At the ongoing appeal trial of Eugène Rwamucyo in France, convicted in 2024 for complicity in genocide and participation in a conspiracy to prepare genocide, we are reminded that genocide is prepared, justified and orchestrated by intellectuals who embrace an extremist ideology.
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Between 1990 and 1994, public discourse and propaganda calling for ethnic hatred crowned a century‑long dissemination of racial theories, turned into policy from 1959 onward. Step by step, ideas were transformed into a license to kill. The 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi was an intellectual project, and Rwamucyo was one of its architects.
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The presence in the courtroom of Callixte Mbarushimana, the former executive secretary of the Kinshasa-backed genocidal FDLR militia, who between 2010 and 2012 was charged by the International Criminal Court prosecutor for crimes against humanity and war crimes committed in eastern DR Congo, is a stark reminder that the ideological and operational network of 1994 is still alive and deeply implicated in today’s wars in DR Congo.
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A year before the genocide, Rwamucyo signed an open letter to the Belgian ambassador in Kigali that frames Rwanda as an exclusively Hutu nation under attack by a "foreign” Tutsi minority identified indiscriminately with the Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF). Tutsi refugees are portrayed as invaders, thieves and killers, driven by a thirst for domination. The Hutu are the "brave” defenders of the country. This is the classic logic of extermination: "they” are a race of enemies, "we” can survive only if "they” do not. Violence is recast as self-defense, genocide as an existential war.
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A second document signed by Rwamucyo in 1993 at the National University of Rwanda denounced a supposed "genocide perpetrated by the RPF.” It speaks of a Hutu population in fatal danger. This is propaganda in a mirror, attributing to the Tutsi the very crime being prepared against them. Extremist intellectuals in Butare constructed this narrative to justify in advance what they were planning themselves. If killing the Tutsi was redefined as stopping a genocide of Hutu, the path to mass murder was cleared before a single roadblock was erected.
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After 1994, Rwamucyo did not break with this ideological universe. In a 1995 article published in the journal Dialogue, under the pious title "Rwandans have tried everything except reconciliation, truth and justice,” he questions the very reality of the genocide against the Tutsi, speaking of "alleged perpetrators” and warning readers not to "fall into the trap”. He calls for peace and dialogue while continuing to present the Tutsi as fundamentally deceitful. This is the double language of post‑genocide denial: rhetorical appeals to reconciliation masking a systematic effort to empty the word "genocide” of its meaning and turn history into a manipulable narrative.
The same ideology reorganized itself across the border in DR Congo, where Mbarushimana and others occupied senior positions within the genocidal militia. The FDLR manifesto‑programme, signed in 2005 by their president Ignace Murwanashyaka, repeated word for word the discourse found in Rwamucyo’s texts. The RPF is accused of a "planned extermination” of part of the Rwandan people and FDLR claims to be defending the "sovereignty” and "survival” of the nation. Article 5 provides for an armed wing, while Article 6 defines as a central objective of FDLR to "end the genocide perpetrated by the RPF since October 1990.” Once again, the crime is reversed and the perpetrators claim the status of victims, justifying continued war in the name of stopping a fictitious genocide of the Hutu.
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Over three decades, this discourse has led to massacres and persecutions of the Tutsi and perceived Tutsi "allies” in eastern DR Congo producing more than a million exiles.
When a figure like Mbarushimana comes to support Rwamucyo in court, it reveals the continuity of a network that stretches from university campuses in Butare in 1993 to armed groups in DR Congo’s North Kivu Province today. The same actors, the same ideology, the same inversion of victims and perpetrators sustain a conflict that has lasted 30 years.
Intellectuals like Rwamucyo supply the moral justifications and historical distortions that make the unthinkable seem necessary and continue to arm militias long after the original crime. Rwamucyo’s trial, observed from the benches by Mbarushimana, shows that judging one man’s responsibility is also exposing a living system that links the genocidaires of 1994 to the wars ravaging DR Congo today.
The writer is a researcher in conflict discourse, atrocity prevention, and peace and security in the Great Lakes region of Africa.