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Rwanda commemorates 25th anniversary of 1994 genocide

China Daily | Updated: 2019-04-09 09:24
People hold candles as they attend a night vigil and prayer at the Amahoro Stadium as part of the 25th Commemoration of the 1994 genocide, in Kigali, Rwanda, on Sunday. [YASUYOSHI CHIBA/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE]
KIGALI, Rwanda-Rwandans on Sunday started commemorating the 25th anniversary of the 1994 genocide that left more than 1 million people dead, with President Paul Kagame calling for continued efforts to transform the country.

"Rwanda's young people have everything needed to transform our country," Kagame said. "They have the responsibility to take charge more and more, and participate fully in securing the Rwanda we want and deserve."

Three-quarters of Rwandans are under 30, and almost 60 percent of Rwandan people were born after the genocide, Kagame said. Rwandans are the last people in the world who should succumb to complacency, he said, adding that the suffering the Rwandan people have endured should be enough to keep their fighting spirit alive.

"The fighting spirit is alive in us. What happened here will never happen again," Kagame said.
Dignitaries present at the ceremony also recognized Rwanda's recovery after the genocide, whose victims were primarily ethnic Tutsis.

Rwanda is an example of how a deeply wounded society can rise again, thanks to the courage of its people, said president of the European Commission, Jean-Claude Juncker. The genocide commemoration event is an opportunity to celebrate the remarkable resilience of the people of Rwanda as well as the extraordinary leadership, said Belgian Prime Minister Charles Michel.

The leadership of the Rwandan government, coupled with the resilience of Rwandans, is what has made Rwanda move forward, Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed said. Rwanda's commitment to reconciliation is a testament to honoring victims and it's a lesson for the world to have hope in reconciliation, Ahmed said.

"I applaud the resilience of genocide survivors and all Rwandans. Rwanda has emerged from the darkest period to become one of the fastest growing economies in Africa," said Djiboutian President Ismail Omar Guelleh.

                                       New platform planned
Moussa Faki Mahamat, chief of the African Union Commission, told the ceremony that he is planning to set up a platform in charge of fighting against the most abominable genocidal ideologies and ethnic derivatives in Africa. Performances for remembrance were staged during the ceremony.
Shortly before the ceremony, Faki, Juncker and other dignitaries laid wreaths at the Kigali Genocide Memorial, the final resting place for more than 250,000 victims of the genocide.

Kagame, Rwandan first lady Jeannette Kagame, Faki and Juncker jointly lit the flame of remembrance at the memorial. Other activities on the first day of the commemoration include a Walk to Remember event and a night vigil at the Amahoro National Stadium.

Heads of Rwandan national commissions for anti-genocide and reconciliation both spoke highly of Rwanda's reconciliation and unity after the genocide days ahead of the commemoration.

Rwandans have reconciled whereby genocide perpetrators and survivors are able work together to develop their respective communities through community work, or Umuganda, and other national development initiatives, said Jean-Damascene Bizimana, executive secretary of the National Commission for the Fight against Genocide.

Unity and reconciliation among Rwandans have reached more than 95 percent and the country is continuing to ensure that Rwanda will be a completely unified country in the next few years, according to Fidele Ndayisaba, executive secretary of National Unity and Reconciliation Commission.
Xinhua

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