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Date
: 07/04/2004
Source: The Presidency
Title: T Mbeki: Commemoration of the Rwanda Genocide
STATEMENT OF THE PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA, THABO
MBEKI, AT THE COMMEMORATION OF THE 10TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE
COMMENCEMENT OF THE 1994 GENOCIDE IN RWANDA, Kigali, 7 April
2004
President Paul Kagame
Distinguished Guests
Genocide Survivors
People of Rwanda.
I am honoured to express my sincere thanks and appreciation to His
Excellency, President Kagame, for the invitation extended to us to
be here today to participate in this important commemoration of the
Rwanda Genocide of 1994.
We are privileged to convey to you, Mr President, the government
and people of Rwanda a heartfelt message of friendship and
solidarity from the government and people of South Africa and an
unwavering commitment to work with you as our peoples strive to
achieve the shared goal of a better life for all.
As you know, Mr President, 20 days from today, we will be
celebrating our 10th Anniversary of Freedom, our liberation from
the clutches of the apartheid crime against humanity.
History decreed Mr President that during the very same month that
your country and people saw the beginning of the unimaginable
nightmare of Genocide, your brothers and sisters in South Africa
ended the apartheid system of white minority domination by
participating in our very first democratic elections.
Because we were preoccupied with extricating ourselves from our own
nightmare, we did not cry out as loudly as we should have against
the enormous and heinous crime against the people of Rwanda that
was committed in 1994. For that we owe the people of Rwanda a
sincere apology, which I now extend in all sincerity and
humility.
We do this because we know that the apartheid regime that our
people defeated in 1994, too late to make a difference to what
happened in this country, supplied some of the weapons that were
used by those who massacred a million of their compatriots and
fellow Africans in 100 days.
We remember too, Mr President, that when we acted on the request of
your Movement to ask the apartheid regime to stop the supply of the
weapons of death, representatives of the oppressor regime in our
country boldly asserted the precedence of profit from the sale of
the instruments of death over the lives of the people of
Rwanda.
To that extent, we too as South Africans contributed to the
diabolical slaughter of the innocents. We hope that by the
admission of these truths we can contribute even an infinitesimal
fraction of the balm that helps to moderate the sharp pain of the
remembering of a crime that is too fresh to have receded into the
mists of history.
Mr President, a time such as this demands that the truth, the whole
truth and nothing but the truth should be told. It should be told
because not to tell it is to create the conditions for the crime to
recur.
Not to tell the truth is to impose an additional burden on those
who already carry too heavy a burden of an intensely felt pain, of
denying them the possibility to forgive those who had done wrong,
of condemning them to nurse a consuming anger and grievance against
those guilty of acts of commission and omission.
Mr President, at a time such as this, it is inevitable that many
questions will and must be asked and answers demanded.
Why did it happen?
What evil force captured the souls of the genocidaires, giving them
the courage to murder a million people in cold blood?
What was it that gave the leaders and commanders of the
genocidaires the murderous courage to direct and preside over so
gruesome a crime?
What did we as Africans do to stop the slaughter? If we did
nothing, why did we do nothing?
Why did the United Nations, set up to ensure that genocide, as
occurred when the Holocaust was visited on the Jewish people, did
not recur anywhere in the world, stand by as Africans were
exterminated like pernicious vermin?
Why were General Romeo Dallaire and his undermanned contingent of
UN peacekeepers abandoned by the same people who sent them to
Rwanda?
Why did those who dispose of enormous global power that has been
used to determine the fate of all humanity, decide that the
slaughter in Yugoslavia had to be stopped at all costs, while the
bigger slaughter in Rwanda should be allowed to run its full
course?
Have all the guilty been identified, whatever their contribution to
the commission of the genocide? Have the necessary lessons been
learnt? What are those lessons? Who has learnt them? What have
these done with the knowledge they have acquired?
Was it enough merely to say "sorry" on the part of those who had
the humility, courage and honesty to say "sorry"? And what of those
who are perhaps too arrogant to utter this simple word?
Everyday, the severed heads and skeletons stored at the sites of
the massacres point an accusing finger at all of us who did not do
what we should have done to stop the murderous rampage. Everyday
they remind us that we cannot merely say the Rwanda Genocide
occurred and treat it just as an historical episode that has
passed.
Mr President, we have returned to Kigali today to convey our humble
thanks and sincere gratitude to the people of Rwanda and their
leaders for restoring our dignity as Africans, through the
extraordinary things you have done, to teach the world and us the
meaning of forgiveness and national reconciliation.
We have returned to Kigali to learn the lessons we can and must
learn from the extraordinary people of this land, whose beauty
disguises the fact only 10 years ago it was disfigured by the
torrents of blood that flowed here as though that blood was no
different from the water brought by the tropical rainstorms.
We have come to this land that knows the true meaning of tragedy
fully to absorb the lesson that to be truly human is to overcome
the easy temptation to hate, to despair, to seek revenge and
retribution, to worship at the altar of violence, deifying the use
of terrifying force in the ordering of human relations.
A Rwandan girl child survived the genocide because the corpses that
fell on her at the church where people were killed, sheltered her
from the eyes of the murderers. When she was found, she said, "We
will never come back to this church. It is a graveyard. The angels
have left us."
There are others in the world that would have said the same thing
when they saw Rwanda 10 years ago, with corpses covering the
landscape and the stench of decomposing human flesh making it
difficult to breathe. They too would have said, "We will never come
back to this country. It is a graveyard. The angels have left
us."
But we have come because of what you, the people of Rwanda have
done, which has said this a country of hope and a new life of
peace, on which the angels shower their blessings.
We salute you, our Rwandan brothers and sisters, and pledge our
friendship with you, a friendship that obliges us willingly and
voluntarily to stand side by side with you as you work to rebuild
your country and your lives. Thank you.
For more information please call Dumisani Nkwamba on 082 451 5583
or Bheki Khumalo on 083 256 9133
Issued by: The Presidency
7 April 2004