In October 2024, a French court of Assizes sentenced Dr. Eugène Rwamucyo, a Rwandan medical doctor and long-time fugitive from justice, to 27 years in prison for complicity in genocide, complicity in crimes against humanity, and conspiracy to commit these crimes. Though the court acquitted him of direct charges of "genocide” and "crimes against humanity,” the judgement nonetheless held that he had played a substantial role: he disseminated anti-Tutsi propaganda, supervised the burials of mass victims in the Butare region, and thereby helped to cover up evidence of mass murder.
His conviction came three decades after the Genocide Against the Tutsi, during which he served not as a healer but as an architect of hate. Far from being a passive witness, Rwamucyo was part of the genocidal establishment that orchestrated and justified the mass murder of more than a million Tutsi.
While Rwamucyo’s 1995 article is academic and reflective in tone, his biography and the facts established in the trial suggest he was deeply rooted in the ideological and logistical networks of the 1994 genocide against the Tutsi. He was a lecturer at the National University of Rwanda at Butare and a member of extremist Hutu group Circle of Progressive Republicans (Cercle des républicains progressistes)
Witness statements at his trial alleged he spoke in major public meetings in May and June 1994 before then-Prime Minister Jean Kambanda and relayed extremist messages inciting Hutu to arms— "in the framework of a civil defence”—while simultaneously organising mass burials in the aftermath of the killings.
His "Dialogue” piece is part of a larger pattern that shows the transition from intellectual fomenting of extremist ideology (propaganda) to concrete mass-murder logistics (burials, destruction of evidence). It is no accident that the court held: "one can kill with words.”
Therefore, his discourse is part of the ideological eco-system of genocide: denying, relativising, combining pseudo-peace calls with victim-framing, opposing accountability.
His medical degree, once a mark of learning, became a weapon of moral corruption. According to several testimonies, including that of the late Eugène Kilimobenecyo, Rwamucyo was not merely a participant but the real editor of Kangura Magazine — the infamous propaganda outlet that helped radicalize the Hutu population.
Kangura’s pages dripped with venom, portraying Tutsi as traitors and enemies to be exterminated. That Rwamucyo, a man of science, could become a midwife of extermination is a grim reminder that intellect without conscience is merely refined barbarity.
But the trial is only one part of the story. The more pernicious part lies in the ideological work that Rwamucyo has carried out for decades—especially in the form of what appears to be high-minded reflection, theological invocations and calls for "dialogue,” but which in substance functions as denial, obfuscation and propaganda for the genocidal ideology. It is this manipulative discourse that merits a sharp, critical dissection.
A genocide ideologue in the language of divinity
After fleeing Rwanda and later settling in Côte d’Ivoire, Rwamucyo attempted to reinvent himself as a "thinker” and "moral observer” of Rwanda’s catastrophe. In 1995, barely a year after the genocide, he published an article titled "Rwandans Have Tried Everything Except Reconciliation, Truth, and Justice!” in DIALOGUE No. 183 — a publication then run by a Rwandan— François Nzabahimana and Belgian Catholic priest Guy Theunis, both known apologists for genocidaires. The journal included a seemingly harmless preface: "Some readers will find these free comments self-evident; others will not appreciate them much. Yet they recall a fundamental idea: reconciliation passes through honesty.”
The irony is horrendous. Here was a platform claiming to be supporters of "honesty,” yet hosting a now convicted genocidaire who specialized in the art of distortion. The piece, written in May–June 1995, is a masterclass in manipulative rhetoric, one that demonstrates how the language of reconciliation can be hijacked to erase guilt, dilute moral responsibility, and reframe genocide as a "civil conflict.”
From the first paragraph, Rwamucyo deploys what should be called moral camouflage: "It is unjust to accuse an entire people or an entire category of people of being the authors of genocide. It is equally unjust and criminal to justify war and those who provoke it, whatever the circumstances—yesterday as today.”
For anyone versed in the discourse of Hutu Power, the message is unmistakable. The unnamed "entire people” are the Hutu, and the "war provokers” are the Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF), the force that ended the genocide. The formula is sly: by appealing to universal justice, he masks a specific defense of the perpetrators. His tone mimics reasonableness — "I condemn no one,” he writes — yet it is the calculated neutrality of someone who already knows where his sympathies lie.
