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Unity and Reconciliation

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Title: Unity and Reconciliation


1
RWANDAN UNITY AND RECONCILIATION DURING
POST-GENOCIDE RECONSTRUCTION WITH MAJOR FOCUS ON
RECONCILIATION INITIATIVES BY NURC ,


2
Background to RwandanUnity and Reconciliation
Process
For decades Rwanda was run by repressive
regimes which for their survival resulted to
practicing divisive and discriminatory policies.
This resulted eventually in massive violations of
human right that culminated in the mass killing,
1959 massive refugees in the world and April 1994
Tutsi Genocide.
3
Background to RwandanUnity and Reconciliation
Process
The Arusha peace accords, signed in August
1993 between the then Rwandan government and
Rwandan Patriotic Front, considered unity and
reconciliation as a process that is fundamental
for the stability and the development of Rwanda.
4
CHALLENGES OF PEACE BUILDING IN RWANDAS POST
GENOCIDE RECONSTRUCTION
This was the glaring state of affair in Rwanda
after the 1994 genocide. The country had been
Totally destructed/ destroyed to the level where
some people believed Rwanda was never going to
be a nation any more.
5
CHALLENGES OF PEACE BUILDING IN RWANDAS POST
GENOCIDE RECONSTRUCTION..
  • 3 million refugees and this at the time accounted
    for the half of the countrys population

6
CHALLENGES OF PEACE BUILDING IN RWANDAS POST
GENOCIDE RECONSTRUCTION..
  • 300.000 orphans and non accompanied minors
  • 500 000 Widows

7
CHALLENGES OF PEACE BUILDING IN RWANDAS POST
GENOCIDE RECONSTRUCTION..
  • Thousands of handicapped, horrified and
    vulnerable
  • A highly divided, suspicious and traumatized
    population
  • The whole economy and existing physical
    infrastructure had been destroyed
  • There was rampant insecurity resulting from
    perpetrators of genocide.

8
CHALLENGES OF PEACE BUILDING IN RWANDAS POST
GENOCIDE RECONSTRUCTION..
  • The countrys capacity to enforce law and order
    had completely been shattered
  • The judicial system and other state management
    mechanisms had been totally destroyed
  • 120,000 suspects of genocide in prisons.

9
Way forwad.
  • Each conflict has root causes and dynamics
    peculiar to it, which in turn determine the
    subsequent post-conflict character of the state,
    shapes its reconstruction and the relevant peace
    building strategy.
  • Conflicts also have varying effects in terms of
    destruction magnitude, but they all lead to a
    state of moral, social, economic and political
    degeneration. In extreme cases conflict lead to a
    situation of total failed states.

10
Mahatma Gandhi, the Father of the Indian
Nation in his most famous book Satyagraha in
South Africa, writes
There is no place and no race on earth, which is
not capable of producing the finest types of
humanity, given suitable opportunities and
education.
11
My vision of Rwanda is a united country that
feels itself as an integrated into the sub region
Family of nations, a country that is developed
and has eradicated poverty, a country that is
democratic, and above all, a stable country at
peace with itself as well as with its neighbors.
Rwandas president Paul KAGAME
12
Rwandan Reconciliation Model
The Rwandan model for unity and reconciliation
is inspired and founded on national vision,
Rwanda constitution, Political will and positive
cultural values that have become vast in
conflict resolution mechanisms, citizenship
capacity building, good governance and economic
empowerment
13
Rwandan Reconciliation Model
  • Redefining the Rwandan identity and building a
    shared sense of Rwandan ness is at the centre of
    reconciliation in Rwanda.
  • Memory, truth, justice, confessions and
    forgiveness have been the core threads of
    reconciliation process in Rwanda.

14
Rwandan Reconciliation Model
  • Human transformation founded on home-grown
    approach to the building of national unity and
    reconciliation, national identity and patriotism,
    and participatory conflict resolution mechanisms.
  • Unity and reconciliation, inclusiveness of
    everyone in the process of national
    reconstruction were inevitable ingredients for
    sustainable peace building

15
The National Unity and Reconciliation Commission
(NURC)
  • The National Unity and Reconciliation Commission
    (NURC) was there for instituted by the parliament
    in 1999 which was later in 2003 according to new
    Rwanda constitution, the objectives of NURC
    include particularly the following
  • Preparing and coordinating the national programs
    for the promotion of national unity and
    reconciliation
  • Putting in place and developing ways and means to
    restore and consolidate unity and reconciliation
    among Rwandans

16
The Objective of National Unity and
Reconciliation Commission (NURC)
  • Educating and mobilizing the population on
    matters relating to national unity and
    reconciliation
  • Carrying out research, organizing debates,
    disseminating ideas and making publications
    relating to peace, national unity and
    reconciliation
  • Making proposals on measures that can eradicate
    divisions among Rwandans and to reinforce
    national unity and reconciliation

17
The National Unity and Reconciliation Commission
(NURC)
  • Denouncing and fighting against acts, writings
    and utterances which are intended to promote any
    kind of discrimination, intolerance or
    xenophobia
  • Making an annual report and such other reports as
    may be necessary on the situation of national
    unity and reconciliation.

