โMilestoneโ: Macron opens Paris monument honouring Rwanda genocide victims
French President Emmanuel Macron has presented a memorial in Paris dedicated to the victims of the 1994 Rwandan genocide, as France pursues closer ties with the East African country and continues to grapple with its role in the historic atrocity. Speaking at the inauguration eve
French President Emmanuel Macron has presented a memorial in Paris dedicated to the victims of the 1994 Rwandan genocide, as France pursues closer ties with the East African country and continues to grapple with its role in the historic atrocity.
Speaking at the inauguration event alongside his Rwandan counterpart Paul Kagame on Tuesday, Macron said the monument marked โthe culmination of a long and patient quest for truthโ.
โAn unprecedented reconciliation has emerged between Rwanda and France,โ said Macron. โThis monument, while it is an achievement, is not an end. It is a milestone on a path we have opened.โ
Dubbed โLโArchiveโ (The Archive), the monument consists of two black brass steles, and it bears an engraved tribute to the estimated 800,000 men, women and children, mostly ethnic Tutsis, massacred between April and July 1994.
The memorialโs inauguration comes five years after Macron travelled to Kigali and first acknowledged Franceโs failure to heed warnings of impending massacres in Rwanda.
Macron has said Paris and its Western and African allies did not have the will to halt the genocide, though he has stopped short of issuing a formal apology.
Speaking at the ceremony, Kagame hailed Franceโs efforts to assume its share of responsibility, and praised Macron for his โcourage and humanityโ.
โFrance was not alone in falling short, far from it,โ said Kagame, who had long accused France of โcomplicityโ.

