Berliner Boersenzeitung - Peace still elusive for east DR Congo 30 years after genocide in Rwanda

EUR -
AED 4.301555
AFN 73.779193
ALL 95.50254
AMD 434.947725
ANG 2.096126
AOA 1075.065432
ARS 1645.082546
AUD 1.630337
AWG 2.109436
AZN 1.994608
BAM 1.958343
BBD 2.358242
BDT 143.985731
BGN 1.953507
BHD 0.441793
BIF 3484.00949
BMD 1.171096
BND 1.495028
BOB 8.090471
BRL 5.857467
BSD 1.17081
BTN 110.635712
BWP 15.835427
BYN 3.303461
BYR 22953.474287
BZD 2.354848
CAD 1.601837
CDF 2719.862066
CHF 0.924341
CLF 0.026513
CLP 1043.587015
CNY 8.007308
CNH 8.00936
COP 4228.919996
CRC 532.586998
CUC 1.171096
CUP 31.034034
CVE 110.55321
CZK 24.353637
DJF 208.127296
DKK 7.471391
DOP 69.387257
DZD 155.154914
EGP 61.875656
ERN 17.566434
ETB 184.301204
FJD 2.59954
FKP 0.864227
GBP 0.866488
GEL 3.156083
GGP 0.864227
GHS 13.046367
GIP 0.864227
GMD 86.067605
GNF 10279.291323
GTQ 8.945539
GYD 244.95807
HKD 9.177584
HNL 31.174087
HRK 7.532518
HTG 153.377846
HUF 363.749909
IDR 20198.998817
ILS 3.461744
IMP 0.864227
INR 110.80872
IQD 1534.135271
IRR 1541161.844741
ISK 143.178241
JEP 0.864227
JMD 184.47954
JOD 0.830277
JPY 186.88871
KES 151.17905
KGS 102.388421
KHR 4696.093159
KMF 493.031138
KPW 1053.981161
KRW 1724.29801
KWD 0.360182
KYD 0.975759
KZT 536.682281
LAK 25699.693433
LBP 104930.167935
LKR 373.211415
LRD 215.188405
LSL 19.36405
LTL 3.457941
LVL 0.708384
LYD 7.430593
MAD 10.839954
MDL 20.250121
MGA 4858.87593
MKD 61.648457
MMK 2459.346894
MNT 4211.675584
MOP 9.451031
MRU 46.843862
MUR 54.784212
MVR 18.093405
MWK 2038.877562
MXN 20.364357
MYR 4.62875
MZN 74.844323
NAD 19.381597
NGN 1604.600006
NIO 42.996808
NOK 10.911244
NPR 177.017339
NZD 1.989475
OMR 0.450263
PAB 1.170815
PEN 4.104394
PGK 5.088118
PHP 71.544577
PKR 326.298528
PLN 4.248325
PYG 7339.467371
QAR 4.256427
RON 5.096138
RSD 117.400013
RUB 88.209772
RWF 1710.385163
SAR 4.392759
SBD 9.399138
SCR 16.400969
SDG 703.245697
SEK 10.859019
SGD 1.494827
SHP 0.874341
SLE 28.83821
SLL 24557.285258
SOS 669.278604
SRD 43.875083
STD 24239.315043
STN 24.885782
SVC 10.245216
SYP 129.463768
SZL 19.382118
THB 38.061004
TJS 10.982661
TMT 4.10469
TND 3.377147
TOP 2.819717
TRY 52.745889
TTD 7.961269
TWD 36.926399
TZS 3053.775937
UAH 51.599359
UGX 4355.618426
USD 1.171096
UYU 46.209607
UZS 14135.124337
VES 566.733541
VND 30856.027577
VUV 138.453487
WST 3.19453
XAF 656.804229
XAG 0.015987
XAU 0.000255
XCD 3.164944
XCG 2.110122
XDR 0.817095
XOF 655.232581
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.482119
ZAR 19.378412
ZMK 10541.265481
ZMW 22.21475
ZWL 377.092314
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    64

