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Juvénal Habyarimana

president of Rwanda

Juvénal Habyarimana, (born March 8, 1937?, Gasiza, Gisenyi province, Ruanda-Urundi (now in Rwanda)—died April 6, 1994, near Kigali, Rwanda), army officer and politician who ruled Rwanda almost single-handedly for more than 20 years after he seized power in a 1973 coup.

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Rwanda
Rwanda: The Habyarimana era

With the elimination of Tutsi elements from the political arena, north-south regional competition among Hutu politicians arose, reflecting the comparatively privileged position of those from the central and southern regions within the party, the government, and the administration. Regional tensions came to a…

Habyarimana studied humanities and mathematics at St. Paul’s College and medicine at Lovanium University, both in the Belgian Congo (now the Democratic Republic of the Congo). He returned home in 1960 to begin training for the National Guard in Kigali. Although he was a member of the Hutu majority ethnic group, he proved to be an effective officer against insurgents from both the Hutu and the Tutsi minority. He rapidly rose through the ranks, becoming chief of staff (1963–65) and then minister of defense and police chief of staff (1965–73). In April 1973 he was promoted to major general; three months later, on July 5, he led a group of disgruntled Hutu officers in the overthrow of Pres. Grégoire Kayibanda. A civilian-military government was established, of which Habyarimana became president.

Habyarimana initially banned all political activity. In 1975 he established the National Revolutionary Movement for Development, with himself as sole leader of the single-party state. A new constitution promulgated in December 1978 provided for a return to civilian rule, and in elections held that same month Habyarimana was elected president. He was reelected in 1983 and 1988 when, as the only candidate for president, voters purportedly approved his stay in office overwhelmingly. Other than an abortive coup in April 1980, Habyarimana’s grip on power was largely unchallenged.

Until 1990 only low-level incidents of violence against the minority Tutsi had occurred under Habyarimana’s rule—nothing on the same scale as the persecution and mass killings that periodically took place before the 1973 coup. Habyarimana did not, however, do much to address the grievances of the Tutsi, which included the demand that the tens of thousands of Tutsi refugees in neighbouring countries who wished to return to Rwanda be allowed to do so. Nor did he calm the ever-present simmering tensions between the Hutu and the Tutsi. The status quo was shattered when a rebellion by the Tutsi-led Rwandan Patriotic Front (Front Patriotique Rwandais; FPR) began in October 1990. The rebellion further inflamed the country’s long-standing ethnic tensions, and Hutu mobs, incited by local authorities, killed hundreds of Tutsi civilians. Intermittent peace talks yielded little success until Aug. 4, 1993, when, at peace negotiations held in Arusha, Tanz., Habyarimana signed a power-sharing agreement with the FPR. This was strongly opposed by Hutu extremists in Habyarimana’s administration.

Meanwhile, Habyarimana had gradually accepted that some reforms to Rwanda’s political process were needed, and in July 1990 he announced his support of such reforms. Constitutional changes, which included a new allowance for multiparty participation in the government, were promulgated in 1991. The next year Habyarimana retired from the military to comply with the new constitutional ban on military participation in government. In January 1994 he was named president of the power-sharing transitional government established by the 1993 Arusha peace agreement, although lingering discord delayed the formation of the rest of the government.

In April 1994 Habyarimana and Pres. Cyprien Ntaryamira, the Hutu leader of neighbouring Burundi, were returning from ongoing peace talks between the Hutu and the Tutsi when their plane was shot down. The death of the two Hutu presidents under suspicious circumstances served as the trigger for the Hutu extremist-orchestrated genocide in Rwanda that followed, in which more than 800,000 Tutsi and moderate Hutu were massacred. (See Rwanda genocide of 1994.)

The identity of the person or group who fired upon Habyarimana’s plane has long been the subject of debate. Hutu extremists were originally thought to have been responsible; later there were allegations that FPR leaders were responsible. Investigations of the plane crash in the 21st century also reached conflicting conclusions. In 2004 the leaked findings of a report commissioned by French judge Jean-Louis Bruguière (claiming jurisdiction because the flight crew members who perished in the crash were French) included allegations that Paul Kagame—an FPR leader who by then was the president of Rwanda—and other FPR leaders ordered the rocket attack that caused the plane crash, echoing the claims of some Rwandan dissidents; Kagame vehemently denied the allegations. In October 2007 the FPR-led Rwandan government launched a formal investigation into the plane crash. The results, released in January 2010, indicated that Hutu extremist soldiers were responsible for shooting down the plane carrying Habyarimana, with the intent of derailing his peace negotiations with Tutsi rebels, and then used the incident as an excuse to initiate the genocide against the Tutsi and moderate Hutu.

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