Rwanda: Cartographie des crimes
Rwanda: cartographie des crimes du livre "In Praise of Blood, the crimes of the RPF" de Judi Rever
Kagame devra être livré aux Rwandais pour répondre à ses crimes: la meilleure option de réconciliation nationale entre les Hutus et les Tutsis.
Let us remember Our People
Let us remember our people, it is our right
You can't stop thinking
Don't you know
Rwandans are talkin' 'bout a revolution
It sounds like a whisper
The majority Hutus and interior Tutsi are gonna rise up
And get their share
SurViVors are gonna rise up
And take what's theirs.
We're the survivors, yes: the Hutu survivors!
Yes, we're the survivors, like Daniel out of the lions' den
(Hutu survivors) Survivors, survivors!
Get up, stand up, stand up for your rights
et up, stand up, don't give up the fight
“I’m never gonna hold you like I did / Or say I love you to the kids / You’re never gonna see it in my eyes / It’s not gonna hurt me when you cry / I’m not gonna miss you.”
The situation is undeniably hurtful but we can'stop thinking we’re heartbroken over the loss of our beloved ones.
"You can't separate peace from freedom because no one can be at peace unless he has his freedom".
Malcolm X
Welcome to Home Truths
The year is 1994, the Fruitful year and the Start of a long epoch of the Rwandan RPF bloody dictatorship. Rwanda and DRC have become a unique arena and fertile ground for wars and lies. Tutsi RPF members deny Rights and Justice to the Hutu majority, to Interior Tutsis, to Congolese people, publicly claim the status of victim as the only SurViVors while millions of Hutu, interior Tutsi and Congolese people were butchered. Please make RPF criminals a Day One priority. Allow voices of the REAL victims to be heard.
Everybody Hurts
“Everybody Hurts” is one of the rare songs on this list that actually offers catharsis. It’s beautifully simple: you’re sad, but you’re not alone because “everybody hurts, everybody cries.” You’re human, in other words, and we all have our moments. So take R.E.M.’s advice, “take comfort in your friends,” blast this song, have yourself a good cry, and then move on. You’ll feel better, I promise.—Bonnie Stiernberg
KAGAME - GENOCIDAIRE
Paul Kagame admits ordering...
Paul Kagame admits ordering the 1994 assassination of President Juvenal Habyarimana of Rwanda.
Why did Kagame this to me?
Inzira ndende
Search
Hutu Children & their Mums
Rwanda-rebranding
Rwanda-rebranding-Targeting dissidents inside and abroad, despite war crimes and repression
Rwanda has “A well primed PR machine”, and that this has been key in “persuading the key members of the international community that it has an exemplary constitution emphasizing democracy, power-sharing, and human rights which it fully respects”. It concluded: “The truth is, however, the opposite. What you see is not what you get: A FAÇADE”
Rwanda has hired several PR firms to work on deflecting criticism, and rebranding the country.
Targeting dissidents abroad
One of the more worrying aspects of Racepoint’s objectives
was to “Educate and correct the ill informed and factually
incorrect information perpetuated by certain groups of expatriates
and NGOs,” including, presumably, the critiques
of the crackdown on dissent among political opponents
overseas.
This should be seen in the context of accusations
that Rwanda has plotted to kill dissidents abroad. A
recent investigation by the Globe and Mail claims, “Rwandan
exiles in both South Africa and Belgium – speaking in clandestine meetings in secure locations because of their fears of attack – gave detailed accounts of being recruited to assassinate critics of President Kagame….
Ways To Get Rid of Kagame
How to proceed for revolution in Rwanda:
- The people should overthrow the Rwandan dictator (often put in place by foreign agencies) and throw him, along with his henchmen and family, out of the country – e.g., the Shah of Iran, Marcos of Philippines.Compaore of Burkina Faso
- Rwandans organize a violent revolution and have the dictator killed – e.g., Ceaucescu in Romania.
- Foreign powers (till then maintaining the dictator) force the dictator to exile without armed intervention – e.g. Mátyás Rákosi of Hungary was exiled by the Soviets to Kirgizia in 1970 to “seek medical attention”.
- Foreign powers march in and remove the dictator (whom they either instated or helped earlier) – e.g. Saddam Hussein of Iraq or Manuel Noriega of Panama.
- The dictator kills himself in an act of desperation – e.g., Hitler in 1945.
