from 1894 to 1918 Rwanda
was part of German East Africa. The Belgians occupied Rwanda in 1916,
and the League of Nations created Ruanda-Urundi as a Belgian mandate in
1923. The Tutsi retained their dominance until shortly before Rwanda
reached independence in 1962, when the Hutu took control of the
government and stripped the Tutsi of much of their land. Many Tutsi fled
Rwanda, and the Hutu dominated the country’s political system, waging
sporadic civil wars until mid-1994, when the death of the country’s
leader in a plane crash triggered massive violence. The Tutsi-led
Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF) took over the country by force after the
massacre of almost one million Tutsi and Tutsi sympathizers by the Hutu.
Two million refugees, mostly Hutu, fled to the neighbouring Democratic
Republic of the Congo after the RPF’s victory. A transitional government
was replaced in 2003 following the country’s first multiparty elections.
Profile
Official name Repubulika y’u Rwanda (Rwanda); République Rwandaise
(French); Republic of Rwanda (English)
Form of government multiparty republic with two legislative bodies
(Senate [26]; Chamber of Deputies [80])
Head of state and government President assisted by Prime Minister
Capital Kigali
Official languages Rwanda; French; English
Official religion none
Monetary unit Rwandan franc (RF)
Population estimate (2008) 10,009,000
Total area (sq mi) 10,185
Total area (sq km) 26,379
Main
landlocked republic lying south of the Equator in east-central
Africa. Known for its breathtaking scenery, Rwanda is often referred to
as le pays des mille collines (French; “land of a thousand hills”). The
capital is Kigali, located in the centre of the country on the Ruganwa
River.
Like Burundi, its neighbour to the south, Rwanda is a geographically
small country with one of the highest population densities in
sub-Saharan Africa. Rwanda also shares with Burundi a long history of
monarchical rule. Unlike what happened in Burundi, however, the demise
of the Rwandan kingship came about through a grassroots Hutu-led
upheaval that occurred before the country became independent in 1962.
Ethnic strife between the majority Hutu and minority Tutsi factions
peaked in 1994. Civil war and genocide at that time left Rwanda’s
economy and social fabric in shambles. The years that followed have been
characterized by reconstruction and ethnic reconciliation.
Land
Rwanda is bounded to the north by Uganda, to the east by
Tanzania, to the south by Burundi, and to the west by the Democratic
Republic of the Congo (Kinshasa) and Lake Kivu.
Relief
The landscape is reminiscent of a tropical Switzerland. Its dominant
feature is a chain of mountains of rugged beauty that runs on a
north-south axis and forms part of the Congo-Nile divide. From the
volcanoes of the Virunga (Birunga) Mountains in the northwest—where the
Karisimbi reaches 14,787 feet (4,507 metres)—the elevation drops to
4,000 feet (1,220 metres) in the swampy Kagera (Akagera) River valley in
the east. The interior highlands consist of rolling hills and valleys,
yielding to a low-lying depression west of the Congo-Nile divide along
the shores of Lake Kivu.
Drainage
Except for the Ruzizi, through which the waters of Lake Kivu empty
into Lake Tanganyika, most of the country’s rivers are found on the
eastern side of the Congo-Nile divide, with the Kagera, the major
eastern river, forming much of the boundary between Rwanda, Burundi, and
Tanzania.
Soils
The best soils, formed from volcanic lavas and alluvium, are found,
respectively, in the northwest and along the lower portions of the
larger river valleys. Elsewhere the largely metamorphic bedrock has
produced soils of generally poor quality. The combination of steep
slopes, abundant rainfall, deforestation, and intensive farming has set
in motion a process of extreme soil erosion that requires a burdensome
investment of time and energy to curtail.
Climate
Elevation accounts for Rwanda’s generally mild temperatures, which
average 70 °F (21 °C) year-round at Kigali, for example, in the interior
highlands. There are significant variations, however, between the region
of the volcanoes in the northwest, where heavy rainfalls are accompanied
by lower average temperatures, and the warmer and drier interior
highlands. The average annual rainfall in the latter is about 45 inches
(1,140 millimetres), which is concentrated in two rainy seasons (roughly
February to May and October to December).