18
THE NURCS STRATEGY
  • To sustain peace building and reconciliation
    process indigenous participatory home-grown
    approaches became inevitable
  • Community consultative meetings
  • National summit(diaspora, friends of Rwanda)
  • To work closely with MINEDU and integration
  • of civic education valves (Life skills) into
    school curriculum

19
THE NURCS STRATEGY
  • For sustainable reconciliation, community
    capacity building was essential since post
    genocide reconstruction required every
    individuals participation.
  • Promote community and national dialogue.
  • Civic education and conflict resolution skills
    with the special focus on the youth, leaders,
    x-combatants, released prisoners, etc
  • Advocacy for social inclusion
  • Research for policy guidance.(community
    conflict,impact assessment on UR,land propert
    reco

20
THE NURCS STRATEGY
  • Participation of gacaca in rec process,soc
    cohesion, cause of violence after genocide,
    origin of conflict,process of decentralization
    and democracy, social re-integration of X
    genocide prison, impact assessment of
    Ingando,reconciliation barometer...........).
  • Promoting partnership with public, and civil
    society institutions for integrating
    reconciliation in their work.
  • Empower communities to initiate reconciliation
    and economic initiatives (Associations, Student
    reconciliation clubs, Reconciliation volunteers).
  • Use of culture in promoting reconciliation,
    governance and economic development.

21
THE NURCS STRATEGY
  • To sustain peace building and reconciliation
    process indigenous participatory home-grown
    approaches became inevitable

22
HOME GROWN APPROACHES.
  1. Ingando Taken from the Rwandese verb Kugandika
    that refers to halting normal activities to
    reflect on, and find solutions to existing
    challenges. Ingando have been used at various
    levels of the community enhance citizenship for
    peace building and economic prosperity.

23
HOME GROWN APPROACHES.
  1. Ingando

Ingando for Students going to university Born
of(SCUR)
24
HOME GROWN APPROACHES.
  1. Ingando These forums of civic education have
    facilitated the smooth reintegration of former
    returnees including X-FAR armies, sexual workers,
    provisional released prisoners back into their
    communities . Ingando have also been organized
    for a cross section of Rwandan youth, women,
    students, teachers and community leaders.

25
HOME GROWN APPROACHES.
  1. Ingando held at grassroots levels have
    facilitated Rwandans to come to terms with the
    past by facing history, forging a common vision
    for a united future, and created a forum for
    trust building and critical analysis of national
    challenges with a view to search for solutions to
    address them.

26
HOME GROWN APPROACHES.
  1. Ingando

Former NURC Executive Secretary at Ingando for
former sexual workers
27
HOME GROWN APPROACHES.
  1. Ingando

Ingando for released Prisoners constructing
houses for victims of genocide
28
HOME GROWN APPROACHES.
2. GACACA A traditional Rwandan conflict and
disputes resolution procedure designed to be
participatory and reconciliatory justice has been
renovated and used to deal with a backlog of
genocide cases. Inyangamugayo (Persons of
integrity) taken from the local community make up
the jury of that traditional jurisdiction.
29
HOME GROWN APPROACHES.
2. GACACA
Rwandan Prime minister attending a Gacaca
court
30
HOME GROWN APPROACHES.
2. GACACA
A witness delivering testimony
31
HOME GROWN APPROACHES.
3. ABUNZI Community mediators. They are elected
by the population on the basis of integrity to
resolve day to day conflicts before referring
them to conventional courts. This has reduced the
number of cases that would otherwise have to go
to conventional court, and has reinforced unity
and reconciliation.
32
HOME GROWN APPROACHES.
3. ABUNZI
Residence in a village participate in the
mediation session
33
HOME GROWN APPROACHES.
4. NJYANAMA (Advisory Council), Elected
democratic Councils that promote inclusion,
participation and representation of Rwandans of
all categories. They are used as forums for
articulating interests, concerns in problem
identification, planning and implementation of
plans, programs and projects from village to
district levels. They are a simplified community
parliament.
34
HOME GROWN APPROACHES.
4. NJYANAMA (Advisory Council),
35
HOME GROWN APPROACHES.
5. ABAKANGURAMBAGA Community reconciliation
Volunteers after a one week training in conflict
resolution skills and community empowerment.
36
HOME GROWN APPROACHES.
6. UBWISUNGANE (solidarity) e.g. reconciliation,
cooperatives, health insurance and micro-credit
schemes.
37
HOME GROWN APPROACHES.
7. UBUDEHE An approach of community support
and solidarity used in poverty reduction.
38
HOME GROWN APPROACHES.
8.UBUSABANE Get together festivals aimed at
fostering unity and reconciliation and
promoting partnership among communities.
39
HOME GROWN APPROACHES.
9. GUTARAMA Entertainment through history,
proverbs, songs, dance, poems, intergenerational
dialogue between young and old aimed at enhancing
unity and learning about Rwandan culture.
40
HOME GROWN APPROACHES.
10. UMUGANDA A traditional community support to
both individual and national cause has been
revived in the interest of national
reconstruction. This support comes in form of
general cleaning, tree planting, road works,
building houses for vulnerable groups,
construction of schools, health centers etc.
41
HOME GROWN APPROACHES.
10. UMUGANDA
Residents plant trees
42
HOME GROWN APPROACHES.
11. Community and National Dialogue
43
HOME GROWN APPROACHES 12. Performance contract
  • All 30 district leaders, each signs a performance
    contact every year with the president of Rwanda.
  • 30 district Leader's achievements are monitored
    and evaluated every after 3 m, 6m by the
    Provencal governors and the community people
  • Feedback is presented and discussed during
    National dialogue at the end of the year and
    chaired by the president.

