France's Blindness to Please Kagame:
When You Don't Respect the French, They Respect You: The Paradox of Rwanda–France Relations
Introduction: The Most Puzzling Diplomatic Relationship in Contemporary Africa
Few relationships in African–European diplomacy are as paradoxical, emotionally charged, and politically revealing as the one between Rwanda and France. For three decades, Rwanda has been the most hostile African state toward France—accusing it of complicity in genocide, humiliating French leaders, dismantling French institutions, expelling French influence, replacing the French language, and repeatedly denigrating France on the international stage.
Yet France has responded not with retaliation, pressure or distance—but with apologies, concessions, aid packages, political support and military cooperation.
This dynamic represents one of the clearest examples of a geopolitical truth that many Africans repeat with irony:
"When you don't respect the French, they respect you."
It is not an insult, but a political analysis: France tends to respect assertiveness, especially when it is rooted in moral accusation. Rwanda understood this better than anyone else. It recognised early that France's greatest weakness is its historical guilt. And once Rwanda realised how deeply France is trapped by remorse, Kigali turned that guilt into a weapon of diplomatic leverage.
This long-form analysis explores how Rwanda managed to transform France from a powerful political actor into a vulnerable partner unable to defend itself, unable to criticise Rwanda's actions, and unable to articulate a sovereign position regarding Rwanda's destabilising role in the region—especially in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).
I. Before the Rupture: Rwanda as a Jewel of Francophone Influence
To understand the magnitude of the post-1994 rupture, it is essential to recall what Rwanda represented for France. During the Cold War and up to the early 1990s, Rwanda was a central piece of the Francophone geopolitical architecture in Central Africa. It was a showcase of French cultural and linguistic influence in the Great Lakes region, and a key ally in France's rivalry with the Anglophone world, especially with Uganda.
French military officers were embedded in Rwandan institutions. French advisers worked in the presidency. French aid funded schools, infrastructure and security programmes. Rwanda was deeply integrated into the Françafrique network.
In Paris's view, Rwanda was a small but symbolically important Francophone partner whose stability solidified France's image as a protector of Francophonie.
This foundation makes the later rupture even more dramatic. No Francophone African country has ever broken so violently with France. No former French partner has ever launched such a radical anti-French campaign. And never before has France accepted humiliation from a small African country as passively as it did with Rwanda.
II. Rwanda's Post-1994 Strategy: From Victimhood to Aggressive Accusation
After the Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF) seized power in July 1994, the new Rwandan government swiftly identified France as its principal political enemy. Kigali constructed and promoted a narrative in which France was no longer simply a foreign supporter of the former regime—France was portrayed as an accomplice to genocide, an enabler of massacres, and a morally culpable actor. Paul Kagame and Louise Mushikiwabo were personally involved in driving this strategy, repeatedly issuing public accusations, denunciations, and even direct insults against French leaders and institutions.
This narrative provided the RPF with immense strategic value.
By attacking France, Rwanda could simultaneously:
1. Legitimise its new regime by presenting itself as the force that defeated not only a genocidal government but also its alleged foreign backer.
2. Shape international sympathy, positioning Rwanda firmly as a victim seeking justice against a powerful European state.
3. Silence internal dissent, since anyone questioning the RPF could be accused of aligning with "genocidaires" or defending French complicity.
4. Dismantle Rwanda's Francophone identity to justify its shift toward the Anglophone world and realign its geopolitical alliances.
5. Place France in a permanent defensive posture, forcing Paris to react emotionally rather than strategically.
From 1995 onward, hostility toward France became an institutionalised pillar of Rwandan foreign policy. Senior officials consistently insulted, blamed, and denigrated French leaders in speeches and interviews. Media outlets aligned with the government amplified these accusations, ensuring that the message reached both domestic and international audiences. Rwanda used every available platform—United Nations meetings, genocide commemorations, diplomatic summits, and international media events—to reinforce the claim that France carried direct responsibility for the genocide.
