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Title: PO377 Ethnic Conflict and Political Violence


1
PO377 Ethnic Conflict and Political Violence
  • Week 5 Rwanda

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Lecture Outline
  • Overview
  • History of Rwanda
  • Contested Views on Ethnicity in Rwanda Ancient
    Hatred or Legacy of Colonialism?
  • 3 schools of thought
  • Ranked vs. Unranked Ethnic Systems
  • Ranked ethnic systems
  • Unranked ethnic systems
  • 4 directions in which subordinate groups can try
    to move a ranked system
  • Civil War and Peace Accords
  • Negotiations and aid conditionality
  • Arusha Accords
  • Genocide
  • Explaining Genocide?
  • Post-Genocide
  • Conclusions

5
Pop Quiz
  • I think I understand why genocide occurred in
    Rwanda
  • Yes.
  • No.

6
Overview
  • Population 10.9 million (2011).
  • Two thirds live below the poverty line (in 1994
    figure was 86).
  • 1994 genocide 800,000-1,000,000 people killed
    (mostly Tutsi). 250,000-500,000 women and girls
    raped.
  • Killing rate 5 times that of the Nazis.
  • Genocide was carefully planned.
  • History of Rwanda is deeply contested.

7
History of Rwanda
  • Pre-colonial oral tradition. Myth of Gatwa,
    Gahutu and Gatutsi. Ruled by Tutsi monarchy at
    European contact but power structures and social
    relations complicated. Clan system which largely
    cut across Tutsi-Hutu-Twa identities.
  • 1885 Berlin Conference Rwanda given to Germany
    as part of German East Africa (Ruanda-Urundi).
  • Pop. spoke same language (Kinyarwanda), shared
    same religion (Kubandwa then Christianity), told
    same myths and ancestral stories, yet three
    groups. Twa (1) pygmy hunter-gatherers. Hutu
    (majority) peasant farmers resembled
    neighbours, classed by Europeans as Bantu.
    Tutsi (ruling class) cattle-herders taller and
    thinner, lighter skinned.

8
History of Rwanda (2)
  • European racial ideas Tutsi as superior to Hutu
    and Twa, as quasi-Caucasian and as descendants of
    conquering race from Ethiopia or Egypt (ref.
    explorer John Hanning Speke). Tutsis as
    Hamites descendants of Ham, Noahs son (Book
    of Genesis). (See Prunier 1997 Destexhe 1995.)
  • European contact during time of change towards
    greater centralisation, greater dominance by
    central Tutsi monarchy and increase in Tutsi
    chiefly powers.
  • Belgian rule succeeded German 1916 moves towards
    more direct colonial rule and further
    consolidation of Tutsi power at expense of Hutu.
    Forced labour, beatings.

9
History of Rwanda (3)
  • 1933 Belgian census in Rwanda and implementation
    of ethnic identity cards (14-15 classed as
    Tutsi).
  • 1945 UN formed Trusteeship Council to oversee
    3rd world decolonisation. Rwanda is made a
    trusteeship.
  • UN Trusteeship Council critical of Belgian rule
    1950s moves towards democracy. Formation of
    political parties, established on ethnic lines
    Parmehutu party (Parti du Mouvement de
    lEmancipation Hutu) opposition party mainly
    Tutsi, Union National Rwandaise (UNAR).

10
History of Rwanda (4)
  • 1957 Hutu manifesto calls for emancipation and
    majority rule, receiving support from Belgium and
    the UN etc.
  • 1959 inter-ethnic political violence after
    suspicious death of Tutsi king. Hutu revolution,
    exile of 150,000-200,000 Tutsi, abolition of
    monarchy republic established.
  • 1962 Rwanda and Burundi become independent as
    separate states.
  • 1963, 1967, 1973 slaughters of Tutsi. Hutu rule
    until 1990 civil war.

11
Contested Views on Ethnicity
  • 3 schools of thought
  • Primordialists distinct ethnic groups in Rwanda
    for 100s of years (colonial administrators and
    missionaries some anthropologists used as part
    rationale for genocide).
  • Hutu and Tutsi are one ethnic group as they share
    language, religion and culture Hutu and Tutsi
    were purely caste/class groupings. Existing
    divisions are entirely a colonial legacy.
  • In between such views pre-colonial Tutsi
    monarchy created differences and distinct
    identities but these were more fluid and about
    wealth/class, not ethnicity colonial era and
    racial agendas entrenched Hutu and Tutsi labels
    as ethnic/racial groups.
  • (Uvin 1997 is useful on these debates.)