Rwamucyo adorns his discourse with religious allusions, seeking moral elevation through theology. He writes: "I would like to point out a truth from the Gospel of Jesus Christ: the complicit indifference of fearful silence sends many innocents to the gallows. The Jews, who knew perfectly well that Jesus was innocent, nonetheless demanded his crucifixion with loud cries.”
This is not spirituality; it is propaganda dressed in cassock. Please note how the analogy to Jesus shifts the narrative from perpetrator to victim. By comparing himself and his ideological kin to Christ — "innocents condemned by the crowd” — Rwamucyo reclaims the moral high ground from the victims. He transforms genocidaires into martyrs and their defeat into crucifixion. It is a blasphemy both theological and moral: a grotesque inversion in which executioners become the persecuted.
The tone of victimhood is strategic. It appeals to sympathy from foreign readers who, unfamiliar with Rwanda’s realities, may be seduced by his vocabulary of "truth,” "justice,” and "reconciliation.” But beneath the piety lies a denialist architecture meticulously built on inversion, relativization, and projection.
The universal guilt to destroy history
At the heart of Rwamucyo’s piece lies one of the most persistent tropes of genocide denial — the theory of collective guilt:
"All of us, without exception and without any discrimination, must be able to meet at the point of mea culpa. Here in Africa, and even more so in Rwanda and Burundi, exclusion does not serve the pursuit of peace.”
It sounds generous, even compassionate. But this is precisely the deception. If "all are guilty,” then no one is answerable or accountable. This rhetorical device — transforming genocide into a mutual tragedy without perpetrators or victims — permits Rwamucyo to erase the asymmetry between those who planned and executed mass murder and those who were hunted and exterminated.
This logic reinforces much of the post-genocide denialist discourse. It disarms moral judgment by destruction of history. The genocide turns into a "conflict,” a "cycle of violence,” a "tribal misunderstanding.” In Rwamucyo’s telling, Rwanda’s tragedy is not a deliberate extermination of Tutsi by a Hutu Power state but the product of "mutual intolerance.” It is a falsehood that masquerades as moral reflection.
The most revealing — and most pernicious — passage in Rwamucyo’s text is where he ventures into moral equivalence. He writes: "In this conflict, some ‘men of goodwill,’ through excessive zeal, wish to politically annihilate the Hutu refugees. Procedural error. Leaders in a society never cease to exist; roles reverse like communicating vessels: yesterday’s RPF Inkotanyi become today’s Interahamwe and Impuzamugambi of the MRND and the CDR. Each side accuses the other of extremism in turn.”
Here lies the heart of his denialist stratagem: equating the RPF with Interahamwe and Impuzamugambi — the militias that executed the genocide. This is not mere rhetorical exaggeration; it is moral perversion.
The Rwandan Patriotic Front was a political and military movement that stopped the genocide and restored order after the MRND/CDR state had turned into a killing machine. The Interahamwe and Impuzamugambi, by contrast, were militias organized, trained, and armed for the explicit purpose of exterminating Tutsi. To suggest that the two "exchange roles” is to obliterate the borderline between savior and butcher, defender and aggressor, life and death.
This equivalence is not born of ignorance — Rwamucyo knew exactly what he was doing. It is a carefully thought strategy of moral inversion common among genocide ideologues—during and after 1994. Once the genocidal project was militarily defeated, its intellectual architects sought refuge not in remorse and shame but in rhetoric. They recast themselves as truth-tellers, humanists betrayed by history, and the RPF as their mirror image.
But this comparison is philosophically unsustainable and ethically obscene. It denotes that the difference between genocide and its prevention is merely a matter of perspective. The discourse repudiates the specificity of genocidal intent — and the organized will to destroy a people as such. It obliterates the victims by making them co-conspirators in their own destruction.
The reasoning of inversion
Rwamucyo’s equalization of RPF and Interahamwe serves several interlinked purposes:
The first, is the deflection of responsibility: By claiming that "roles reverse,” he diverts attention from the genocidaires’ premeditated crimes to a supposedly endless cycle of revenge.
Secondly, it is normalization of the crime of genocide: If both sides are equally culpable, genocide becomes just another war crime, stripped of its singularity.
Thirdly, is the victim appropriation: The criminals rebrand themselves as victims of the victors, claiming moral equivalence with those they annihilated.