- The dictator is assassinated by people near him – e.g., Julius Caesar of Rome in 44 AD was stabbed by 60-70 people (only one wound was fatal though).
- Organise strikes and unrest to paralyze the country and convince even the army not to support the dictaor – e.g., Jorge Ubico y Castañeda was ousted in Guatemala in 1944 and Guatemala became democratic, Recedntly in Burkina Faso with the dictator Blaise Compaoré.
Almighty God :Justice for US
Killing Hutus on daily basis
RPF Trade Mark: Akandoya
Fighting For Our Freedom?
KAGAME VS JUSTICE
Friday, October 23, 2009
23-10-2009
By Patrice de Beer
France's founding republican myth and democratic self-image exist uneasily alongside an enduring popular fixation with the many powerful leaders that have ruled the country: among them Louis XIV, Napoleon I and III, Général Charles de Gaulle, and even the wartime Marshal Pétain (who "gave himself to France" - and France to Hitler).
The latest to enter this imaginary panthéon, offering a heady blend of lofty promises and base populism, is Nicolas Sarkozy. The modern fifth republic - inaugurated in 1958 with the majestic return of Charles de Gaulle from a form of internal self-exile - allows all French presidents to behave like a benign monarch; but is exceptional is that the current one has effectively made himself king of a strange form of republican elected monarchy: "Sarkoland". Never in this half-century has a president held as much power - or been so determined to curtail any potential opposition.
In many cultures there is a tendency to attribute a characteristic of special cunning or ambition to men of small stature. Nicolas Sarkozy is of the same size as Louis XIV and Napoleon, and like them has shown every intention to expand the political and economic role of the state. L'Etat, c'est moi (I am the State) was the "sun king's" motto; the "Sarko" era's addendum is ...et l'Etat est à moi (..and the State is mine).
Sarkozy was widely hailed after his presidential-election victory in 2007 (notably by British and American media and pundits) as the leader who would at last lead the reluctant French towards a model of economic liberalism, deregulation and globalisation. But in the first half of his five-year term - which has coincided with the global financial crisis - he has followed a very different course: extending his hold in all possible fields, buying over any available opponent, and putting his favoured clients in charge of departments, agencies and anything that he could control (see "Nicolas Sarkozy, the frenetic leader", 28 July 2008).
The president is now trying to spread his reach even further by revamping the municipal and local institutions of Paris and the regions, as well as modifying the election process in order to strengthen his grip over them. The unexpected consequence is that some local stalwarts of his Union pour une Majorité Présidentielle (UMP) are protesting against what they see as a reduction of their own power.
A dispirited socialist opposition remains in control of most major cities and departements and of all France's regions except two, but is unable to find the coherence or the policy ideas to mount a serious challenge to the quasi-monarch in the Elysée palace (see "France's socialist crack-up", 17 December 2008).
A turn of the tide
Indeed, things have been going very well for Nicolas Sarkozy over these two and a half years. The Parti Socialiste (PS) is in disarray, unable to unite behind a platform and a leader; the rest of the opposition (not least further on the left) is hopelessly divided. "Sarko" has had the field to himself: piling up reforms (some popular, some less so), flying the tricolore in foreign policy (not without success, including during the French presidency of the European Union in July-December 2008); and riding on his image as a "reformer" capable of international leadership (as in his crucial role in the G20 during the financial crisis).
In domestic terms, the president-monarch has resisted any surrender to what he regards as reactionary forces (meaning, mostly, the left and the trade unions); and portrayed himself as the "irreproachable president" who would end the governance by underhand deal-making embraced by his predecessors.
But in recent weeks, there have been the beginnings of a change. Sarkozy's relations with Barack Obama are much cooler than with George W Bush, whose war in Iraq he supported. The domestic economic troubles include a rising budget deficit, which he refuses to ease by abandoning the "fiscal shield" he imposed after his election (to protect his more affluent supporters from tax demands).
Some of his reforms, moreover, have both irked his followers (including conservative, ageing voters who are the hardcore of his electorate) and provoked the opposition into life. They include the decision to abolish the "professional tax" designed to reduce the fiscal burden on business; for this would also deprive local governments of their main income and thus make them more dependent on the "Sarko" administration at the very time it is seeking to download on them social expenditures which used to be carried by the government. A number of UMP stalwarts worry that about abstention at the regional elections in 2010; their concerns are reinforced by poll findings that suggest a decline of trust in the president.
