It was a sombre mood as thousands of survivors, relatives, friends, residents and government officials thronged Ruhango Memorial Site to accord decent burial to 105 victims of the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi whose remains were recently retrieved from different part of the district.
It was a sombre mood as thousands of survivors, relatives, friends, residents and government officials thronged Ruhango Memorial Site to accord decent burial to 105 victims of the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi whose remains were recently retrieved from different part of the district.
As victims were being according a befitting burial, survivors recounted memories of how their beloved ones were brutally killed, with some saying that they are yet to know the whereabouts of their relatives’ remains.
In what seemed to be a collective move, survivors called for the prosecution of people responsible for the massacres, some of whom are foreigners while others included men such as Charles Kagabo, who was the Bourgmestre (mayor) of Ntongwe commune and is now believed to be in DR Congo jungles.
"Our relatives, families and friends were killed in the most brutal and unimaginable way, those who killed them have not been prosecuted, they include Burundian refugees who were in Rwanda between 1980s to the time of the Genocide, they later went back to their country and have never been prosecuted,” said Alex Rusagara, the head of Genocide survivors of Kinazi Sector, formerly Ntongwe commune.
Rusagara requested the government to establish a special commission that would work with the Burundian government in identifying and bringing to book those that may have participated in the Genocide.
Emmanuel Mugabo, who represented families of the 105 victims reburied yesterday, said that among those accorded a decent burial yesterday included members of his immediate family.
"It took us a long time to find their remains. We had to go beg those that killed them (for information about whereabouts of remains), today, we are at peace that our relatives are resting well and decently,” said Mugabo.
The commemoration event was graced by the State Minister in charge of Public Health and Primary Healthcare, Patrick Ndimubanzi, who called for continued fight against genocide ideology.
"We can only counter genocide ideology by continuously telling the truth about what happened and documenting testimonies. We have made progress in the past 21 years during which have witnessed true unity and reconciliation,” Ndimubanzi said.
During the event, survivors gave testimonies of how they were lured into gathering at the Commune offices where they would later be attacked and most of them killed.
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