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CHAPTER THIRTEEN
GACACA AS A PRINCIPLE OF CONFLICT RESOLUTION 
A CASE OF RWANDA 
INTRODUCTION
"The events of April to July 1994 in Rwanda have been well documented. Apart from the 
human tragedy, Rwanda has received much scholarly interest because of the convergence of 
explosive issues like ethnicity, nationalism and political, social and economic exclusion. It was 
the historical development and interaction of these dynamics that created decades of volatile 
mutual suspicions, which regularly erupted and responded to various conflict triggers. Though 
the Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF) Tutsi Diasporas invasion was in 1990, the conflict trigger in 
1994 was the assassination of Rwanda's Hutu then-president, Juvenal Habyarimana. Within 24 
hours of Habyarimana's assassination, the Hutu majority commenced indiscriminate and 
organised killing of the Tutsi minority and moderate Hutus.
However, it is significant to note that there was a sequence of atrocious killings in both 
Rwanda and its close neighbour Burundi before the 1994 genocide. Thus, the history of ethnic 
massacres preceded 1994; unfortunately, it did not attract international attention. As Richard 
Dowden, who reported on the events from Rwanda in 1994, aptly noted: "Burundi came and went 
(1993) and about 250 000 people died. Nobody covered it and nobody missed it." Although 
Rwanda was to become a major point for the application of transitional justice by the international 
community (Dowden 1995) 
Rwanda suffered one of the worst genocides in history. During 100 days of killing, 
800,000 people died. More people died in three months than in over four years of conflict in 
Yugoslavia; moreover, the speed of killing was five times faster than the Nazi execution of the 
Final Solution. Unlike the killings that occurred during the Holocaust, Rwandans engaged in "a 
populist genocide," in which many members of society, including children, participated in killing 
their neighbors with common farm tools (the most popular was the machete). While not all Hutus 
engaged in killing and not all victims were Tutsi, Hutus executed the vast majority of the killings 
and Tutsis were largely the target of their aggression. 
Fourteen years after the genocide, Rwanda is still struggling with how to rebuild the 
country and handle the mass atrocities that occurred. During the first four years following the 
genocide, four types of courts developed to prosecute genocidaires. The International Criminal 
Tribunal of Rwanda, foreign courts exercising universal jurisdiction, domestic criminal courts, 


56 
and a domestic military tribunal. Regrettably, none of these courts has been able to resolve the 
enormous problems related to adjudicating genocide suspects. In 2001, the government created 
gacaca. a fifth system for prosecuting genocidaires, to solve the problems it saw in the other 
courts. Gacaca is highly lauded by the government and many outside observers as the solution to 
Rwanda's genocide. A researcher, who studied two gacaca pilot programs for five months, noted 
that "the official discourse is so passionate about gacaca and its anticipated outcome that the 
system is almost granted a mythical status" (JessicaI994). Unfortunately, gacaca cannot fully 
operate as either a court or a customary dispute resolution mechanism because of its twin goals: 
retribution and reconciliation.
Moreover, Rwanda's limited resources and the astounding number of suspects require 
enormous revisions to gacaca. This section explores why Rwanda implemented gacaca, the 
reasons for gacaca's failure and possible solutions for moving forward. Part I presents an overview 
of the history of ethnic tension in Rwanda, the events leading up to genocide, and the genocide 
itself. Part II examiness the four courts created before gacaca to adjudicate genocide, their failures 
in the eyes of the Rwandan government and international observers, and the government's 
creation of gacaca. Part III explores the goals of the Rwandan gacaca model, and whether they 
are attainable or desirable. Part IV examines gacaca courts' failure to implement criminal 
procedure protections. Part V suggests revisions to the current adjudication of genocide suspects, 
including an alternative model of gacaca. Additionally, this section highlights the importance of 
addressing Rwandans' economic struggles, as a necessary element of reconciliation(WFWI 
2005). 

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