Interahamwe

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Interahamwe
Participant in Rwandan Genocide
First Congo War
Second Congo War
Active 1994-present
Ideology Hutu Power
Leaders Augustin Bizimungu
Tharcisse Renzaho
Idelphonse Hategekimana
Idelphonse Nizeyimana
Protais Mpiranya
Callixte Nzabonimana
Aloys Ndimbati
Headquarters none
Area of
operations
Jungles of Uganda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo; formerly Rwanda
Strength 100,000 (1994)
20,000 (1998)
6,500 (2012)
Allies Zaire Zaire (1996-1997)
Rwanda Army for the Liberation of Rwanda (1996-2001)
Democratic Republic of the Congo DR Congo (1998-2003)
FDLR (2000-present)
Opponents Rwandan Patriotic Front Rwandan Patriotic Front (1994)
 Rwanda (1994-present)
Democratic Republic of the Congo AFDL (1996-1997)
Uganda Uganda (1996-present)
Democratic Republic of the Congo DR Congo (2003-present)

The Interahamwe (Kinyarwanda, meaning "those who stand/work/fight/attack together"[1]) is a Hutu paramilitary organization. The militia enjoyed the backing of the Hutu-led government leading up to, during, and after the Rwandan Genocide. Since the genocide, they have been forced out of Rwanda, and have sought asylum in Congo. They are currently a terrorist group hiding in the Congo and the Ugandan forest. While still in action, they despised the Tutsis so much that they often referred to them as cockroaches, or inyenzi in Kinyarwanda.

Origin of the name

The name Interahamwe can be translated as "Those who work together" or "Those who fight together". Interahamwe can be broken up this way: Intera is derived from the verb gutera, meaning "to work". The hamwe means "together" and is related to the word rimwe for "one". "Work" was used as slang on racist radios-working meant using the machete or killing.[2]

English speakers usually pronounce it as /ˌɪntərəˈhɑːmw/, though it is pronounced [inheɾahamwe] in Kinyarwanda. However, Rwandans sometimes, when speaking English will pronounce it in the English manner. The difference can be observed by listening to Paul Rusesabagina in the Return to Rwanda feature of a Hotel Rwanda DVD, and to the translator for a survivor of the Nyarubuye massacre in "Frontline" Ghosts of Rwanda. In Hotel Rwanda, the name is consistently erroneously spelled and pronounced as "Interhamwe".[citation needed]

Organization and history

Robert Kajuga, a Tutsi (unusual for this group),[3] was the President of the Interahamwe. The Vice President of Interahamwe was Georges Rutaganda. The Interahamwe was formed by groups of young people of the MRND party. They carried out the Rwandan Genocide acts against the Tutsis in 1994. The Interahamwe formed RTLM, the genocidal radio station which was used to broadcast where the Tutsis were fleeing.

Following the invasion of the Rwandan capital Kigali by the Tutsi Rwandese Patriotic Front (RPF), many Rwandan civilians and members of the Interahamwe fled to neighbouring countries, most notably to what at the time was Zaire, now Democratic Republic of Congo, and Tanzania. Sudan welcomed former Interahamwe to Juba, and in March 1998, Colonel Tharcisse Renzaho, the former prefect of Kigali, and Colonel Ntiwiragabo, the former Rwandan Presidential Guard commander, arrived in Juba from Nairobi to organize them.[4] It has been nearly impossible to bring the Interahamwe to justice because they did not wear uniforms or have a clearly organized group of followers. They were the neighbours, friends and co-workers of Tutsis. Throughout the war, members of the Interahamwe moved into camps of refugees and the internally displaced. There the victims were mixed in with the enemy and to this day it cannot be proven who killed whom.

During the war, millions of Rwandan Hutu refugees fled to Zaire (now the Democratic Republic of the Congo), along with many members of the Interahamwe, Presidential Guard, and the Rwandan Government Forces (RGF). Following the recruitment of significant numbers of Congolese Hutu the organization took the name Armée de Libération du Rwanda (ALiR).[citation needed] With the Kagame regime still in power, members still take part in border raids from the refugee camps.

Post Rwandan Genocide

In 1999, Interahamwe attacked and kidnapped a group of 14 tourists in Bwindi National Park, Uganda. Eight of the tourists were killed.[5] The story was featured on National Geographic, Locked Up Abroad: Uganda.[6]

Prosecution

Leaders of the Interahamwe have been primarily prosecuted through the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda, sitting in Arusha, Tanzania. The tribunal has convicted at least 41 persons, often with life sentences, including former interim Prime Minister Jean Kambanda and Georges Rutaganda.[7] Fugitives have been captured and prosecuted in other countries, including Jean-Marie Vianney Mudahinyuka (a.k.a.“Zuzu”), an Interahamwe leader arrested in the United States and deported in February 2011.[8][9]

References

  1. "Rwanda: How the genocide happened". BBC News. 17 May 2011. 
  2. Bührer, Michel (1996). Rwanda : Memoire d'un génocide. Paris: Editions UNESCO. p. 12. 
  3. Vasagar, Jeevan (16 February 2005). "The hotel that saved hundreds from genocide". The Guardian. 
  4. Gérard Prunier, From Genocide to Continental War: The "Congolese" Conflict and the Crisis of Contemporary Africa, C. Hurst & Co, 2009, ISBN 1-85065-523-5, p.193
  5. World: Africa Kidnap tourist tells of ordeal
  6. Locked Up Abroad: Uganda
  7. http://www.ictr.org/default.htm
  8. http://www.peterrobinson.com/ICTR/19th%20Rule%2066%20Motion_ICTR.pdf
  9. Guzzardi, Will (2 February 2011). "Suspected Genocide Leader Deported From Chicago To Rwanda". Huffington Post. 
Hutu militants
Rwandan Genocide (1994)
Impuzamugambi
Interahamwe
Rwandan Armed Forces
Refugee crisis
RDR (1995–1996)
1st and 2nd Congo War
ALiR (1996–2001)
FDLR (2000–present)

External links

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