Lastly, is the intellectual rehabilitation: By entrenching his defense in sophisticated language, Rwamucyo seeks to re-enter the public sphere as a "thinker,” not a criminal.
This strategy echoes the writings of European Holocaust deniers who sought to relativize Nazi crimes by equating them with Allied bombings. In both cases, the goal is to erode the concept of moral asymmetry, which is the foundation stone of justice.
Language as weapon: Ideologue’s toolkit
Throughout his 1995 text, Rwamucyo employs what genocide scholar Herbert Hirsch described as "the politics of moral equivalence” — the deliberate effort to blur distinctions between victims and perpetrators to avoid collective accountability. His language is both clinical and evasive. Expressions like "reactionaries,” "men of goodwill,” "zeal,” "procedural error” are used to obscure blood and bodies. The very sentence structure of his writing resists naming the crime.
He never says "Tutsi.” He never says "genocide.” Instead, he writes of "war,” "conflict,” and "mutual accusations.” This etymological evasion is the signature of denial. It takes away moral urgency— from atrocity and swaps it with the comfort of abstraction.
His assertion that "exclusion does not serve peace” is equally deceptive. In 1995, "exclusion” meant the removal of genocidaires from power and the prosecution of their crimes. To condemn this as intolerance is to reject justice itself. What he calls "inclusion” is in fact impunity.
The article is a very good example of the intellectualization of hatred. Rwamucyo’s posture as a sensible, intellectual observer is another key component of his manipulation. He writes as an "occupational physician” and "environmental hygienist” — as a way of reminding readers of his scientific credentials. But what he practices is moral pseudoscience: the hygienist of truth cleansing history of its inconvenient facts. Truth close to him is filth.
Rwamucyo appeals to European audiences, especially academics and clergy, who were predisposed to construe Rwanda’s genocide against Tutsi through the lens of "ethnic conflict.” His essay in DIALOGUE thus performed two tasks at the same time: it reassured guilty Western sympathizers of the old regime that they had been misled by propaganda, and it provided ideological cover for fugitives regrouping abroad.
His writing style is full of the moralistic beat typical of genocidal intellectuals who reinvent themselves as "philosophers of reconciliation.” Every appeal to "truth” is in fact a denial of reality; every invocation of "justice” is a refusal of justice—an appeal for impunity.
Theological and historical deception
By invoking the Gospel and Christ’s crucifixion, Rwamucyo not only appropriates sacred language but also instrumentalizes it to conceal a crime. The analogy of Jesus’ guiltlessness and unfair public condemnation is carefully chosen. He suggests that Hutu Power’s leaders — and by extension, he himself — were victims of a hysterical crowd manipulated by deceit.
This is purely moral laundering through religion. It draws on the colonial trope of the African Christian intellectual — moral, civilized, misunderstood — and weaponizes it against the truth. For Western readers comfortable with the narrative of African barbarity, this rhetoric offered encouragement: maybe the genocide was not so clear-cut, maybe "both sides” went too far. That is precisely the vagueness denialists like Rwamucyo needed to survive.
After setting up his moral equivalence, as a framework of self-victimization—Rwamucyo concludes with a lament: "The great tragedy is that Rwandans have tried everything—except one thing: honest dialogue for peaceful and democratic reconciliation.”
Here he makes himself the prophet of reconciliation — the voice of reason crying in the wilderness. Yet the reconciliation he preaches is one without repentance, one that absolves the murderer without acknowledging the murdered. It is a fake peace, built on erasure.
This ending completes the full circle of denialist discourse: Start with moral relativism ("we are all guilty”). Move to immoral equivalence ("both sides have extremists”). Then conclude with false generosity of spirit ("let us reconcile and move on”).
It is the same formula used by numerous planners of violence who later reinvent themselves as peacemakers.
Immoral equivalency and the shadow of impunity
Rwamucyo’s 2024 conviction in France marked not just a legal outcome but the exemplary unmasking of this whole ideology. For decades, he had found refuge in the opacity he created. France’s slow but eventual prosecution tore through the veil of intellectual respectability he had knitted around himself. The verdict declared that behind the white coat and polished French prose lay complicity in one of history’s darkest crimes.
