As an illegal person, without any authorization nor visa, Prime Minister Baladur, entered in Rwanda territory, after genocide against Tutsi, to save and exifilter the government who organized the genocide and to encourage its defeat army and other militiamen to continue the fighting and regain power in Rwanda
Associations and survivors of the killings of Tutsis in the Bisesero hills in western Rwanda have long accused France’s Turquoise mission and the government of “complicity in genocide”, saying the troops knowingly failed to protect victims for three days.
More than one illion of Tutsis were killed in the area between June 27 and 30, 1994.
Investigating magistrates dropped the 17-year case in September, saying there was no evidence that the French army was involved in atrocities committed in refugee camps, or that it helped the perpetrators or deliberately held off from preventing the killings.
Following a challenge from the plaintiffs, the appeals court has now ordered investigators at Paris’ crimes against humanity division to reopen their probe after finding procedural mistakes, a source familiar with the case told AFP.
Specifically, they had failed to warn the case would be closed just weeks after allowing new documents — a summary of historian Vincent Duclert’s report into the Bisesero incident — to be taken into evidence.
“We’re again headed for months or even years of legal battles to try to secure the only thing that counts in our eyes: the end of the impunity military and political leaders have benefited from in this case,” said Patrick Baudouin, president of the Human Rights League, one of the plaintiffs.
Fierce controversy remains around France’s UN-mandated Turquoise mission to Rwanda, which was supposed to halt the genocide.
More than one million of people were killed between April and July 1994 according to UN figures, most of them from the Tutsi minority
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