Rwanda genocide suspect faces Dutch trial By AFP June 17, 2026 04:33 (EAT) Add as a Preferred Source on Google Follow us Follow on Whatsapp Follow on Google Follow on Twitter The flag of Rwanda flutters in front of the Rwandese embassy in Brussels, Belgium, 31 December 2001. …
It is 32 years since the Rwandan Genocide, which in a mere three months killed close to a million people, mostly ethnic Tutsis and moderate Hutus, following the shooting down of an aircraft carrying then leader Juvenal Habyarimana on April 7, 1994. …
Presidents Macron, Kagame inaugurate Rwanda genocide memorial in Paris By Reuters June 04, 2026 07:42 (EAT) Add as a Preferred Source on Google Follow us Follow on Whatsapp Follow on Google Follow on Twitter Audio By Vocalize French President Emmanuel Macron and his Rwandan count …
Audio By VocalizeFrance's President Emmanuel Macron meets with the France's women national football team in Clairefontaine-en-Yvelines, southwest of Paris on June 2, 2026. [AFP] President Emmanuel Macron on Tuesday will unveil a monument to victims of the Rwanda genocide in the p …
A 68-year-old Rwandan man is on trial in the Netherlands, accused of inciting and participating in the massacre of 3,000 Tutsis in the southern Mbazi district during the 1994 Rwanda Genocide, and of looting and destroying Tutsi homes.
A 68-year-old Rwandan man is on trial in the Netherlands, accused of inciting and participating in the massacre of 3,000 Tutsis in the southern Mbazi district during the 1994 Rwanda Genocide, and of looting and destroying Tutsi homes.
An opinion piece argues that Kenya is complicit in denying justice to victims of the 1994 Rwandan Genocide, which killed close to a million people, mostly ethnic Tutsis and moderate Hutus, in three months following the shooting down of an aircraft carrying then-leader Juvenal Habyarimana on April 7, 1994.
French President Macron and Rwandan President Kagame inaugurated a memorial in Paris on Tuesday honouring victims of Rwanda's 1994 genocide against the Tutsis. Macron said the memorial placed the genocide "at the heart of our capital and our history" and was "the culmination of a long and painstaking quest for the truth"; in May 2021 he recognised France's responsibility and sought forgiveness, though did not issue a formal apology.
President Emmanuel Macron unveiled a monument to victims of the Rwanda genocide on the banks of the Seine in Paris in the presence of Rwandan leader Paul Kagame, marking France's acknowledgment of its role in the 1994 atrocity that killed an estimated 800,000 people, mostly ethnic Tutsis. Macron has recognised France's "responsibility" but stopped short of issuing a formal apology.