Plant and animal life
Only a small percentage of the country is covered in natural forest
vegetation. Reforestation programs have added eucalyptus trees to
previously denuded hillsides and roadsides, though not on a scale
sufficient to effectively counteract erosion. A lush Mediterranean-type
vegetation covers the shores of Lake Kivu, which stands in stark
contrast to the papyrus swamps of Rwanda’s eastern frontier and the
dense bamboo forests of the Virunga Mountains to the north. There, among
the volcanoes, lives Rwanda’s main tourist attraction: the mountain
gorilla, protected in Parc National des Volcans (also known as Parc des
Birugna). For sheer diversity of animal life, however, no other region
can match the resources of the Akagera National Park. This picturesque
park contains significant populations of buffalo, zebra, impala, and
other range animals, as well as baboons, warthogs, lions, and
hippopotamuses. Rare species, such as the giant pangolin (an anteater),
are also part of Akagera’s diverse fauna.
People
Ethnic groups
As in Burundi, the major ethnic groups in Rwanda are Hutu and Tutsi,
respectively accounting for more than four-fifths and about one-seventh
of the total population. The Twa, a hunter-gatherer group, constitute
less than 1 percent of the population. Other minorities include a small
group of Europeans (mostly missionaries, employees of relief and
development programs, and entrepreneurs), a small number of Asian
merchants, and Africans from Tanzania, Uganda, the Democratic Republic
of the Congo, and elsewhere.
Social differences between the Hutu and Tutsi traditionally were
profound, as shown by the system of patron-client ties (buhake, or
“cattle contract”) through which the Tutsi, with a strong pastoralist
tradition, gained social, economic, and political ascendancy over the
Hutu, who were primarily agriculturalists. The formerly more distinct
pastoral and agricultural systems have become well integrated, and
nearly all farm households now engage simultaneously in crop and
livestock production. During the Hutu revolution that began in late
1959, some 150,000 to 300,000 Tutsi were forced out of the country,
which thus reduced the former ruling aristocracy to an even smaller
minority. Since the end of the 1994 genocide, many Tutsi have returned
to Rwanda to reclaim their heritage.
Languages
The country has three official languages: Rwanda (more properly,
Kinyarwanda), English, and French. Rwanda, a Bantu language belonging to
the Benue-Congo branch of the Niger-Congo language family, is spoken by
virtually all Rwandans. It is closely related to Rundi, which is spoken
in the neighbouring country of Burundi. English and French have
traditionally been spoken by only a small fraction of the population,
although English was designated the language of educational instruction
in 2008. Swahili is widely spoken in the towns and is still the
principal means of communication with Africans from neighbouring
countries.
Religion
Nowhere in Africa has Christianity had a more decisive impact than
in Rwanda. The Hutu revolution derived much of its egalitarian
inspiration from the teachings of the European clergy, and Catholic
seminaries served as recruiting grounds for Hutu leaders. More than
two-fifths of the country’s population is Roman Catholic; about
one-fourth is Protestant; and about one-fifth belongs to a Christian
schismatic religious group. Muslims account for less than one-tenth of
the population.
Settlement patterns
Despite a high population density, the dominant pattern is one of
extreme dispersal. More than three-fourths of the population is rural
and lives in nuclear family compounds scattered on hillsides. Kigali,
the capital, was only a hamlet at the time of independence but has grown
to become the country’s largest city.
Demographic trends
Rwanda’s rate of population increase is greater than that of the
global average but similar to that of neighbouring countries. The birth
rate, among the world’s highest, is comparable to that of other
countries in the region; the death rate is well above the world average
and slightly above the rates of neighbouring countries. Life expectancy,
about 50 years, is below the world average but similar to the average
for Africa. Rwanda’s population is young, with about two-fifths of the
population under age 16 and another one-third under age 30.
