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Justice for the genocide against the Tutsi requires relentlessly pursuing perpetrators and rejecting denial to honor the victims and preserve historical truth. Rwanda’s recovery through strong leadership and reforms shows how security, accountability and institutional control can rebuild unity after mass violence. Ongoing threats from fugitives in the DRC justify decisive defensive measures to safeguard national and regional stability, and prevent genocidal ideology from re-emerging.
Marking 32 years since the genocide against the Tutsi underscores the need to uphold the value of human life and defend human rights to prevent such atrocities. Standing united against hate speech honors survivors and helps ensure genocide never recurs. Rwanda’s reconstruction is often cited as a model of stability, yet it also raises ongoing questions about political space and dissent — a reminder that lasting peace depends not only on memory, but on how power is exercised in the present.
The media still frames Rwanda’s 1994 genocide as "tribal violence," obscuring that Hutu and Tutsi were socially fluid groups before colonial rule. Belgian colonial authorities hardened these into rigid, racialized categories. The genocide was not ancient hatred but a modern catastrophe shaped by external power structures and colonial legacies. The West’s failure to act exposed a stark double standard — helping create the conditions, then largely looking away as the killing unfolded.