Blinken had through a post on X (formerly Twitter) expressed the United States solidarity with Rwanda during the 30th anniversary.
“The United States stands with the people of Rwanda during Kwibuka 30 in remembering the victims of genocide. We mourn the many thousands of Tutsis, Hutus, Twas, and others whose lives were lost during 100 days of unspeakable violence,” he wrote.
However, the post did not sit well with netizens, who termed it vague and general, as it did not highlight that the Tutsis were the targeted group in the 1994 atrocities.
“That’s distorting and disregarding the truth; in Rwanda, there was a genocide against the Tutsis in 1994. It’s better not to say anything, Rwandans will be okay, as they always have been. No country is powerful enough, even when they think that they are, to change the facts,” Heritier wrote.
"We remember Genocide against Tutsi! Thank you! #Kwibuka30," Inkotanyi Ruti said.
“@SecBlinken it’s called genocide against Tutsi,” Espoir King wrote.
Others questioned the United States failure to stop the genocide that claimed the lives of more than one million people in just 100 days, while others criticized the country’s biasness in the ongoing Israel-Hamas war, where the US has sided with Israel.
"The 1994 genocide against Tutsi in Rwanda, while devastatingly impacting many, was characterized by the systematic targeting of Tutsis. Recognizing this doesn’t diminish your honor or falsify the truth of the events. The U.S.’s statement during #Kwibuka30 reveals that there is a long way to go to recognize what your government failed to stop while you had the full capacity. Understanding history accurately is crucial for healing and preventing future atrocities,” Emmanuel Habumuremyi wrote.
This is, however, not the first time the US is failing to recognize the official definition of the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsis.
In August 2022, Blinken, while on a visit in Rwanda, was asked by a local journalist, Edwin Musoni, to address the vagueness, but could not offer a direct and convincing answer.
Yesterday, President Paul Kagame, in an apparent reference to the US action, also condemned intentional vagueness in reporting of the genocide against the Tutsi, which he said plays a role in fueling denial.
“Rwandans will never understand why any country would remain intentionally vague about who was targeted in the genocide. I don’t understand that. Such ambiguity is, in fact, a form of denial, which is a crime in and of itself, and Rwanda will always challenge it,” Kagame stated during Kwibuka30.
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