In doing so, Kigali weaponised guilt. And France—terrified of being blamed for genocide, isolated on the international stage, or accused of moral indifference—gradually surrendered its own narrative and adopted a posture of permanent defensiveness and remorse.
III. Destroying French Influence in Rwanda: A Dismantling Without Precedent
The hostility was not merely rhetorical; it manifested in a systematic and deliberate dismantling of French presence in Rwanda. French cultural and educational institutions were progressively shut down. Long-standing cooperation projects were abruptly terminated. French teachers—many of whom had served in Rwanda for decades—were expelled en masse. Development and aid programmes were suspended or cancelled. The French Cultural Centre in Kigali, once a flagship of Francophone influence, was closed and later vandalised. Even the French Embassy became a repeated target of street protests, often encouraged or orchestrated by the authorities, forcing France to scale down its diplomatic presence dramatically.
The symbolic significance of this dismantling cannot be overstated. It was not merely administrative: it represented a profound political and cultural rupture. Rwanda was sending an unambiguous message to Paris:
"Your influence here is over."
This rupture reached its most dramatic and irreversible point with the decision to replace French with English as the national language of instruction. Overnight, Rwanda severed a century-long linguistic and cultural bond with the Francophone world and repositioned itself decisively within the Anglophone geopolitical sphere. The transition was so radical that most teachers across the country—trained in French and unable to teach in English—were dismissed and replaced, leaving entire generations in schools undergoing a sudden and unprecedented linguistic transformation.
No other country in modern history has undertaken such a sweeping linguistic realignment in such a short period. For Rwanda, it was a strategic declaration of independence. For France, it was a devastating confirmation that its cultural foothold had been uprooted completely.
IV. The Duclert Report: The Most Controversial Element of France's Self-Humiliation
One of the most astonishing episodes in the history of France–Rwanda relations is the production of the Duclert Report, commissioned by President Emmanuel Macron in 2019 and published in 2021. Officially, the report was presented as an independent historical investigation into France's role in Rwanda from 1990 to 1994. In practice, it became one of the most politically driven, historically distorted and controversial documents ever produced under the banner of French state introspection.
1. A report written to please Kagame
From the moment the commission was announced, many historians, diplomats and African specialists recognised that its purpose was not to seek historical truth, but to facilitate political reconciliation with Kagame's government. Macron wanted to visit Kigali not as a president accused of denial or colonial arrogance, but as a leader embraced by Rwanda and applauded by the international media. The simplest route to that outcome was to produce a report that validated, or at the very least did not challenge, Rwanda's official narrative of the 1994 events.
Consequently, the Duclert Commission operated within a narrow political framework. It was encouraged—whether explicitly or implicitly—to avoid any conclusion that contradicted Kigali's interpretation of history. This led to a document that:
• selectively interpreted archival evidence,
• omitted or downplayed inconvenient material,
• ignored testimonies that contradicted the RPF narrative,
• minimised or entirely erased well-documented crimes committed by the RPF,
• exaggerated French "blindness" while absolving the RPF of scrutiny,
• and promoted interpretations that closely mirrored decades of Rwandan government accusations.
Moreover, the commission rejected contributions and testimonies from scholars, military officers, and experts whose analyses did not align with the Rwandan government's narrative. Entire bodies of evidence—including those documenting RPF massacres, abuses, and regional operations—were either dismissed or declared irrelevant to the commission's mandate.
For many analysts, this revealed the true nature of the project: the Duclert Report was less an effort to understand history and more a political instrument designed to appease Kagame, rehabilitate France's public image, and demonstrate Macron's willingness to show "humility" at any cost.
Since its publication, numerous historians, diplomats, African specialists and former French officials have criticised the report for being partial, politically biased, methodologically incomplete, and in some cases containing fabricated or speculative historical assertions. Rather than offering a balanced or academically rigorous account, the Duclert Report is widely viewed as a document shaped by political objectives rather than historical accuracy.