Yet, the importance of his conviction goes beyond his individual guilt. It reveals how language itself can become a sanctuary for killers. Long after the grenades and machetes fell silent, genocide ideologues like Rwamucyo continued the war on truth through words. They replaced physical extermination with discursive erasure — killing memory instead of bodies.
To comprehend the seriousness of Rwamucyo’s manipulation, one must dwell on that single, monstrous equivalence: "yesterday’s RPF Inkotanyi become today’s Interahamwe and Impuzamugambi.”
It is a case study in denialist psychology. The above statement condenses the entire psychology of denial. It performs three distortions at once: One—temporal inversion: It suggests that the liberators became the killers, reversing the sequence of cause and effect. Two—moral flattening: It diminishes liberation of a country and extermination of a people to interchangeable acts of extremism. Lastly—there is ideological projection: It accuses the RPF of what the Interahamwe actually did — a classic mechanism of guilt displacement.
This moral algebra is designed not to convince the knowledgeable but to confuse the uninformed. It feeds on the Western mania with "balance,” exploiting journalists and academics who liken impartiality with neutrality. The denier’s genius lies in taking advantage of the moral fatigue — in turning horror into a "complex issue” unworthy of outrage.
To compare the RPF to the Interahamwe is, therefore, not just historically wrong but ethically monstrous. It is the same as equating the Allies with the SS, the firefighters with the arsonists, or the surgeon with the disease. Such equivalence is the final refuge of the guilty — a last attempt to drag the righteous into the same moral pit.
Continuation of Genocide
As genocide scholar Jacques Semelin once observed, denial is not the final stage of genocide but its continuation by other means. Rwamucyo’s pen did what machetes once did: carve out spaces where truth itself could bleed. His 1995 essay was not a reflection; it was an offensive — a counterattack in the war for memory.
Every paragraph undermined the legitimacy of the new Rwanda, delegitimize justice, and offered moral shelter to fugitives. In denying genocide, Rwamucyo sought to perpetuate it symbolically — to ensure that the victims would remain nameless, their suffering relativized, their killers misunderstood.
His call for "honest dialogue” rings especially hollow in hindsight. What kind of dialogue can exist between the unrepentant and the resurrected dead? Between those who deny the crime and those who still bear its scars? Dialogue without truth is not reconciliation but amnesia.
For Rwamucyo, however, "dialogue” meant something else entirely — the restoration of the political legitimacy of genocidaires. It was the coded language of counter-revolution, a call for moral equivalence masquerading as peace.
Rwamucyo embodies the denialist intellectual type — articulate, credentialed, and utterly devoid of conscience. He represents a tradition of elites who used literacy not to enlighten but to rationalize atrocity. In them, intellect serves ideology, not truth.
His writings reveal how denial operates not through shouting but through subtle rephrasing:
Genocide becomes "conflict.” Killers become "zealots.” Victims become "participants.” Justice becomes "exclusion.” Accountability becomes "revenge.”
In such discourse, evil hides behind the syntax of civility. The denier speaks calmly, quotes scripture, appeals to peace, and in doing so, kills truth with a smile.
Conclusion: The danger of rhetorical redemption
Dr. Eugène Rwamucyo’s conviction was long overdue, but his words still circulate — a warning to future generations. His 1995 essay remains a textbook example of how denial disguises itself as virtue. It shows that the greatest danger to truth is not the fanatic with a gun but the intellectual with a pen who insists that everyone is equally guilty.
Rwamucyo’s moral universe is built on inversion: criminals as victims, liberators as killers, and lies as honesty. In that upside-down world, genocide becomes a misunderstanding, justice a form of vengeance, and reconciliation a code word for forgetting.
But truth, like justice, resists erasure. The French court’s verdict restored not only legal accountability but moral order. It reminded the world that there can be no reconciliation without truth, no dialogue without acknowledgment, and no peace built on the corpses of memory.
When Rwamucyo wrote that "Rwandans have tried everything except reconciliation, truth, and justice,” he was right — but not in the way he imagined. The reconciliation he desired was one without repentance; the truth he invoked was a lie; and the justice he sought was immunity.
In the end, his own life became the parable he once tried to distort: the false prophet, convicted not by the crowd’s hysteria but by the enduring voice of truth. His rhetoric, once cloaked in piety, now stands naked before history — proof that even the most eloquent words cannot redeem the silence that follows genocide.