Also in openDemocracy on French politics:
Johannes Willms, "France unveiled: making Muslims into citizens?" (26 February 2004)
Patrick Weil, "A nation in diversity: France, Muslims and the headscarf" (25 March 2004)
Henri Astier, "We want to be French!" (22 November 2005)
Alan Lentin, "The intifada of the banlieues" (17 November 2005)
Henri Astier, "France's revolt against change" (23 March 2006)
Henri Astier "In praise of French direct democracy" (12 April 2006)
KA Dilday, "Zidane and France: the rules of the game" (18 July 2006)
Henri Astier, "France's banlieues: year of the locust" (8 November 2006)
Henri Astier, "Jurassic Left: the strange death of France's deuxième gauche" (25 March 2007)
KA Dilday, "France's two worlds" (7 May 2007)
Hector Andrieu, "A lost left: the soul of French socialism" (5 June 2007)
James McDougall, "Sarkozy: big whitechief's bad memory" (7 December 2007)
In October 2009, three events in particular suggest that Sarkozy's grasp of French public opinion may be becoming shaky. The first is the murky slander trial involving Dominique de Villepin, who was prime minister under Jacques Chirac before Sarkozy's election in 2007. The president is a plaintiff against Villepin, heads the judiciary and is immune from prosecution during his own term; but these have not stopped him from hounding his rival in court and even calling him "guilty" on television (thus violating the law that says that anyone indicted is presumed innocent until being sentenced). Villepin smartly retorted that "justice" was biased against him - in doing so he gained public sympathy, including from the right, who can't understand how two of its brightest sons can fight so bitterly.
The second event is the Frédéric Mitterrand scandal. Among Sarkozy's victories in his unremitting psychological warfare against the PS has been his poaching of the nephew of former president Francois Mitterrand, a TV personality and writer whom "Sarko" appointed culture minister. Alas, Frédéric's denunciation of the arrest of the Polish-French film director Roman Polanski in Zurich over a three-decades old charge of abuse of a minor in California led to National Front co-leader Marine Le Pen publicising quotes from his book La Mauvaise Vie in which he recalled his sexual trysts with young male prostitutes in Bangkok's red-light district. When the president defended his minister, even more Sarkozy voters were horrified (though a majority of French people as a whole seem opposed to Frédéric Mitterrand's resignation).
The third event has been the most damaging: the Jean Sarkozy affair. "Prince Jean", Nicolas Sarkozy's second son from the first of his three marriages, has declared his candidacy to chair EPAD - the public body in charge of La Défense, Europe's largest business centre on the west side of Paris, where 150,000 people work for 2,500 firms on 3.3 million square metres of office-space. The claim was drowned in an outcry: how can a 23-year-old second-year law student, with little more in his CV than being the president's son and having been elected in 2008 a local councillor for Neuilly-sur-Seine (the wealthiest suburb in France and his father's long-time fiefdom) be said to qualify for such an influential position on his own merit? A new terminology - "nepotism", "hereditary monarchy" and even "banana republic" ruled at the president's bon plaisir (whim) has - to the Elysée palace's dismay - been circulating around France and abroad.
All the president's men, and the president himself - amazingly - did not see it coming. "Sarko" has defiantly championed his son, on the grounds that that everyone should have his chance, that "Prince Jean" was fully qualified, and that he had won his legitimacy through election.
This defence omits the facts that his son had been elected in his father's constituency; and that his promotion to EPAD (due to be formalised in December 2009) had been eased both by the resignation of a friendly board member and by the Elysée's blocking of a decree enabling the present chairman - one of Sarkozy's oldest friends, Patrick Devedjian, minister in charge of overseeing economic recovery - to retain his position.
The president does not see the contradiction - some say the hypocrisy - between making Jean his dauphin and his promises of re-establishing a clean, meritocratic republic where hard work is the route to success. The French are outraged. Le Monde's cartoonist, Plantu, portrays Jean holding a "son's diploma". A poll by the CSA company published in Le Parisien finds that 64% of respondents oppose the decision, as do 51% of Sarkozy's voters.
Almost all government MPs and ministers have been sent into battle to support Jean, saying how bright he is and how much he is the victim of an opposition and media plot. But many of them under cover of anonymity also express their dismay at a decision their constituents don't understand. They talk of voters whose educated and multi-qualified offspring are unable to find a job at a time when the economic crisis has turned into a social one.