2. A report that erases RPF crimes
The Duclert Report strikingly avoids addressing well-documented massacres committed by the RPF in 1994 and in the years that followed. The killings of Hutu civilians, the massacres in the forests of Congo, and the acts that some UN experts have described as possibly constituting genocidal acts were either omitted or minimised.
To please Kagame, the report produces an unbalanced historical picture in which the RPF appears morally blameless.
3. A report that condemns France while ignoring geopolitical complexity
Instead of presenting a nuanced analysis, the Duclert Report simplifies the story:
France = responsible
RPF = liberated victims
This simplistic framing allowed Kagame to claim moral victory.
And France, astonishingly, financed and published a document that harmed its own historical narrative.
4. Duclert as a symbol of French self-humiliation
The report became the ultimate symbol of France's new role: a country so desperate for moral redemption that it participates in rewriting history to please the government that accuses it.
V.Selective Memory: France's Refusal to Acknowledge RPF Atrocities and Hutu Suffering
Another dimension of France's silence toward Rwanda concerns the subjects that Paris deliberately avoids addressing—issues that remain politically explosive and morally uncomfortable. France refuses to speak openly about human rights abuses committed by the RPF during and after the 1994 war, despite the existence of numerous international reports documenting such violations. It also avoids acknowledging the widespread war crimes, extrajudicial killings and massacres of Hutu civilians committed not only in Rwanda but also in neighbouring countries, especially in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
For the French political establishment, even mentioning the suffering of Hutu civilians has become almost taboo. In the current diplomatic climate, raising the issue of Hutu victims—who constitute over 85 percent of the Rwandan population—is treated as a political offence, almost equivalent to undermining the recognised narrative of the genocide. This fear of appearing insensitive, revisionist or "supportive of genocidaires" has paralysed France's ability to discuss the full reality of the conflict.
Yet the historical record is clear. Multiple independent investigations—including UN reports, testimonies from human rights organisations, and academic research—have established that the RPF committed large-scale atrocities during the war and in the years that followed. Tens of thousands of Hutu civilians were killed inside Rwanda between 1994 and 1996. Hundreds of thousands more were hunted down and massacred across eastern Congo, in attacks documented by the 2010 UN Mapping Report and described by some UN investigators as acts that, if proven in court, could constitute crimes against humanity or even acts of genocide.
Despite this evidence, France remains silent. It avoids acknowledging these crimes publicly, avoids criticising Kagame's human rights record, and avoids condemning Rwanda's ongoing abuses at home and abroad. The result is a one-sided narrative in which only one category of victims is recognised, while another—larger—population remains ignored and politically erased.
This silence has deeply disappointed many African observers. Across Francophone and non-Francophone Africa alike, people see France's unwillingness to speak about Hutu victims as a moral failure and a strategic mistake. They see a France that is afraid to defend universal human rights principles, afraid to confront Rwanda's abuses, and afraid to acknowledge the suffering of millions of Hutu civilians who were killed during the war, in the aftermath, and in the forests of Congo.
For many Africans, this selective morality undermines France's credibility. A country that refuses to recognise all victims, and that avoids condemning ongoing abuses because of political guilt, cannot present itself as a principled actor or a reliable partner. France's silence on Hutu victims is therefore not only a historical omission—it is a major factor in the erosion of French influence and trust across the African continent.
VI. France Responds with Aid, Apologies and Diplomatic Submission
Instead of contesting Rwanda's accusations or defending its own institutions, France responded with repeated gestures of humility.
Over the past two decades, France has extended billions in aid to Rwanda, including:
• direct development aid
• budgetary support
• debt relief
• infrastructure projects
• health and educational programmes
• security cooperation
• economic investments
The total exceeds €1 billion, making Rwanda one of the most generously supported African states relative to its size.
Presidents Sarkozy and Macron all visited Rwanda, bringing apologies or partial admissions of responsibility. Macron went the furthest, declaring that France bore "massive and overwhelming responsibility" for failing to prevent the genocide. In Kigali, this was celebrated as a diplomatic triumph.
