Tutsi Power in Rwanda and the Citizenship Crisis in Eastern Congo
Author: M Mamdani
Date: 2001
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29 pages
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How can the invasion of Congo by the Rwandan Popular Front (RPF) be understood as an outcome of the citizenship crisis on both sides of the Rwanda-Congo border? This chapter, from the book ‘When Victims Turn Killers: Colonialism, Nativism, and the Genocide in Rwanda’, tackles this question and traces the history of the Kinyarwanda-speaking minority in the Kivu region of Congo and their struggle for citizenship rights.
From the pre-colonial period onwards, Rwandans and some Ugandans migrated to North and South Kivu in successive waves. The colonial authorities distinguished between indigenous and non-indigenous people, and the indigenous majority was divided into different ethnicities with its own ‘customary’ home, law and authority. This meant access to certain social and economic rights, notably land rights. The non-indigenous minorities were denied such an authority and treated as strangers. They also had to pay tribute to local authorities to gain access to land. This customary arrangement continued in the post-colonial period, although citizenship in the civic sphere has been deracialised.
Denied an ethnic space to express themselves, after independence the Banyarwanda in North Kivu turned to the civic sphere, winning collegial elections in 1958. The local elite reacted by hounding Banyarwanda from positions of influence and asserting their status as landlords over the immigrant tenants. This led to ‘La Guerre du Bayarwanda’ in 1963-4. There subsequently occurred a spiralling crisis of citizenship:
It is in this context that over a million refugees from Rwanda poured into Kivu in 1994. These were armed Hutus, who set up armed camps, whose presence made life extremely difficult for the Tutsi in Kivu.
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Source:
Mamdani, M., 2001, 'Tutsi Power in Rwanda and the Citizenship Crisis in Eastern Congo', in When Victims Turn Killers: Colonialism, Nativism, and the Genocide in Rwanda, James Curry, Oxford