An end to promises The three setbacks raise serious questions for the monarch-president. Has Nicolas Sarkozy lost his magic touch; has the man who once said the French were "regicides" departed from reality; has he so surrounded himself by courtesans and close advisers in his palace that he now exists in a bubble of isolation?
The signals are clear. "Sarko's" partisans do not dare criticise him or even give him bad news, fearing they will be rebuffed by the "omni-president". The president has not realise how damaging it is for his democratic image to have called his prime minister, Francois Fillon, a mere collaborateur, to have ministries ruled by his advisers and UMP elders, to have MPs vote for bills crafted in the Elysée palace. Meanwhile, his forays to the outside world are even more stage-managed than before; during one factory visit, short workers were bussed from another plant so that he was not seen to be surrounded by taller people.
Sarkozy may take comfort in the fact that the media quickly tires of scandals. But the moment is worrying: a few months before regional elections, instead of being able to steal more votes from the opposition by blurring the lines between left and right, he has disorientated his own partisans and lost support on the far right (which helped him to win in 2007).
His own personalisation of politics has catapulted him into every frontline, thus making him the only recipient of blame when things go wrong. It is perhaps the fate of would-be strongmen to be victims of their own hubris rather than of their crushed rivals. But is there anyone among the latter in contemporary French politics able to take advantage?
The Truth can be buried and stomped into the ground where none can see, yet eventually it will, like a seed, break through the surface once again far more potent than ever, and Nothing can stop it. Truth can be suppressed for a "time", yet It cannot be destroyed. ==> Wolverine
By Patrice de Beer
France's founding republican myth and democratic self-image exist uneasily alongside an enduring popular fixation with the many powerful leaders that have ruled the country: among them Louis XIV, Napoleon I and III, Général Charles de Gaulle, and even the wartime Marshal Pétain (who "gave himself to France" - and France to Hitler).
The latest to enter this imaginary panthéon, offering a heady blend of lofty promises and base populism, is Nicolas Sarkozy. The modern fifth republic - inaugurated in 1958 with the majestic return of Charles de Gaulle from a form of internal self-exile - allows all French presidents to behave like a benign monarch; but is exceptional is that the current one has effectively made himself king of a strange form of republican elected monarchy: "Sarkoland". Never in this half-century has a president held as much power - or been so determined to curtail any potential opposition.
In many cultures there is a tendency to attribute a characteristic of special cunning or ambition to men of small stature. Nicolas Sarkozy is of the same size as Louis XIV and Napoleon, and like them has shown every intention to expand the political and economic role of the state. L'Etat, c'est moi (I am the State) was the "sun king's" motto; the "Sarko" era's addendum is ...et l'Etat est à moi (..and the State is mine).
Sarkozy was widely hailed after his presidential-election victory in 2007 (notably by British and American media and pundits) as the leader who would at last lead the reluctant French towards a model of economic liberalism, deregulation and globalisation. But in the first half of his five-year term - which has coincided with the global financial crisis - he has followed a very different course: extending his hold in all possible fields, buying over any available opponent, and putting his favoured clients in charge of departments, agencies and anything that he could control (see "Nicolas Sarkozy, the frenetic leader", 28 July 2008).
The president is now trying to spread his reach even further by revamping the municipal and local institutions of Paris and the regions, as well as modifying the election process in order to strengthen his grip over them. The unexpected consequence is that some local stalwarts of his Union pour une Majorité Présidentielle (UMP) are protesting against what they see as a reduction of their own power.
A dispirited socialist opposition remains in control of most major cities and departements and of all France's regions except two, but is unable to find the coherence or the policy ideas to mount a serious challenge to the quasi-monarch in the Elysée palace (see "France's socialist crack-up", 17 December 2008).
A turn of the tide
Indeed, things have been going very well for Nicolas Sarkozy over these two and a half years. The Parti Socialiste (PS) is in disarray, unable to unite behind a platform and a leader; the rest of the opposition (not least further on the left) is hopelessly divided. "Sarko" has had the field to himself: piling up reforms (some popular, some less so), flying the tricolore in foreign policy (not without success, including during the French presidency of the European Union in July-December 2008); and riding on his image as a "reformer" capable of international leadership (as in his crucial role in the G20 during the financial crisis).
