author

 Tom Ndahiro
Tom Ndahiro
The New Times
When an Australian university became a platform for Genocide ideologue
The New Times
When architects of genocide become media darlings 
Andrew Rettman
International
A toxic handshake of nonsense: The curious case of a EUobserver editor
Vincent Karega, the former ambassador to DR Congo and current ambassador-designate to Belgium, on October 2022.File Photo
Africa
Belgium’s blind spot in a Diplomatic Impasse
The New Times
How Clergy Celebrated Tutsi Massacres from All Saints’ Day 1959 to Genocide 1994
The New Times
Genocidaires’ revisionist vision, now on sale!
Jean Kambanda and Hermann Wilhelm Göring. 
A masterclass in rebranding and monetisation of Genocide
Former French President François Mitterrand, who played a particularly egregious role in enabling genocidaires, was once quoted as saying “In countries like that, genocide is not too important" by French daily Le Figaro. Net photo
Understanding Western racism and colonial legacy in context of the Genocide against the Tutsi
Col. Theoneste Bagosora, the mastermind of the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi, laid the foundation in October 1995 for a denialist narrative that would be repeated by many in the years since. Net photo
A form of genocide denial that is an insult to "Hutu"
President Juvénal Habyarimana (R) was depicted in Issue No. 25 of Kangura wearing a bishop’s chasuble and mitre, holding a book resembling a Bible with the word 'Ubumwe' (Unity) on the cover. On the left is his son, Jean-Luc Habyarimana, who is a 'staunch defender' of his father's genocidal legacy.
Jambo ASBL and the intersection of religion and extremism
Bishop Perraudin (left) and President Gregoire Kayibanda (right).
Denial of Genocide: From PARMEHUTU to Charles Onana
Olivier Nduhungirehe.
When Rwanda’s foreign minister called out DR Congo counterpart for stalling Luanda Peace Process
The New Times
Félix Tshisekedi’s bold plan to save DR Congo: Defeat M23 and... wait, what?
Rwandan elements of the Ugandan army” ended the Genocide against the Tutsi, rebuilt the nation, emancipated its people, and ushered in an era where discrimination is a relic of the past.
How "Rwandan elements of the Ugandan Army" foiled Rwanda's dream of eternal oppression
Cameroonian  journalists Charles Onana
Charles Onana: An Ideological Successor to the Genocidal Regime
President Paul Kagame addresses delegates at the Thanksgiving Prayer Breakfast held at Kigali Convention Centre on Sunday, September 15. Photo by Dan Gatsinzi.
Kagame on positive faith and a call for critical thinking
Kenneth Roth, the long-time executive director of Human Rights Watch (HRW).
Kenneth Roth's endorsement of Genocidal ideologies
Victoire Ingabire and Theodore Sindikubwabo.
Rwanda: Despicable Democratic Republicanism

Subscribe to The New Times E-Paper