At no point did France respond to Rwanda's hostility with firmness.
The imbalance became clear:
Rwanda attacks; France apologises.
Rwanda insults; France extends aid.
Rwanda undermines French interests; France reinforces cooperation.
VII. The Francophonie Paradox: Mushikiwabo's Appointment as Secretary-General
The most shocking diplomatic reversal occurred in 2018 when Louise Mushikiwabo—Rwanda's foreign minister and one of the most vocal critics of France—was appointed Secretary-General of the Organisation Internationale de la Francophonie (OIF).
This appointment was surreal for several reasons:
- Rwanda had abolished French as a national educational language.
- Rwanda had shifted decisively to the Anglophone world by joining the Commonwealth.
- Mushikiwabo had personally denounced French leaders for years.
- Rwanda's internal governance contradicted the Francophonie's stated human rights values.
- Several Francophone African countries objected to the appointment.
Yet Emmanuel Macron personally supported Mushikiwabo's candidacy, pressuring other Francophone states to accept it.
It was the ultimate demonstration of France's new attitude toward Rwanda:
The more Rwanda rejects French influence, the more France rewards Rwanda.
VIII. France's Strategic Paralysis: A Foreign Policy Trapped by Guilt
At the heart of this paradox lies the central thesis:
France's relationship with Rwanda is shaped by guilt—self-inflicted, politically exaggerated guilt that has become a trap. France cannot act rationally because it fears appearing immoral.
This guilt:
• paralyses French diplomacy
• prevents France from criticising Rwanda
• pushes France to overcompensate
• makes France predictable
• gives Rwanda enormous leverage
Rwanda understands perfectly that France fears moral accusations more than geopolitical threats. Kagame uses this to extract concessions, silence criticism, and obtain strategic advantages.
France's guilt has become a foreign policy handicap—a permanent weakness rooted in historical anxiety.
IX. Rwanda's Involvement in DRC: France's Ambiguous and Cowardly Silence
Nowhere is France's paralysis more visible than in its silence regarding Rwanda's involvement in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
The UN has repeatedly documented Rwanda's support to the M23 rebels.
The United States, United Kingdom and European Parliament have all expressed concern.
African governments—including South Africa, Tanzania, Burundi, Kenya and Angola—have criticized Rwanda's destabilization of eastern Congo.
And yet, France remains ambiguous.
French diplomats issue vague statements calling for "dialogue," "restraint," and "regional engagement." They refuse to name Rwanda directly. Even when France chairs UN Security Council discussions on the DRC, it avoids mentioning Kigali.
This silence is not accidental.
It is guilt.
It is fear.
It is political paralysis.
France knows that criticizing Rwanda risks triggering accusations of genocide denial or historical hypocrisy.
Thus, France prefers ambiguity—even at the cost of credibility and moral consistency.
X. Military Cooperation: Rwanda Protects TotalEnergies in Mozambique
The paradox deepens further with France's military and economic cooperation with Rwanda, especially in Mozambique.
When Islamist insurgents overran Cabo Delgado province in 2020–2021, threatening TotalEnergies' multi-billion-euro gas project, France needed a stabilizing force. Instead of deploying its own army or relying on Mozambican forces, Paris supported a Rwandan military intervention.
Rwandan troops now protect French energy installations.
Rwanda's army is effectively a subcontracted security provider for French multinational interests.
The implications are enormous:
• France is now dependent on Rwanda militarily.
• Rwanda's image as a "security partner" prevents France from criticizing its behaviour.
• Economic interests override moral and geopolitical considerations.
• France's silence on Congo is partly driven by fear of losing Rwandan military cooperation.
In other words:
France needs Rwanda more than Rwanda needs France.
XI. Kagame's Strategy: Reversing the Power Relationship
Paul Kagame's strategy is not accidental. It is calculated, deliberate and rooted in a sophisticated understanding of Western psychology.