In domestic terms, the president-monarch has resisted any surrender to what he regards as reactionary forces (meaning, mostly, the left and the trade unions); and portrayed himself as the "irreproachable president" who would end the governance by underhand deal-making embraced by his predecessors.
But in recent weeks, there have been the beginnings of a change. Sarkozy's relations with Barack Obama are much cooler than with George W Bush, whose war in Iraq he supported. The domestic economic troubles include a rising budget deficit, which he refuses to ease by abandoning the "fiscal shield" he imposed after his election (to protect his more affluent supporters from tax demands).
Some of his reforms, moreover, have both irked his followers (including conservative, ageing voters who are the hardcore of his electorate) and provoked the opposition into life. They include the decision to abolish the "professional tax" designed to reduce the fiscal burden on business; for this would also deprive local governments of their main income and thus make them more dependent on the "Sarko" administration at the very time it is seeking to download on them social expenditures which used to be carried by the government. A number of UMP stalwarts worry that about abstention at the regional elections in 2010; their concerns are reinforced by poll findings that suggest a decline of trust in the president.
Also in openDemocracy on French politics:
Johannes Willms, "France unveiled: making Muslims into citizens?" (26 February 2004)
Patrick Weil, "A nation in diversity: France, Muslims and the headscarf" (25 March 2004)
Henri Astier, "We want to be French!" (22 November 2005)
Alan Lentin, "The intifada of the banlieues" (17 November 2005)
Henri Astier, "France's revolt against change" (23 March 2006)
Henri Astier "In praise of French direct democracy" (12 April 2006)
KA Dilday, "Zidane and France: the rules of the game" (18 July 2006)
Henri Astier, "France's banlieues: year of the locust" (8 November 2006)
Henri Astier, "Jurassic Left: the strange death of France's deuxième gauche" (25 March 2007)
KA Dilday, "France's two worlds" (7 May 2007)
Hector Andrieu, "A lost left: the soul of French socialism" (5 June 2007)
James McDougall, "Sarkozy: big whitechief's bad memory" (7 December 2007)
In October 2009, three events in particular suggest that Sarkozy's grasp of French public opinion may be becoming shaky. The first is the murky slander trial involving Dominique de Villepin, who was prime minister under Jacques Chirac before Sarkozy's election in 2007. The president is a plaintiff against Villepin, heads the judiciary and is immune from prosecution during his own term; but these have not stopped him from hounding his rival in court and even calling him "guilty" on television (thus violating the law that says that anyone indicted is presumed innocent until being sentenced). Villepin smartly retorted that "justice" was biased against him - in doing so he gained public sympathy, including from the right, who can't understand how two of its brightest sons can fight so bitterly.
The second event is the Frédéric Mitterrand scandal. Among Sarkozy's victories in his unremitting psychological warfare against the PS has been his poaching of the nephew of former president Francois Mitterrand, a TV personality and writer whom "Sarko" appointed culture minister. Alas, Frédéric's denunciation of the arrest of the Polish-French film director Roman Polanski in Zurich over a three-decades old charge of abuse of a minor in California led to National Front co-leader Marine Le Pen publicising quotes from his book La Mauvaise Vie in which he recalled his sexual trysts with young male prostitutes in Bangkok's red-light district. When the president defended his minister, even more Sarkozy voters were horrified (though a majority of French people as a whole seem opposed to Frédéric Mitterrand's resignation).
The third event has been the most damaging: the Jean Sarkozy affair. "Prince Jean", Nicolas Sarkozy's second son from the first of his three marriages, has declared his candidacy to chair EPAD - the public body in charge of La Défense, Europe's largest business centre on the west side of Paris, where 150,000 people work for 2,500 firms on 3.3 million square metres of office-space. The claim was drowned in an outcry: how can a 23-year-old second-year law student, with little more in his CV than being the president's son and having been elected in 2008 a local councillor for Neuilly-sur-Seine (the wealthiest suburb in France and his father's long-time fiefdom) be said to qualify for such an influential position on his own merit? A new terminology - "nepotism", "hereditary monarchy" and even "banana republic" ruled at the president's bon plaisir (whim) has - to the Elysée palace's dismay - been circulating around France and abroad.
All the president's men, and the president himself - amazingly - did not see it coming. "Sarko" has defiantly championed his son, on the grounds that that everyone should have his chance, that "Prince Jean" was fully qualified, and that he had won his legitimacy through election.
