Rwandan genocide court shuts after 20 years

Rwandan genocide court shuts after 20 years

After two decades of work and 61 convictions at a cost of nearly $2 billion, the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda shuts up shop amid criticism but at least with some justice served.
The Tanzanian-based and United Nations-backed ICTR, set up in late 1994 to try the alleged masterminds behind Rwanda's genocide, is ending its work, with only its appeals chamber staying open for one final trial after December 31.
In the end, the court "did its job," admits Bonaventure Higaniro, the guardian of the genocide memorial at Kamonyi, a massacre site some 36 kilometres south of Rwandan capital Kigali.
Kamonyi's mayor Jean-Paul Akayesu was sentenced to life imprisonment for genocide and crimes against humanity in 1998, and is serving his sentence in Mali.
"It would have been better that he was tried here... because here people knew him and could give more information," said Higaniro.
But he admits that, without the ICTR, the ex-mayor -- who fled to Zambia after the genocide -- and many other kingpins of the killing would not have not have been arrested and so would have escaped justice.
"Those who tried to flee, the ICTR put its hand on them and found them.... The court did it its job," he said.
The closure comes on the 20th anniversary of the genocide, which saw at least 800,000 people, overwhelmingly ethnic Tutsis, murdered by Hutu extremists.
In two decades, the tribunal has indicted 92 people, mostly senior political or military officers at the time of the genocide. Of those, 61 were convicted, including seven who are still waiting for their appeal.
Critics say the court's justice has been painfully slow, incredibly expensive at a cost of $2 billion (1.6 billion euros) and, being geographically far removed from the victims on the ground, it lacked an understanding of context.
While the tribunal's contribution to fighting impunity is clear, it has been criticised for lacking any mechanism for victim reparations and failing to prosecute alleged crimes by those on the other side of the conflict.
Rwanda opposed the ICTR's mandate, which also covered possible crimes committed by the Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF) in 1994. The then-rebel Tutsi group is now Rwanda's ruling party, led by President Paul Kagame.

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Rwandan genocide court shuts after 20 years

Rwandan genocide court shuts after 20 years

After two decades of work and 61 convictions at a cost of nearly $2 billion, the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda shuts up shop amid criticism but at least with some justice served.
The Tanzanian-based and United Nations-backed ICTR, set up in late 1994 to try the alleged masterminds behind Rwanda's genocide, is ending its work, with only its appeals chamber staying open for one final trial after December 31.
In the end, the court "did its job," admits Bonaventure Higaniro, the guardian of the genocide memorial at Kamonyi, a massacre site some 36 kilometres south of Rwandan capital Kigali.
Kamonyi's mayor Jean-Paul Akayesu was sentenced to life imprisonment for genocide and crimes against humanity in 1998, and is serving his sentence in Mali.
"It would have been better that he was tried here... because here people knew him and could give more information," said Higaniro.
But he admits that, without the ICTR, the ex-mayor -- who fled to Zambia after the genocide -- and many other kingpins of the killing would not have not have been arrested and so would have escaped justice.
"Those who tried to flee, the ICTR put its hand on them and found them.... The court did it its job," he said.
The closure comes on the 20th anniversary of the genocide, which saw at least 800,000 people, overwhelmingly ethnic Tutsis, murdered by Hutu extremists.
In two decades, the tribunal has indicted 92 people, mostly senior political or military officers at the time of the genocide. Of those, 61 were convicted, including seven who are still waiting for their appeal.
Critics say the court's justice has been painfully slow, incredibly expensive at a cost of $2 billion (1.6 billion euros) and, being geographically far removed from the victims on the ground, it lacked an understanding of context.
While the tribunal's contribution to fighting impunity is clear, it has been criticised for lacking any mechanism for victim reparations and failing to prosecute alleged crimes by those on the other side of the conflict.
Rwanda opposed the ICTR's mandate, which also covered possible crimes committed by the Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF) in 1994. The then-rebel Tutsi group is now Rwanda's ruling party, led by President Paul Kagame.

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