12
Ranked vs. Unranked Ethnic Systems
  • Ranked ethnic systems
  • Ethnic groups in hierarchical, ranked
    relationship. Social class and ethnicity
    coincide society stratified along ethnic lines.
    One ethnic group clearly superordinate over a
    subordinate group in political, economic and
    social status simultaneously. Ethnic groups often
    fill distinct occupational groups.
  • Examples Rwanda and Burundi Jamaica apartheid
    South Africa any system of slavery.

13
Ranked vs. Unranked Ethnic Systems (2)
  • Unranked ethnic systems
  • Ethnic groups are parallel, unranked. Social
    class and ethnicity dont fully coincide ethnic
    groups are cross-class so each is internally
    stratified. Each parallel group is potentially a
    whole society, covering range of occupations and
    statuses.
  • Examples Sri Lanka former Yugoslavia Northern
    Ireland.
  • Neither type of system is completely pure and
    both are subject to change.

14
Ranked vs. Unranked Ethnic Systems (3)
  • 4 directions in which subordinate groups can try
    to move a ranked system
  • Subordinate groups try to displace superordinate
    groups (e.g. Rwanda 1959).
  • Subordinate groups aim to abolish ethnic
    divisions altogether (e.g. United States).
  • Subordinate groups try to raise their position in
    ethnic hierarchy without denying legitimacy of
    that hierarchy (e.g. caste changes in India are
    similar).
  • Subordinate groups try to move the system from
    ranked to unranked (e.g. Rwanda 1990 RPF war).
  • (On ranked and unranked ethnic systems see chpt.
    1 of Horowitz 2000.)

15
Civil War and Peace Accords
  • 1980s Museveni gets Ugandan presidency through
    insurgency aided by Tutsi immigrants backs Tutsi
    efforts to overthrow Hutu-led Rwandan government.
  • 1989 collapse of international coffee market
    increases economic hardship, followed by
    structural adjustment programme 1990-94.
  • 1990-91 exiled Tutsi (Rwandan Patriotic Front)
    war against Rwandan govt. RPF includes moderate
    Hutu and claims it wants multi-ethnic democracy.
  • 1991 cease-fire between Rwandan govt and RPF
    after strong international pressure. Govt
    negotiates with RPF and other opposition leaders.

16
Civil War and Peace Accords (2)
  • Negotiations and aid conditionality
  • 1992 talks in Arusha (Tanzania) in response to
    pressure from USA, Belgium, and Organization of
    African Unity (OAU).
  • US State Department continued aid dependent upon
    progress towards multi-party coalition
    government.
  • Negotiations led to Aug. 1993 Arusha Accords.
    Organized by OAU delegations from African
    states observers/monitors from France, Belgium,
    Germany, US, Britain, Canada, Netherlands, EU.

17
Civil War and Peace Accords (3)
  • Arusha Accords
  • Democratic power-sharing governance.
  • RPF and Rwandan armed forces to integrate.
  • Intl. peacekeeping force (UN Assistance Mission
    in Rwanda) to be deployed and French soldiers to
    withdraw.
  • Refugees to be allowed home.
  • Hutu regime not genuinely committed to cease-fire
    or accords 1991-1994 periodic massacres. Accords
    never instituted. Civilian militias are armed and
    trained by the MRND and CDR.
  • Many thought Accords were best settlement that
    could be achieved problem was Habyarimanas
    regime not committed. Others say Accords backed
    hardliners into a corner and created extremist
    reaction (see Khadiagala 2002, week 19 reading
    list).

18
Genocide
  • Both the mediators and the parties to the
    Arusha Agreement staked its implementation almost
    exclusively on international actors who were
    unwilling and unprepared to expend the resources
    required to meet its provisions (Khadiagala
    2002, p. 463).
  • Implementation of Arusha Accords delayed
    genocide of Tutsis began April 1994. UNAMIR
    peacekeepers withdrew.
  • Genocide ended July 1994 through RPF military
    victory. RPF governing in coalition with other
    political parties.

19
Genocide (2)
  • Systematic, murderous anti-Tutsi propaganda
    campaign began well before 1994.
  • Radio station Radio Télévision Libre des Mille
    Collines (RTLM) disseminated misinformation and
    propaganda. (Some staff later convicted by ICTR
    of inciting genocide.)
  • 6 April 1994 Hutu presidents of Rwanda and
    Burundi were killed when their plane was shot
    down by a rocket (still the subject of
    controversy).

