A/HRC/19/56/Add.1
pleading guilty. A survey reported that over 80 per cent of Rwandans believed that gacaca
courts made positive contributions in terms of facilitating the successful reconciliation of
Rwandans and delivering justice.16
30.
Criticisms levelled at the gacaca system included that: it did not meet international
due process standards; judges had little or no legal training being appointed only as “people
of integrity”; no defence counsel was available to offenders; the process lacked safeguards
to prevent false accusations; some judges, survivors and witnesses were threatened or
killed; some judges were corrupt or themselves implicated in crimes; and the sentences
were not proportionate to the crimes. International experts questioned the degree to which
the process fulfilled obligations to prosecute genocide perpetrators.
31.
The Government has responded that gacaca judges did receive training and
technical assistance provided by legal experts of the National Service of gacaca Courts.
Incompetent or corrupt judges were denounced and expelled. In the Government‟s view, it
was most important that gacaca courts were “mainly a conciliatory justice” with simple
procedures and the active participation of the concerned population.
32.
Now that the gacaca process has ended, there are concerns over how new returnees
will be reintegrated into their former communities and how tensions arising from their
return will be handled. Many Rwandans refugees, including ex-Rwandan Armed Forces
(ex-FAR) combatants and members of the interahamwe militia, have returned to Rwanda
and tensions around their return have been processed through the gacaca village-level
courts. The independent expert visited the Mutobo demobilization camp, where returnees
from the Democratic Republic of Congo to Rwanda are following reintegration
programmes before return to their old communities. She met former combatants of the
Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda recently returned from years spent in the
Democratic Republic of Congo, who indicated that there are many others who wish to
return. The winding-up of the gacaca courts may leave a crucial gap in the punishment and
reintegration process.
33.
With regard to gacaca, the Institute of Research and Dialogue for Peace states that:
“this popular and proximity justice has inevitably hurt many people who need to be healed
in order to achieve social cohesion”. 17 The Institute nevertheless concludes that it:
“responds clearly to the need for justice and launches a debate on ethnic issues … it opens
the wounds that need to be healed in order to achieve social cohesion. Politically speaking,
it would not be fair to leave the pending post-Gacaca conflict without creating a mechanism
to bring people together. The framework of debate that has been created by Gacaca is very
relevant and creates opportunities to solve ethnic conflicts.”18 The Government emphasizes
that a strategy to deal with any problems that may result from the conclusion of the gacaca
courts is being formulated by the National Unity and Reconciliation Commission, which
has started a programme known as “community dialogue” meant to deal with such issues.
C.
Gender-based crimes
34.
It is estimated that in the region of 250,000–500,000 mostly minority Tutsi women
and girls were raped during the genocide. This led to groundbreaking jurisprudence
developed by the International Criminal Tribunal for the Prosecution of Persons
Responsible for Genocide and Other Serious Violations of International Humanitarian Law
16
17
18
10
National Unity and Reconciliation Commission, Rwanda Reconciliation Barometer, p. 64.
Institute of Research and Dialogue for Peace, “Ethnic identity and social cohesion in Rwanda: Critical
analysis of political, social and economic challenges”, p. 14.
Ibid., pp. 35–36.