Owing to regional insecurity, refugees from Burundi and the
Democratic Republic of the Congo have periodically sought refuge in
Rwanda; conversely, Rwandans have fled to those two countries during
times of conflict, such as the civil war that began in 1990 and the 1994
genocide. These conflicts have contributed to a new wave of demographic
changes, including the exodus and repatriation of more than two million
refugees, several hundred thousand orphans, and a vast number of single
parent- or child-headed households.
Economy
Agriculture, forestry, and fishing
The country’s economy is overwhelmingly agricultural, with the
majority of the workforce engaged in agricultural pursuits. Broadly
diversified cultivation is practiced throughout the country. Dry beans,
sorghum, bananas, corn (maize), potatoes, sweet potatoes, and cassava
(manioc) are the primary crops grown in Rwanda. While beans, sorghum,
and corn are harvested seasonally at the onset of the two dry seasons,
bananas, sweet potatoes, and cassava can be grown and harvested
throughout the year. Bananas are grown principally for the production of
banana wine, a highly popular local beverage consumed in all regions of
the country. Some banana varieties are grown in smaller numbers for
cooking or direct consumption. Not only are bananas essential as a food
source in Rwanda, but, as a broad-leafed perennial crop, they play a
vital role in combating soil erosion on steep slopes throughout the
country. Arabica coffee (first introduced by European missionaries),
tea, tobacco, and pyrethrum (a flower used to create the nonsynthetic
pesticide pyrethrin) are the principal cash crops, with coffee
constituting the prime export.
Farming is highly labour intensive: hoes and machetes are the main
farm implements used, and animal traction is virtually nonexistent.
Fertilizers and pesticides are used by a small fraction of farms.
Commonly raised livestock include goats, cattle, sheep, and pigs.
Livestock husbandry is integral to the farming system, but the
progressive conversion of pasture into cropland caused a reduction in
livestock production in the last decades of the 20th century, and a
parallel decline occurred in the amount of manure available for
improving soil fertility. Livestock numbers began increasing just prior
to the turn of the century.
Most of what is left of the small amount of natural forest is found
on the slopes of the Virunga Mountains in the northwest. Fishing is
widespread in Lake Kivu as well as in the smaller lakes of the interior,
most notably Lake Muhazi and Lake Mugesera.
Resources and power
Rwanda’s primary mineral resources are tin (cassiterite) and
tungsten (wolfram); other resources include tantalite, columbite, beryl,
and gold. Methane gas from Lake Kivu is used as a nitrogen fertilizer
and is also converted into compressed fuel for trucks. The Mukungwa
hydroelectric power installation, the country’s major source of
electricity, meets only a portion of the country’s energy needs, and
much of the remainder must be imported from the Democratic Republic of
the Congo.
Manufacturing
Aside from small-scale mining operations and limited consumer
manufactures (such as textiles, cement, paint, pharmaceuticals, soap,
matches, furniture, beverages, and food products), for the most part
industrial activities involve the processing of coffee, tea, and other
agricultural commodities. Most of the country’s large industries are
located in Kigali. More important to the economy, however, are myriad
microenterprises that have emerged in response to local demand. These
include the manufacture of roof tiles, brick, and timber for building
construction; the production of handheld farm implements, baskets, and
clothing; and the provision of specialized services such as masonry,
carpentry, and metal works.
Finance and trade
Rwanda is home to many financial institutions, including commercial
and development banks. The National Bank of Rwanda is the central bank
and issues the national currency, the Rwandan franc. The Rwanda Stock
Exchange, located in Kigali, opened in 2008.
Rwanda’s primary exports are coffee, tea, pyrethrum extract, tin,
tantalite, and gold. Imports include machinery and equipment, petroleum
products, and foodstuffs. Important trading partners include Kenya,
Germany, China, and Uganda. Some efforts have been made at promoting
closer economic links between Rwanda and its neighbours through such
organizations as the Economic Community of Great Lakes Countries, the
Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa, and the East African
Community. Since the return of numerous Tutsi from Uganda and elsewhere
after the 1994 genocide, regional trade with East African partners,
notably Uganda and Kenya, has grown rapidly.