    0%

  • CMSD

    -0.0400

    23.22

    -0.17%

  • GSK

    0.4200

    54.64

    +0.77%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2000

    15.2

    -1.32%

  • RELX

    -0.3250

    36.065

    -0.9%

  • RIO

    -1.2800

    98.67

    -1.3%

  • CMSC

    -0.0200

    22.84

    -0.09%

  • JRI

    -0.0400

    12.79

    -0.31%

  • BCC

    -0.8500

    83.01

    -1.02%

  • BCE

    -0.0850

    23.475

    -0.36%

  • NGG

    0.2350

    87.465

    +0.27%

  • AZN

    -0.6200

    186.89

    -0.33%

  • BTI

    1.0300

    58.35

    +1.77%

  • VOD

    -0.0100

    15.5

    -0.06%

  • BP

    0.4250

    46.395

    +0.92%

Peace still elusive for east DR Congo 30 years after genocide in Rwanda
Peace still elusive for east DR Congo 30 years after genocide in Rwanda / Photo: Pascal GUYOT - AFP/File

Peace still elusive for east DR Congo 30 years after genocide in Rwanda

Sitting at home in Goma in the volatile east of the Democratic Republic of Congo, Rachel Sematumba describes herself as "a child of war".

Text size:

As the 30th anniversary of the genocide in Rwanda approaches, she reflects on how peace remains as elusive now in the city as when she was born.

"Since my birth at the time of the genocide in Rwanda until now with the M23 (rebel militia), there's only been that in Goma -- war," Sematumba said.

In summer 1994, nearly one million Rwandan Hutu refugees fled across the border into Goma, the capital of DRC's North Kivu province.

Fearing reprisals by the new Kigali authorities, they had left a country riven and traumatised by genocide.

Rachel was born in August that year when "all the hospitals in the city were packed with corpses and the sick", her father Onesphore Sematumba recalled emotionally.

Cholera was rife, claiming the lives of tens of thousands of refugees and residents.

Today, a few months shy of turning 30, Rachel is due to have her own child at the end of the week, around the time commemorations begin in Rwanda for the genocide.

In just 100 days between April and July 1994, some 800,000 minority Tutsis and moderate members of the Hutu majority were slaughtered, in massacres orchestrated and inflamed by the authorities.

Around 30 years old at the time, Onesphore was a French literature teacher in Rwanda when president Juvenal Habyarimana's plane was shot down on April 6.

Hutu extremists went on the rampage, unleashing the 20th century's last genocide.

"We were on Easter holidays in Congo," he said. "The school year was abruptly halted, from one day to the next I found myself unemployed in Goma," he said, bitterly.

- Armed incursions -

Onesphore spoke of the "human tide" which three months later flooded from Rwanda into Goma.

"Children, elderly people, cattle, battle tanks, trucks, all the army, the government... it was half a country that poured into the city, without any accommodation or supervision.

"Without anything," he said.

Goma had fewer than 300,000 inhabitants then and "looked like a big village", he said.

Open spaces such as football pitches, churches, schools and roundabouts quickly filled up, he recalled.

Due to the cholera epidemic, "we began seeing bodies pile up".

"Refugees were cooking alongside the dying in general indifference. We even would see babies suckling the dead body of their mother."

He said "huge mass graves" appeared behind the airport and refugee camps "became like towns" around Goma.

Onesphore would bump into former pupils who would talk of wanting to retake power in Kigali and of carrying out armed incursions into Rwanda.

But it was Paul Kagame and his Rwandan Patriotic Front rebel army who stopped the Hutu extremists, entered Kigali in July 1994 and came to power where he has remained ever since.

- Same uncertain future -

For 30 years, the Rwandan regime has argued that the presence of Hutu extremists in North Kivu poses a threat that justifies military intervention in DRC, directly or via rebel groups.

Wars and conflicts have gone on since 1996, with the mostly-Tutsi M23 currently controlling large swathes of North Kivu, including around Goma, with the Rwandan army's backing.

The rebels claim to be defending Congo's Tutsi population, as the genocide continues to cast a long shadow over relations between countries of the Great Lakes region.

Rachel remembered as a young child running home when shooting in the city interrupted her games with neighbours.

It did not abate as she grew older, although she described her teens as "normal", before adding: "Growing up, you do wonder what's the reason for all that."

At the age of 19, she left Goma for the Kenyan capital Nairobi and studied for a master's in diplomacy, development and international security.

After graduating, Rachel returned to Goma in late 2021, married two years later and moved into a small house near the centre.

From the first week, shots rang out near their home. "We said 'OK, welcome to the neighbourhood!'" she joked.

Rachel wants to be a diplomat to represent her country and also fight exploitation and violence against women. "Instead of women being brought up, here they are killed, raped," she said.

In eastern DRC "it's difficult to move on from the past," her father said.

Thirty years on, the scenes he witnessed in Goma are back again with the M23 conflict having forced more than 1.5 million people from their homes.

(Y.Berger--BBZ)