This defence omits the facts that his son had been elected in his father's constituency; and that his promotion to EPAD (due to be formalised in December 2009) had been eased both by the resignation of a friendly board member and by the Elysée's blocking of a decree enabling the present chairman - one of Sarkozy's oldest friends, Patrick Devedjian, minister in charge of overseeing economic recovery - to retain his position.
The president does not see the contradiction - some say the hypocrisy - between making Jean his dauphin and his promises of re-establishing a clean, meritocratic republic where hard work is the route to success. The French are outraged. Le Monde's cartoonist, Plantu, portrays Jean holding a "son's diploma". A poll by the CSA company published in Le Parisien finds that 64% of respondents oppose the decision, as do 51% of Sarkozy's voters.
Almost all government MPs and ministers have been sent into battle to support Jean, saying how bright he is and how much he is the victim of an opposition and media plot. But many of them under cover of anonymity also express their dismay at a decision their constituents don't understand. They talk of voters whose educated and multi-qualified offspring are unable to find a job at a time when the economic crisis has turned into a social one.
An end to promises The three setbacks raise serious questions for the monarch-president. Has Nicolas Sarkozy lost his magic touch; has the man who once said the French were "regicides" departed from reality; has he so surrounded himself by courtesans and close advisers in his palace that he now exists in a bubble of isolation?
The signals are clear. "Sarko's" partisans do not dare criticise him or even give him bad news, fearing they will be rebuffed by the "omni-president". The president has not realise how damaging it is for his democratic image to have called his prime minister, Francois Fillon, a mere collaborateur, to have ministries ruled by his advisers and UMP elders, to have MPs vote for bills crafted in the Elysée palace. Meanwhile, his forays to the outside world are even more stage-managed than before; during one factory visit, short workers were bussed from another plant so that he was not seen to be surrounded by taller people.
Sarkozy may take comfort in the fact that the media quickly tires of scandals. But the moment is worrying: a few months before regional elections, instead of being able to steal more votes from the opposition by blurring the lines between left and right, he has disorientated his own partisans and lost support on the far right (which helped him to win in 2007).
His own personalisation of politics has catapulted him into every frontline, thus making him the only recipient of blame when things go wrong. It is perhaps the fate of would-be strongmen to be victims of their own hubris rather than of their crushed rivals. But is there anyone among the latter in contemporary French politics able to take advantage?
The Truth can be buried and stomped into the ground where none can see, yet eventually it will, like a seed, break through the surface once again far more potent than ever, and Nothing can stop it. Truth can be suppressed for a "time", yet It cannot be destroyed. ==> Wolverine
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Profile
I am Jean-Christophe Nizeyimana, an Economist, Content Manager, and EDI Expert, driven by a passion for human rights activism. With a deep commitment to advancing human rights in Africa, particularly in the Great Lakes region, I established this blog following firsthand experiences with human rights violations in Rwanda and in the DRC (formerly Zaïre) as well. My journey began with collaborations with Amnesty International in Utrecht, the Netherlands, and with human rights organizations including Human Rights Watch and a conference in Helsinki, Finland, where I was a panelist with other activists from various countries.
My mission is to uncover the untold truth about the ongoing genocide in Rwanda and the DRC. As a dedicated voice for the voiceless, I strive to raise awareness about the tragic consequences of these events and work tirelessly to bring an end to the Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF)'s impunity.
This blog is a platform for Truth and Justice, not a space for hate. I am vigilant against hate speech or ignorant comments, moderating all discussions to ensure a respectful and informed dialogue at African Survivors International Blog.
Genocide masterminded by RPF
Finally the well-known Truth Comes Out.
After suffering THE LONG years, telling the world that Kagame and his RPF criminal organization masterminded the Rwandan genocide that they later recalled Genocide against Tutsis. Our lives were nothing but suffering these last 32 years beginning from October 1st, 1990 onwards. We are calling the United States of America, United Kingdom, Japan, and Great Britain in particular, France, Belgium, Netherlands and Germany to return to hidden classified archives and support Honorable Tito Rutaremara's recent statement about What really happened in Rwanda before, during and after 1994 across the country and how methodically the Rwandan Genocide has been masterminded by Paul Kagame, the Rwandan Hitler. Above all, Mr. Tito Rutaremara, one of the RPF leaders has given details about RPF infiltration methods in Habyarimana's all instances, how assassinations, disappearances, mass-slaughters across Rwanda have been carried out from the local autority to the government,fabricated lies that have been used by Gacaca courts as weapon, the ICTR in which RPF had infiltrators like Joseph Ngarambe, an International court biased judgments & condemnations targeting Hutu ethnic members in contraversal strategy compared to the ICTR establishment to pursue in justice those accountable for crimes between 1993 to 2003 and Mapping Report ignored and classified to protect the Rwandan Nazis under the RPF embrella . NOTHING LASTS FOREVER.