Fluctuations in the prices of primary commodities, especially coffee
and tea, and the years of civil strife that culminated in the 1994
genocide have had a catastrophic effect on Rwanda’s balance of trade.
Although the country has shown consistent economic progress in the years
following the genocide, the country still runs large annual trade
deficits. Investment programs are almost entirely covered by external
sources of financing.
Services
The government has encouraged development of the tourism sector,
which is centred on the country’s attractive landscapes and wildlife
diversity. National parks continue to be the primary draw, particularly
Parc National des Volcans, home to the rare mountain gorilla. Akagera
National Park is also a popular tourist attraction because of the
diverse array of wildlife found there.
Labour and taxation
More than four-fifths of the labour force is engaged in agricultural
activities. All workers, except for civil servants, have the right to
form and to join unions. Less than one-third of the labour force is
unionized.
Taxes in Rwanda include taxes on goods and services, an income tax,
and import and export duties.
Transportation and telecommunications
Rwanda claims one of the densest road networks on the continent,
though less than one-fourth of it is paved. Publicly supported mass
transit is concentrated in Kigali, but since the 1990s there has been a
large influx of privately operated networks of minibus routes that
connect Kigali with towns in all directions. Domestic transportation of
farm commodities and other goods occurs largely by small-scale traders
with individually owned pickup trucks. Rwanda relies heavily on its road
network, as it has no railway system and its waterway ports are largely
limited to the minor facilities at Gisenyi, Cyangugu, and Kibuye on Lake
Kivu. There are several airports located in the country, including
international airports at Kigali and Kamembe.
Rwanda’s landline telephone system is insufficient, and its use is
generally limited to government and businesses. Mobile phone usage is
much more prevalent and expanding rapidly. Internet use is growing as
well, with Internet centres opening throughout the country.
Government and society
Constitutional framework
The constitution promulgated in 1978 established a presidential form
of government. The president at the time, Juvénal Habyarimana, combined
the roles of head of state and head of government with that of president
of what was then the single ruling party, the National Revolutionary
Movement for Development. He was returned to office by referenda in 1983
and 1988. A revised constitution was enacted in 1991 that allowed for
multiparty participation in government. In 1994, however, after
Habyarimana’s death, the country slipped into chaos before elections
could be held. The legislative body under the 1978 constitution, the
unicameral National Development Council, was replaced by the
Transitional National Assembly in 1994, which enacted another
constitution in 1995. A new constitution, promulgated in 2003, employed
strong language decrying the ethnic strife of the past, listing the
resolutions to “fight against the ideology of genocide and all its
manifestations” and “the eradication of ethnic, regional and other
divisions and the promotion of national unity” among its fundamental
principles.
Under the constitution, the president, who serves as head of state,
is directly elected to a seven-year term, renewable once. The president
selects a prime minister, who serves as the head of government.
Legislative power is exercised by a bicameral parliament, which consists
of the Chamber of Deputies and the Senate. Deputies serve five-year
terms; about two-thirds are directly elected. The rest of the deputies
are indirectly elected: two are elected by the National Youth Council;
one is elected by the Federation of the Association of the Disabled; and
the remaining seats are allocated to female representatives elected by
local government bodies. Senators serve eight-year terms. Twelve are
elected by local government bodies; eight are selected by the president;
and four are selected by the Forum of Political Organizations (a
regulatory body).
Local government
For administrative purposes, the country is divided into four
provinces (North, East, South, and West) and one city (Kigali), each
headed by a governor. The country had previously been divided in 10–12
prefectures since independence, but the administrative structure was
reorganized in 2006 in an effort to decentralize power and create
multiethnic areas.
Justice
Rwanda’s constitution provides for an independent judiciary, which
is based on German and Belgian civil law systems and customary law. The
Supreme Court is the highest court; other courts include the High Court
of the Republic, provincial courts, district courts, and municipal and
town courts.