20
Genocide (3)
  • Interim govt blamed plane crash on RPF and
    Belgian UNAMIR troops Rwandan army killed 10
    Belgians Belgium withdrew troops then UN
    withdrew almost all peacekeepers.
  • UN decided to send expanded peacekeeping force
    (UNAMIR II) but didnt arrive until Aug (already
    over). France intervened unilaterally armed and
    supported Hutu elite.
  • Apr.-Jul. 1994 est. 800,000-1,000,000 Rwandans
    killed majority Tutsi but also many moderate
    Hutu. Brutal deaths most violence committed by
    civilian militia groups (interahamwe) armed with
    machetes and sharpened wooden and metal objects.

21
Explaining Genocide?
  • There is no consensus in the literature on
    exactly why genocide occurred in Rwanda and at
    the time it did so. Different scholars place
    different weights on various factors and how they
    interact
  • racist narratives about ethnicity (Uvin 1997
    Taylor 1999 Prunier 1997 Destexhe 1995 Mamdani
    2002)
  • colonial changes to the nature of the state and
    traditional social and economic structures
    (Prunier 1997 Destexhe 1995 Mamdani 2002
    Hintjens 1999)
  • socio-political contestation between the
    northwest and the rest of Rwanda intra-Hutu
    competition (Uvin 1997 Hintjens 1999)
  • economic crisis, structural adjustment programme,
    and scarcity of land (Storey 1999 Uvin 1997
    African Rights 1995a Jones 2002)

22
Explaining Genocide? (2)
  • fear, insecurity and displacement generated by
    the civil war (Reyntjens 1996)
  • political manipulation by elites trying to hold
    onto power in the face of crisis and internal and
    external pressure to democratize (Uvin 1997
    Hintjens 1999 Prunier 1997 Reyntjens 1996)
  • deliberate media propaganda (appears in all
    accounts)
  • a social tradition of extreme conformity
    (Reyntjens 1996 Hintjens 1999)
  • the failure of the international community in
    various forms structural adjustment, coercion
    via aid conditionality, involvement of particular
    individual states, role of NGOs, withdrawal of
    peacekeepers etc. (Clapham 1998 Prunier 1997
    Storey 1997 Gourevitch 1999 Melvern 2000
    Klinghoffer 1998).

23
Pop Quiz
  • I believe that ethnic tensions in Rwanda have
  • Largely been resolved since the end to the
    genocide, with the government of national
    unity.
  • Been repressed but not overcome.
  • Been transferred to neighbouring states.

24
Post-Genocide
  • By 19 July 1994 RPF had control of most of Rwanda
    and installed themselves as govt of national
    unity, in coalition with 4 other political
    parties provided for in the Arusha Accords
    (exception of MRND). New President, PM and many
    cabinet members were Hutu but the current govt is
    more Tutsi-dominated.
  • Current President, Paul Kagame, is a Tutsi who
    was military commander of the RPF when it ended
    the genocide.
  • When RPF took power up to 2,000,000 Hutu fled to
    refugee camps in neighbouring states, mainly
    Zaire. From camps Hutu exiles launched attacks
    on Rwanda Rwandan govt invaded Zaire (now DR
    Congo) to clear out Hutu refugee camps. Various
    types of Rwandan military involvement in DRC
    since then, including mass slaughter of Hutus.

25
Post-Genocide (2)
  • Today Rwanda is fairly stable but more like
    tenuous stalemate than genuine peace. Weakly
    democratic and really pretty authoritarian.
    Repression of political opposition and media.
    Focus on development.
  • Govt has arguably failed to move towards genuine
    national reconciliation. Approach seems largely
    to be to try and erase the notion of ethnic
    difference, rather than to acknowledge and value
    all what do you think about this approach to
    ethnic conflict?

26
Conclusions
  • Different group identities existed in Rwanda
    prior to colonial contact but the nature of these
    identities/divisions remains hotly debated.
  • Colonial notions of race and colonial political
    administration had huge and negative impact on
    constructions of ethnic identity in Rwanda.
  • Arusha Accords were imposed upon Hutu elite and
    strongly resisted did this contribute to
    causing the genocide?
  • The impact of the economic situation seems to
    have been very significant but fundamentally it
    was the interaction of this with political power
    struggles which led to state incitement to
    genocide.
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