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Survivors Fund (SURF) Newsletter 
Survivors Fund (SURF)

SURF November Newsletter

Dear Friends,

As I embark on my final few weeks at the helm at Survivors Fund (SURF), I reflect on my past five years in post as director. 

It is has been a remarkable experience. The time has truly flown! That is testament to the enjoyment and rewards of the work, made possible with the assistance of an incredible staff team in Rwanda, as well as a supportive board here in the UK, and an array of remarkable donors and even more remarkable partners.

Hopefully over my time in post, I have built on the strong foundations laid for me by SURF's founder, Mary Kayitesi Blewitt OBE. Though the numbers that we document in our annual report tell one story, it is the small moments that I recall that speak volumes. Just a few that come immediately to mind:

  • Attending the graduation ceremony of Odette, now Executive Secretary of AVEGA, who had just completed her degree along with several other staff of AVEGA - through the support of SURF. As it is said in yiddish, I shlepped naches (received great joy) from being called up to give one of the many addresses that I have had to make impromptu over the 14 visits that I have undertaken since I began in post. 
  • On hearing the result of the winner of the AERG Youth Entrepreneurship Training Programme business plan competition at the Solace Ministries Conference Hall (which SURF helped Solace build with a loan, which they paid back in full within twelve months) and the 150 students erupting as Andrew Jones MP of Project Umubano named the winning business, SuperPork - and seeing Rameez, one of the volunteers who had coached the team, punching the air in joy (which you can see in the background of the announcement). You can see the moment by clicking here.
  • Visiting the remarkable memorial at Bisesero in the Western Province and hearing the stories of the survivors there who had received so little support due to the remoteness of their location, and pledging that we would do all possible to ensure that the programmes of AVEGA could be extended to benefit them - and returning there a few years subsequent to hear how that has finally materialised.
  • Travelling up to one of the many presentations that I have given to schools and groups, in this case to Morcambe in Lancashire, to give a talk to a wonderful church group on behalf of the Good Gifts Catalogue, who after hearing the story of Sid the Bull, committed to raise the funds to donate not only one new Sid, but two over the year ahead!
     
  • Meeting Jonathan Torgovnik and Jules Shell whilst I was studying in New York, just before I started in posted and making the connection between Jonathan's award-winning portrait and our work in Rwanda, which subsequently developed into one of SURF's strongest partnerships with Foundation Rwanda.
Such highlights though have been tinged with great sadness, and loss too. That our support has extended to support tens of thousands of survivors has been a source of great pride, but there are many that sadly we have not been able to assist - in my mind, exemplified by the story of Clare.

Earlier this year, I took the terrible call that notified me of the death of Benon, our long serving accountant, supporter and friend of SURF. I still cannot quite believe that he is no longer with us - but his legacy will always live on. Equally tragic, was the death of Christopher Shale, who was just as vocal in his support of our work.

As I serve my final day formally in post on 17th November, I will raise a mutzig in memory of lost friends, as well in honour of you - our supporters - without whom none of our work would have been possible. So in this my final newsletter in post, I include two articles of projects that I hope will be extended beyond my small contribution - on the progress of our projects with AERG, and the campaign for reparation for survivors. 

I now handover that work, and the baton, to Françoise, on my final formal visit to Rwanda later this month. I am certain that with your continuing support, she will ably lead Survivors Fund (SURF) through its next phase of development.   

Thank you dearly again to you all for making our work possible.

Murakoze cyane

David Russell
Outgoing Director, Survivors Fund (SURF)

Fruits of Hope

Fruits of Hope and Success Cooperative (FOHSC) was formed by seven students following their graduation from the Youth Entrepreneurship Training Program (YETP). In partnership with the Association of Student Genocide Survivors (AERG), YETP provides entrepreneurship training to student survivors, culminating with a business competition and access to a loan.

The program was initially funded by the Kattan Family, and resulted in 150 students being trained last year. Based on its initial success, another 150 students were trained again this year through funding from the Alan & Babbette Sainsbury Charitable Trust and Inspire!Africa. And the hope is to extend the training to a further 150 students next year.

The members of FOHSC were in the first cohort of training, and have since developed a thriving mushroom farm. Although the farm is relatively new, the members of FOHSC have already established partnerships with 15 buyers and supermarkets, and have begun to scale up the amount of mushroom they produce.