Rwanda also uses the traditional gacaca legal system. In precolonial
days gacaca courts were traditionally used to resolve conflict between
families. The courts were held outside, and the heads of households
served as judges. In the 21st century, this system was adapted to judge
those accused of committing genocide in 1994. This was done because the
tremendous number of people to be tried in connection with the genocide
resulted in a massive backlog of cases and an inability to proceed in a
timely manner. To alleviate the problem, the government in 2001 proposed
trying the majority of cases, consisting of lesser crimes, in gacaca
courts; the courts were inaugurated in 2002 and began operating in
phases over the next several years. Those accused of the more serious
crimes of planning, instigating, and leading the genocide were to be
tried through Rwanda’s court system, while the top officials involved
were to be tried by the United Nations International Criminal Tribunal
for Rwanda, held in Arusha, Tanz.
Political process
Under the constitution, all citizens at least 18 years of age are
eligible to vote. Women play an active role in Rwandan politics, aided
in part by the constitutional requirement that at least 30 percent of
the seats in the Chamber of Deputies be reserved for women. In addition,
women have successfully contested the unreserved seats as well. Rwanda
has the distinction of having the world’s first female-majority
legislative body; after the 2008 elections, 55 percent of the deputies
were women.
Rwanda has a multiparty political system with some restrictions,
including the 2003 ban on political parties based on ethnicity,
religion, or sex. Major parties include the Rwandan Patriotic Front, the
Social Democratic Party, and the Liberal Party.
Security
The Rwandan Defense Force consists of a large army contingent and
small air force. There also is a small paramilitary unit. Military
service is voluntary. Rwandan troops have participated in African Union
missions and served as United Nations Peacekeeping Forces.
Health and welfare
Health conditions in Rwanda are poor. The country has a relatively
high HIV/AIDS prevalence rate. Nutritional deficiencies present an even
greater threat to the population, however, along with malaria and
tuberculosis. Health facilities are still grossly inadequate, consisting
for the most part of poorly equipped health centres and dispensaries,
and there is a shortage of medical personnel. Welfare activities are
primarily organized under the auspices of missionary societies.
Education
Six years of primary education is compulsory beginning at age seven;
it is followed by six years of secondary education, consisting of two
three-year cycles. In the early 1990s more than two-thirds of the
primary-school-age population was enrolled, but the civil strife and the
1994 genocide severely disrupted the school system. Even prior to that,
few Rwandans attended secondary schools, as those facilities had space
for only 10 percent of the primary-school graduates. Although progress
has been made with rebuilding the education system, fewer than
two-fifths of primary students complete their primary education, and
only about one-third enroll in secondary schools; a fraction continue
with tertiary education.
There are several private and public universities and colleges in
Rwanda, including the National University of Rwanda (1963) and the
Kigali Institute of Science, Technology and Management (1997). Courses
at the university level were previously taught in French, but English
instruction was added in the mid-1990s to accommodate the postwar influx
of Anglophone returnees from Uganda. Since 2008, English has been
designated the language of instruction at all levels of education.
About three-fifths of the population is literate, with men enjoying a
slightly higher literacy rate than women.
Cultural life
Holidays in Rwanda include those associated with the majority
Christian population, such as Good Friday, Easter, and Christmas. The
Feast of the Assumption is observed by the Roman Catholic community on
August 15. Holidays celebrated by the Muslim community include ʿĪd
al-Fiṭr, which marks the end of Ramadan, and ʿĪd al-Aḍḥā, which marks
the culmination of the hajj. Other holidays include Genocide Memorial
Day, observed on April 7, and Independence Day, celebrated on July 1.
The arts
Much of Rwanda’s traditional cultural heritage revolved around
dances, praise songs, and dynastic poems designed to enhance the
legitimacy of the Tutsi kingship. Since independence in 1962, another
set of traditions has emerged, emphasizing a different cultural stream,
identified with a Hutu heritage. Regional dances, including the
celebrated hoe dance of the north, are given pride of place in the
country’s cultural repertoire. Traditional crafts such as basketry,
ceramics, and ironworks provide another element of continuity with the
past.
