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currently live. Often they are among the Gacaca judges in their community or they might
intervene in the proceedings by making some general comments.
The survivors, on the other hand, are the main stakeholders in the Gacaca process at the
local level. They are almost always of Tutsi identity, with only a few exceptions. Fieldwork
observations make it clear that there are, in general, three defining parameters necessary to be
able to make a legitimate claim as a victim seeking justice for 'wrong done' in the Gacaca courts:
one needs to have suffered persecution-not simply to 'have lost'- between October 1990 and
December 1994; persecution because of having a certain identity; or 'identity based' persecution
because of belonging to the Tutsi ethnic group, which currently makes one an officially
recognized survivor. Survivors are the catalysts of the Gacaca proceedings in that they testify,
make accusations and provide information on the past. But, although they are knowledgeable
about the events during the genocide in general, and more specifically about what happened to
them personally, they survived because they were in hiding and thus their knowledge is limited.
Their evaluation of the Gacaca courts is mixed. They see them as in opportunity to find more
information on the locations where the bodies of deceased family members were thrown, or as a
way to find some compensation in kind for the losses or to see those responsible for past crimes
punished for their actions. However, they are also aware that their testimonies incriminating
others cause 'bad relationships' with the families of the accused and imprisoned. They often see
the results of their testimonies in Gacaca- imprisonment or community service in work camps-as
being to the sole benefit of the state (Oomen, 2005).
Among the Bahutu, four groups can be distinguished in a local community. First, there
are the prisoners who are absent from daily village life and are only transported to the village
when their own trial takes place. Their families are present, however, and approach the Gacaca
courts as a means to get their loved ones set free. Second, a community also contains liberated
prisoners who have confessed in' prison and therefore been released. They are closely monitored
by the authorities. Often they play an important role in the Gacaca proceedings iJY accusing
fellow villagers, Bahutu who have never been imprisoned but were somehow implicated in the
genocide.
If
there own confession is sincere and if they are personally convinced that revealing the
truth about the past is a necessity, they function as expert witnesses and are often consulted by
the
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