When asked why they decided to start a business, the head of the cooperative, Fortunatus, responded:

"We started this business because it is not expensive to start, and you can harvest the mushrooms in 7-14 days. There is much need and demand in Rwanda for mushrooms, but not a lot of competition. It takes very little land for a lot of mushrooms too – this was important in Kigali because there is very little land available to buy. Right now we are planning to harvest 300 pieces within 3 months, and will make an estimated 1 million RWF."

FOHSC was able to start the business through a loan of RWF 778,500 (about £800) from a loan guarantee fund SURF has established in partnership with AERG with the youth empowerment bank, COOJAD. Prior to receiving the money, all of the members were required to invest their own capital and build the structure that would house the mushrooms. It is one of the first six businesses that has so far been funded through the program to date.

Fortunatus and his team have big dreams of expanding the business into exports and processed goods. When asked if they were confident in running the business Furtunatus explained that because they come from different backgrounds, they’re able to leverage one another’s skills. Within their cooperative are agronomists, a lawyer, and economists.

Fortunatus explained his hope for the project, thanks for the program, and ambition to help others through FOHSC’s success:

"The project is just now starting, but we have a dream and a hope to have good production. We hope to keep our AERG connections and continue to adapt if things are different than planned. This training opened our minds. Through school and after school, AERG accompanies us through life. They helped us to move from one life to another. We hope that this project can help more people too, like AERG did. Maybe through its success, we will also save others, and not just ourselves." 


Compensation

The Rwandan case: is it possible to truly compensate victims of genocide?

Jean-Paul Mugiraneza discusses why the victims of the Tutsi Genocide- one of the worst incidences of mass killing in the 20th century- are still struggling to receive financial compensation for their physical and material loss 20 years on, and asks, is it even possible to fully compensate these people after such an atrocity?

The 1994 Tutsi genocide in Rwanda is a tragedy in human history which remains hard to understand. The astonishing severity and pace at which it unfolded begs many questions, paramount of which being: how does a country begin to recover after experiencing such an event? Yet 20 years on present day Rwanda serves as an ongoing development success story politically, economically and socially, due to the combined efforts of the Rwandan government and wider society.

The basis for this unexpected development can be traced to both internal and external institutional efforts that focused upon helping Rwanda as a country achieve reconciliation and development whilst also ensuring justice.

At national level, the Rwandan Government created the National Commission for Unity and Reconciliation in addition to special chambers designed to prosecute the most notorious war criminals. Equally, on a community level, traditional Gacaca courts were employed as a tool to provide reconciliation and justice. Upon its completion, it will have been the most thorough process in bringing the rank and file of genocide to justice. Over 100,000 inmates have been indicted for crimes of genocide. Similarly at an international level, the United Nations established the International Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR).

Rwanda, as a society, has also undertaken many of the non-financial components of reparations in order to assist survivors. These include an annual public commemoration. Additionally, the Rwandan government has established Fonds d’Assistance aux rescapes du Genocide (FARG) and provide health care and tuition for survivors. But does this go far enough?

Financial compensation - An essential component to true justice

Though Rwanda and the international community have valiantly pursued justice, financial compensation for genocide survivors, either individually or as a collective, still hasn’t occurred to date. With this is mind, we must ask; can there be genuine reconciliation without financial reparation? The answer, in my opinion, is no. Reparation plays an important role on a number of levels- both in terms of mending the damage done and in educating society on the consequences of their actions.

This isn’t to suggest that the exercise of financial reparations isn’t challenging, both logistically and morally. To guarantee some degree of fair compensation it requires one to assess the damage caused to both person and property, and subsequently assigning a monetary value to these losses. Some would also argue, quite rightly, that genocide is an irreparable crime due to the sheer scale of psychological and physical suffering.

But irrespective of these logistical and moral challenges- and in light of universal recognition of the horrors of the Rwandan genocide- the silence surrounding the subject of financial reparations is striking.

In the immediate aftermath of the Tutsi genocide, Rwanda was a country in utter disrepair. Genocide had left tens of thousands of orphans and widows, as well as numerous refugees and displaced people, who were forced to flee to various parts of the region. The entire state apparatus was ravaged and the already scant infrastructure which existed previously had vanished.

Initially the issue of financial compensation was understandably placed upon the back burner as resources and attention centred upon formidable task of restoring Rwandan infrastructure. But 20 years on- despite the existence of a strong governing body- dialogue surrounding the issue of financial reparations remains absent from the political arena.