Cultural institutions
Rwanda’s National Ballet and the Impala Orchestra add considerable
lustre to the country’s cultural life, the former through a choreography
leaning heavily on traditional folk dances and the latter through a
distinctly modern musical repertoire. For many years, the Association
des Écrivains du Rwanda kept alive the best of Rwanda’s literary
traditions, while the bimonthly review Revue Dialogue provides a forum
for a vigorous intellectual exchange on a wide range of social and
cultural issues.
Sports and recreation
Traditional sport in Rwanda was a form of celebration, a friendly
competition between community members during feasts and holidays or a
way to honour visiting dignitaries. Friends and family, especially young
men, would match skills and strength in such events as wrestling, high
jumping, and archery and by hurling a lance through a moving hoop.
The modern era of sport in Rwanda emerged gradually in the middle of
the 20th century with greater exposure to international sports such as
football (soccer), volleyball, track and field (athletics), and, later,
basketball. Football is the most popular team sport in the country.
Senior and junior clubs compete in regular league play, and the Rwanda
Équipe Nationale de Football features the more accomplished players.
Rwanda’s first Olympic appearance was at the 1984 Games in Los
Angeles, where runner Marcianne Mukamurenzi attracted international
attention for her unorthodox training regimen; while working as a mail
carrier and messenger for the Rwandan Ministry of Youth, Sport, and
Culture, she sped from one destination to the next, making deliveries
across Kigali’s hilly terrain entirely on foot. Though the country has
yet to earn a medal, several athletes, including Mathias Ntawulikura and
Ildephonse Sehirwa, have had strong showings.
Media and publishing
Notable publications include Rwanda Herald and New Times (English),
La Relève (French), and Umeseso and Kinyamateka (Kinyarwanda). While
relatively few households outside Kigali own television sets, the
Rwandan government maintains one broadcast station, which offers
programming in Kinyarwanda, French, and English. Far more common in
Rwandan households is the radio. The state-operated Radio Rwanda
broadcasts in Kinyarwanda, Swahili, French, and English; there are also
several privately owned stations as well.
René Lemarchand
Daniel Clay
History
This discussion focuses on Rwanda from the 16th century. For a
treatment of earlier periods and of the country in its regional context,
see Central Africa, history of.
Pre-colonial Rwanda
The area that is now Rwanda is believed to have been initially
settled by the Twa, who were closely followed by the Hutu, probably
sometime between the 5th and 11th centuries, and then by the Tutsi
beginning in the 14th century. Tutsi traditions trace the birth of the
Rwanda kingdom to the miraculous feats of its founding hero, Gihanga,
whose coming to Rwanda is said to coincide with the advent of
civilization. A more historical appraisal, however, would emphasize a
long process of Tutsi migrations from the north, culminating in the 16th
century with the emergence of a small nuclear kingdom in the central
region, ruled by the Tutsi minority, that persisted until the arrival of
Europeans in the 19th century. Because of this, Rwanda differs from most
countries in sub-Saharan Africa in that its general boundaries were not
drawn by European powers but reflect the fully established nation-state
that existed until the introduction of German rule.
Rwanda under German and Belgian control
From 1894 to 1918, Rwanda, along with Burundi, was part of German
East Africa. After Belgium became the administering authority under the
mandates system of the League of Nations, Rwanda and Burundi formed a
single administrative entity; they continued to be jointly administered
as the Territory of Ruanda-Urundi until the end of the Belgian
trusteeship in 1962. By then, however, the two states had evolved
radically different political systems. Rwanda had declared itself a
republic in January 1961 and forced its monarch (mwami), Kigeri, into
exile. Burundi, on the other hand, retained the formal trappings of a
constitutional monarchy until 1966.
