France on Tuesday declassified documents in the presidential archives relating to the 1994 Rwandan genocide, in which Kigali accuses Paris of having an indirect role.
A decision to declassify the papers was signed on Tuesday and concerns “documents in the Elysee relating to Rwanda between 1990 and 1995,” spanning the genocide, which claimed at least 800,000 lives, a source in French President Francois Hollande’s entourage said.
“The president had announced a year ago that France must provide proof of transparency and facilitate remembrance of this period,” the source said.
The papers, which include documents from diplomatic and military advisers as well as minutes from ministerial and defense meetings, will be available to both researchers and victims’ associations, the French presidency said.
Ties between France and Rwanda are strained as Rwandan President Paul Kagame accuses Paris of complicity in the genocide because of its support of the Hutu nationalist government that carried out the mass killings, mainly of ethnic Tutsis.
Paris has repeatedly denied the accusations and insists that French forces had worked to protect civilians. Relations between both countries were completely frozen from 2006 to 2009.
Kagame did not meet any French officials during his visit in February to UNESCO in Paris.
The genocide was sparked by the ouster of the country’s president, a Hutu.
Kagame last year caused a stir by repeating his accusations against France before commemorations to mark the 20th anniversary of the genocide, which ran from April to July 1994.
He notably said that France had not “done enough to save lives” and had not only been complicit, but “an actor” in the massacre of Tutsis.
He also spoke of “the direct role of Belgium and France in the political preparation of the genocide, and the participation of the latter in its actual execution.”
Former French prime minister Alain Juppe, who was former French president Francois Mitterrand’s foreign minister at the time of the genocide, termed the accusations “intolerable” and urged Hollande to “defend France’s honor.”
Stung by the repeated accusations, France canceled plans for the justice minister to attend the 20th anniversary commemorations.
A French parliamentary inquiry set up to try to establish the truth about the French role declared that “France was in no way implicated in the genocide against the Tutsis.”
The two rapporteurs, one of whom was Bernard Cazeneuve, who is now French minister of the interior, admitted the French authorities made “serious errors of judgement.”
Lobby group SOS Racisme chairman Dominique Sopo said that the the presidency’s “decision finally initiates on the part of France a logic of transparency and openness.”
He added that it is “an important step, but it has to be followed by other action” such as putting those guilty of genocide on trial.
The announcement of the declassification of the Rwanda papers came on the 21st anniversary of the outbreak of the genocide on April 7, 1994.
The procedure of releasing the documents is separate from about 20 ongoing judicial cases over “crimes against humanity” that have been launched in Paris.
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