44
13. ITORERO RYIGIHUGU was formerly a
traditional Rwandan school to instill moral
values of integrity, and capacity to deal with
Countries problems. It has today been revised to
promote Rwandan values of unity, truth, culture
of hard work,patriotism, Rwandan
identity,integrity,self respect....all aimed at
speeding up the attainment of Vision 2020, MDGS
and EDPRS.
45
HOME GROWN APPROACHES.
14. Children pose a photo with President KAGAME
after a 2 days childrens summit
46
LESSONS LEARNT
  • Political will and leadership commitment are
    very critical to capacity building for peace.
  • Analysis of the root causes of conflicts is
    critical
  • Community inclusion and participation create
    ownership of national undertaking
  • Education and popular participation in debates
    and dialogue of national interests is empowering
    in conflict transformation

47
LESSONS LEARNT
  • Ownership without capacity is always a recipe for
    unrealizable dreams
  • Capacity without a clear vision, can only be a
    wasted opportunity.
  • Unity and reconciliation is a cross-cutting
    endeavor, thus requiring holistic action and
    involvement of every stakeholder
  • Home grown approaches are empowering less cost
    effective and sustainable

48
LESSONS LEARNT.
  • The crime of genocide destroys hope and trust, as
    well as dehumanizes people.
  • Reconciliation is a painful process that
    requires the knitting of the torn social fabric,
    healing wounds, rebuilding a sense of
    togetherness and creation of institutions that
    promote national unity, accountability,

49
LESSONS LEARNT.
  • Trust building and trauma healing are critical to
    reconciliation.
  • National unity and reconciliation is
    cross-cutting and requires holistic interventions
    in all aspects of political, social economic
    life.
  • The resilience and determination of Rwandans to
    move on after genocide determines political,
    social and economic progress made so far.

50
LESSONS LEARNT.
  • A revisit to Rwandan culture has been at the
    Centre of our reconciliation process.
  • Balancing the demands of justice and peace
    remains central to the process of reconciliation
    in Rwanda.
  • Consultation and participatory approaches is key
    to enhancing reconciliation and democracy.
  • Combating discrimination and genocide ideology is
    a complex and long-term struggle.

51
CHALLENGES
  • Limited capacities at local decentralized levels
  • Monitoring divisivion, discrimination and
    conflicts,
  • Cross-cutting nature of reconciliation
  • There some people with genocide ideology and
    divisions

52
CONCLUSION
  • The uniqueness of Rwandan Reconciliation
    model lies in a number of factors
  • Rwandas history is unique and requires unique
    problem solving mechanisms.
  • Rwanda has had a protracted divisive system which
    require protracted remedial system.
  • Rwandas conflict involves Rwandans, hence
    reconciliation approaches must be home grown and
    an onus of every Rwandan.

53

Ntidushora gusubiza igihe inyuma cyangwa ngo
tuvaneho ibibi byatubayeho ariko dufite
ubushobozi bwo kugena ejo heza hazaza hu Rwanda
no gutuma ibyabaye bitazongera kuba ukundi Kuba
umunyarwanda muzima niyo politike twese dukwiye
kugenderaho. Politike yikinyoma yishe u Rwanda,
Afurika nisi muri rusange. Ntabwo twe
Abanyarwanda twapfa kabiri. Twapfuye rimwe kandi
rirahagije. Byaba ari ishyano twemeye gupfa
kabiri. Kudapfa bwa kabiri rero turashaka
abanyarwanda babayobozi bazima bumva ko tutapfa
kabiri.. Nyakubahwa KAGAME Paul, Perezida wa
Repubulika yu Rwanda
54
Thank you very much for your attention.
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