The Rwanda revolution was rooted partly in a traditional system of
stratification based on an all-embracing “premise of inequality” and
partly in a colonial heritage that greatly increased the oppressiveness
of the few over the many. Tutsi hegemony was unquestionably more
burdensome under Belgian rule than at any time prior to European
colonization. By the end of World War II, a growing number of colonial
civil servants and missionaries had come to recognize the legitimacy of
Hutu claims against the ruling Tutsi minority. The proclamation of the
republic a year and a half before the country acceded to independence
testifies to the substantial support extended by the trusteeship
authorities to the revolution.
Independence and the 1960s
What began as a peasant revolt in November 1959 eventually
transformed itself into an organized political movement aimed at the
overthrow of the monarchy and the vesting of full political power in
Hutu hands. Under the leadership of Grégoire Kayibanda, Rwanda’s first
president, the Party for Hutu Emancipation (Parti du Mouvement de
l’Emancipation du Peuple Hutu) emerged as the spearhead of the
revolution. Communal elections were held in 1960, resulting in a massive
transfer of power to Hutu elements at the local level. And in the wake
of the coup (January 1961) in Gitarama in central Rwanda, which was
carried off with the tacit approval of the Belgian authorities, an
all-Hutu provisional government came into being. Therefore, by the time
that independence was proclaimed in July 1962, the revolution had
already run its course. Thousands of Tutsi began fleeing Rwanda, and by
early 1964—following a failed Tutsi raid from Burundi—at least 150,000
were in neighbouring countries.
The Habyarimana era
With the elimination of Tutsi elements from the political arena,
north-south regional competition among Hutu politicians arose,
reflecting the comparatively privileged position of those from the
central and southern regions within the party, the government, and the
administration. Regional tensions came to a head in July 1973, when a
group of army officers from the north overthrew the Kayibanda regime in
a bloodless coup and installed a northerner, Maj. Gen. Juvénal
Habyarimana. Habyarimana gave a distinctly regional coloration to the
institutions of the state during his 21 years in power.
North-south polarities eventually gave way to subregional factions
within the northern establishment. By 1980 the principal factions were
the Bashiru and Bagoyi elements, respectively identified with the
Bushiru and Bugoyi subregions. Habyarimana sided with the Bashiru
faction and was the target of an abortive, Bagoyi-inspired coup in April
1980. Thereafter Habyarimana remained in power by holding referenda in
1983 and 1988, thus circumventing the stipulation in the 1978
constitution that the president serve only a single five-year term.
Tension between the Hutu and Tutsi flared in 1990, when the Tutsi-led
Rwandan Patriotic Front (Front Patriotique Rwandais; FPR) rebels invaded
from Uganda. A cease-fire was negotiated in early 1991, and negotiations
between the FPR and the government began in 1992. In the meantime,
revisions were made to the 1978 constitution, and the new document,
allowing multiparty participation in the government, was promulgated in
June 1991. An agreement between the government and the FPR was signed in
August 1993 at Arusha, Tanz., that called for the creation of a
broad-based transition government that would include the FPR; Hutu
extremists were strongly opposed to this plan.
Genocide and aftermath
On April 6, 1994, a plane carrying Habyarimana and Burundi Pres.
Cyprien Ntaryamira was shot down over Kigali; the ensuing crash killed
everyone on board. Although the identity of the person or group who
fired upon the plane has never been conclusively determined, Hutu
extremists were originally thought to have been responsible; later there
were allegations that FPR leaders were responsible. The next day Prime
Minister Agathe Uwilingiyimana, a moderate Hutu, was assassinated. Her
murder was part of a campaign to eliminate moderate Hutu or Tutsi
politicians, with the goal of creating a political vacuum and thus
allowing for the formation of the interim government of Hutu extremists
that was inaugurated on April 9. Over the next several months the wave
of anarchy and mass killings continued, in which the army and Hutu
militia groups known as the Interahamwe (“Those Who Attack Together”)
and Impuzamugambi (“Those Who Have the Same Goal”) played a central
role. The Tutsi-led FPR responded by resuming their fight and were
successful in securing most of the country by early July. Later that
month a transitional government was established, with Pasteur Bizimungu,
a Hutu, as president and Paul Kagame, a Tutsi, as vice president.