The resistance of the political elite to enforce compensation for victims

In theory, the Rwandan legal framework explicitly provides a framework for genocide survivors to seek and receive compensation. Under this framework prosecutions against genocide suspects have been conducted. According to the Lawyers without Borders, out of the 159 judgments made by the specialised chambers specifically created to prosecute genocide suspects, 50% of them have awarded financial compensation to victims. However, these judgments, though enforced on a criminal level, have yet to be enforced with regards to financial compensation.

In countries around the world- or more accurately those with legitimate and effective legal systems- a judgment made by its courts is considered legally binding. It guarantees inalienable rights to beneficiaries. Survivors of the Rwandan genocide, therefore, have the right to demand the application of these judgments. But this is not the case in practice. This inaction on behalf of the government highlights their lack of clarity, on the issue of financial reparations. And this is far from an isolated case.

Indeed, in some cases the Rwandan government itself has been mandated to pay indemnities to the victims. But instead of implementing the judgment the Minister of Justice at the time wrote a letter to all justice chambers dealing with genocide, ordering them to “suspend all cases in which the Rwandan government is called upon to intervene .” This is clearly in opposition to the process of reparation and the administration of justice. Similarly, in 2001, a bill calling for the creation of a compensation fund was formulated. This, however, never materialised.

If we are to look critically at this general attitude of the Rwandan government, we could interpret this in one of two ways; as simply a demonstration of complete indifference towards the issue of reparations, or, perhaps more sinisterly, a calculated political move.

It has been speculated that at the forefront of government concerns are how financially compensating the survivors of the Tutsi community may affect social cohesion. It could be speculated that to openly provide government financial support to the Tutsi community- a group historically considered to have enjoyed unique privileges in Rwandan society under colonial rule- could risk fostering resentment amongst the Hutu majority community.

Reparations could be detrimental to the already fragile social cohesion in a country where there is still a Hutu majority and in whose name the genocide was committed.

The international community failing the victims - prior and post genocide

It is generally agreed that the UN failed the victims of the genocide. Instead of protecting civilians, the UN military contingent fled the country during the peak of the killings. Many assessments of the genocide have also concluded that, among other factors, the enormous death toll was aided by the fact that people held confidence in the UN peacekeeping troops and remained in Rwanda. Because of this, the reputation of the UN amongst the Rwandan people has suffered. And one would hope that after their failures the UN would take a leading role in compensating survivors. But unfortunately the UN has, so far, only shown an interest in the criminal proceedings and has completely ignored financial reparations.

The UN Security Council established the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR) in the aftermath of the genocide on November 8, 1994. But, parallel to this commitment for criminal justice, the ICTR has avoided dealing with matters of financial reparation for victims (none of judgments issued by the ICTR to date have awarded financial damages). How can an institution like the UN not understand the importance of financial reparation in the rehabilitation of victims and administration of justice?

One could conclude that there is a lack of a will from UN authorities to participate in reparation process. Indeed, initiatives have been taken to encourage the UN to amend the statute of the ICTR to include the creation of a compensation fund, but without success.

Notable is former ICTR prosecutor Carla Del Ponte’s statement on the matter: “Every judge agrees with the principle that victims should be compensated…(therefore) we thought we should approach the Security Council of the United Nations to amend the statute, to extend our office mandate so that we can compensate victims.” This, unsurprisingly, has fallen on death ears. It begs the question, how can the ICTR be considered an effective institution of justice if it fails to offer financial reparations to the victims of genocide?

The UN commission created to compensate Kuwaitis following their 1990 invasion by Iraq- as well as the $1.07 billion subsequently made available to the Government of Kuwait- shows that there doesn’t exist at the UN an institutional opposition to participating in the reparation process. So how can we explain their unwillingness to do so in Rwanda?

Perhaps some of the blame for this lay at the feet of the Rwandan government. Their markedly weak stance regarding financial reparations to the Tutsi people is a perhaps an explanation for the international community’s hesitance to intervene on the behalf of survivors. The solution to this is concrete measures at a national level to encourage other international partners to participate- a compensation endowment, as was originally intended by the draft law in 2001, for example.

Having said that we should recognize the contribution of FARG to improving the living conditions of survivors- every year 6% of the total state income revenue is spent on it. But assisting survivors, as a vulnerable group, is an obligation for any responsible nation. It does not remove the right for financial reparations.

About the Author:  is Insight on Conflict’s local correspondent for Rwanda. He is currently working as Program Advisor for Interpeace Regional office as liaison officer in Kigali.

This article was originally published on Insight on Conflict. The leading online resource for local peacebuilding and human rights in conflict areas.


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