Human and Civil Rights
Human Rights, Mutual Respect and Dignity
For all Rwandans :
Hutus - Tutsis - Twas
Rwanda: A mapping of crimes
Rwanda: A mapping of crimes in the book "In Praise of Blood, the crimes of the RPF by Judi Rever
Be the last to know: This video talks about unspeakable Kagame's crimes committed against Hutu, before, during and after the genocide against Tutsi in Rwanda.
The mastermind of both genocide is still at large: Paul Kagame
KIBEHO: Rwandan Auschwitz
Kibeho Concetration Camp.
Mass murderers C. Sankara
Stephen Sackur’s Hard Talk.
Prof. Allan C. Stam
The Unstoppable Truth
Prof. Christian Davenport
The Unstoppable Truth
Prof. Christian Davenport Michigan University & Faculty Associate at the Center for Political Studies
The killing Fields - Part 1
The Unstoppable Truth
The killing Fields - Part II
The Unstoppable Truth
Daily bread for Rwandans
The Unstoppable Truth
The killing Fields - Part III
The Unstoppable Truth
Time has come: Regime change
Drame rwandais- justice impartiale
Carla Del Ponte, Ancien Procureur au TPIR:"Le drame rwandais mérite une justice impartiale" - et réponse de Gerald Gahima
Sheltering 2,5 million refugees
Credible reports camps sheltering 2,500 million refugees in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo have been destroyed.
The UN refugee agency says it has credible reports camps sheltering 2,5 milion refugees in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo have been destroyed.
Latest videos
Peter Erlinder comments on the BBC documentary "Rwanda's Untold Story
Madam Victoire Ingabire,THE RWANDAN AUNG SAN SUU KYI
Rwanda's Untold Story
Rwanda, un génocide en questions
Bernard Lugan présente "Rwanda, un génocide en... par BernardLugan Bernard Lugan présente "Rwanda, un génocide en questions"
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Stephen Sackur, HARDtalk's presenter, has been a journalist with BBC News since 1986. Stephen Sackur, HARDtalk's pr...
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Kananga foot shufflers, April 19, 2003 Kinshasa, May 4, 2003 » Kigali, Rwanda, April 22, 2003 “How many lives in danger are necessary for a...
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[ Since 1994, the world witnesses the horrifying Tutsi minority (14%) ethnic domination, the Tutsi minority ethnic rule, tyranny and corr...
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[Bizima(na) Karaha(muheto), Azarias Ruberwa(nziza), Jules Mutebusi (vit protégé actuellement au Rwanda),Laurent Nkunda(batware) (vit protég...
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[Since 1994, the world witnesses the horrifying Tutsi minority (14%) ethnic domination, the Tutsi minority ethnic rule with an iron han...
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29/09/2019 By Jean-Christophe, Libre Penseur A blanket amnesty of past and present crimes whitewash to ...
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[Since 1994, the world witnesses the horrifying Tutsi minority (14%) ethnic domination, the Tutsi minority ethnic rule with an iron ha...
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[Since 1994, the world witnesses the horrifying Tutsi minority (14%) ethnic domination, the Tutsi minority ethnic rule with an iron han...
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- Aux Survivants, aux Résistants, au Rwanda, en Répu...
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Everything happens for a reason
Bad things are going to happen in your life, people will hurt you, disrespect you, play with your feelings.. But you shouldn't use that as an excuse to fail to go on and to hurt the whole world. You will end up hurting yourself and wasting your precious time. Don't always think of revenging, just let things go and move on with your life. Remember everything happens for a reason and when one door closes, the other opens for you with new blessings and love.
Hutus didn't plan Tutsi Genocide
Kagame, the mastermind of Rwandan Genocide (Hutu & tutsi)
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