During the genocide more than 800,000 civilians, primarily Tutsi,
were killed. As many as 2,000,000 Rwandans, both Hutu and Tutsi, fled,
most of them into eastern Zaire (after 1997 called the Democratic
Republic of the Congo); the great majority returned to Rwanda in late
1996 and early 1997. The International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda
(ICTR), established by the United Nations Security Council to try the
tens of thousands (mostly Hutu) who had committed acts of genocide in
1994, began trying its first cases in 1995. The tremendous number of
people to be tried resulted in an inability to proceed in a timely
manner, and in 2000 tens of thousands of prisoners continued to await
trial. In 2001 the government proposed trying the majority of cases
through the traditional gacaca legal system; the gacaca courts were
inaugurated in 2002 and began operating in phases over the next several
years. The government also periodically granted mass amnesty to
prisoners accused of lesser crimes.
Regional conflict
Meanwhile, in late 1996 Rwanda’s military forces entered
neighbouring Zaire to expel Hutu extremists, who had fled there after
the genocide and were using that country as a base for launching attacks
on Rwanda. Frustrated by the lack of support from Zairean president
Mobutu Sese Seko regarding these efforts, Rwanda’s troops also
intervened in the rebellion taking place in that country: along with
Ugandan troops, they lent crucial support to rebel Laurent Kabila, to
whom Mobutu eventually relinquished power in 1997. Little more than a
year after Kabila became president of what was by then known as the
Democratic Republic of the Congo, Rwanda again cited frustration with
that country’s government over the issue of Hutu extremists and lent
support to rebel factions attempting to overthrow Kabila. Because of the
number of African countries that intervened in Congo’s civil war to
support either Kabila or the rebels, the conflict was referred to as
Africa’s “first world war.” Rwanda faced much international criticism
over its involvement in the war, including a suspension of foreign aid.
After many attempts at resolution, a peace agreement was reached in 2002
that provided for the withdrawal of Rwandan troops from Congo in
exchange for the disarmament and repatriation of Hutu extremist rebels
in Congo.
Moving forward
Although Hutu insurgencies continued to occupy Rwanda’s government,
a new constitution aimed at preventing further ethnic strife in the
country was promulgated in 2003. Later that year the first multiparty
democratic elections in Rwanda since independence were held; Kagame, who
had ascended to the presidency after Bizimungu resigned in 2000, was
victorious in securing another term. In 2006 the Rwandan government
implemented a significant administrative reorganization, replacing the
previous 12 prefectures with 5 larger multiethnic provinces intended to
promote power sharing and reduce ethnic conflict. The country’s economy,
adversely affected by the conflict of the early 1990s, continued to
recover gradually. Recovery efforts were aided in 2006, when significant
debt relief was granted by the World Bank and the International Monetary
Fund, and in 2007, when Rwanda joined the East African Community, a
regional trade and development bloc.
In the early 21st century the events of 1994 still weighed heavily in
Rwanda. In 2004 Kagame came under fire after a newspaper leaked the
findings of a report commissioned by French judge Jean-Louis Bruguière,
including allegations that Kagame and other FPR leaders ordered the
rocket attack that caused the 1994 plane crash that killed Habyarimana
and triggered the genocide (echoing the claims of some Rwandan
dissidents); Kagame vehemently denied the allegations. Rwanda severed
relations with France in 2006 when Bruguière—claiming jurisdiction
because the flight crew members that perished in the crash were
French—signed international arrest warrants for several of Kagame’s
close associates for their alleged roles in the plane crash and
requested that Kagame stand trial at the ICTR. As before, Kagame denied
having anything to do with the crash and countered by alleging that the
French government armed and advised the rebels responsible for the
genocide. Later that year Rwanda established a commission to investigate
France’s role in the genocide. In October 2007 the Rwandan government
launched a formal investigation into the 1994 plane crash.
René Lemarchand
Ed.