He realized early that:
- Western guilt is a powerful tool.
- France is terrified of appearing immoral.
- Western institutions reward countries that present themselves as victims.
- The genocide narrative grants Rwanda diplomatic immunity.
- France needs Rwanda more than Rwanda needs France.
By blending victimhood narratives with geopolitical assertiveness, Kagame achieved what no other African leader has managed:
• He reversed the colonial relationship.
• He placed France in a subordinate emotional position.
• He transformed France into a partner that apologises before negotiating.
• He gained respect through confrontation, not submission.
In doing so, Kagame turned Rwanda into a regional power far larger than its size, population or economy would suggest.
XII. Implications: How France's Weakness Toward Rwanda Has Damaged Its Credibility Across Francophone Africa
France's submissive, confused and guilt-driven posture toward Rwanda has not only reshaped bilateral relations—it has profoundly damaged France's broader credibility in Africa, particularly among Francophone nations that traditionally formed the backbone of Françafrique. What is happening between France and Rwanda is not seen in isolation by African governments, political elites or civil societies. It is interpreted as a symbol of France's declining strategic coherence, moral fragility, and diminishing geopolitical influence.
For many African observers, France's inability to articulate a firm position toward Rwanda—despite Kigali's systematic humiliation of French institutions, its destabilising role in Congo, and its aggressive foreign policy—reveals a France that is no longer capable of defending its interests or upholding coherent regional principles. This perception has contributed to a wave of disillusionment, resentment and disengagement among other Francophone states.
1. France Lost the Image of a Strong, Coherent Power
France was historically perceived as a decisive actor in African affairs—sometimes too dominant, but never indecisive. Yet in its relationship with Rwanda, France appears paralysed, apologetic and emotionally trapped. African governments have observed:
• France afraid to speak openly
• France unable to draw red lines
• France apologising continuously
• France allowing a small country to dictate narratives
• France rewarding aggression with concessions
This contrasts sharply with France's confident interventions of the past. To many leaders, France's stance toward Rwanda signals the end of its geopolitical bravery and intellectual coherence in Africa.
2. Other Francophone States Interpreted France's Timidity as Weakness
Countries like Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger watched France's relationship with Rwanda closely. While each has its own political context, they all shared a growing perception that France:
• cannot defend its allies
• lacks strategic consistency
• is dominated by guilt and self-doubt
• will sacrifice long-term partnerships to please Western media
• has lost its moral and political compass
As a result, these countries began distancing themselves from France—not only for bilateral reasons but because France's Rwanda policy symbolised a deeper crisis of confidence.
3. The Collapse of Francophone Alliances: Mali, Burkina Faso, Niger
In the early 2020s, Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger—once pillars of France's Sahel strategy—cut military ties with France, expelled French forces, and embraced new alliances with Russia and other non-Western partners. While their decisions were driven by local political dynamics, the broader perception of French weakness influenced their calculations.
African leaders noticed that France could be:
• insulted without consequence
• manipulated through guilt
• pressured into silence
• deprived of influence by small or medium powers
This encouraged Sahel leaders to test France and eventually break away from it entirely. France's submissive behaviour toward Rwanda signaled that Paris lacked the will or confidence to stand firmly as a global power.
4. Francophone Public Opinion Turned Against France
In many Francophone countries, public opinion has drastically shifted. France is no longer viewed as a reliable partner. Citizens see:
• France humiliated by Rwanda
• France unable to protect Francophone values
• France losing diplomatic battles
• France failing to defend French-speaking Africans
• France celebrating Rwanda—now an English-speaking country—while ignoring Francophone concerns
This appears absurd and insulting to many Francophone populations. How can France claim to defend Francophone culture when it rewards a country that abolished French and attacks Francophonie?
The perception is that France is not loyal to its own allies, values or partners.
5. The Broader Loss of Influence: France No Longer Listened To
France's diplomatic weight has drastically diminished in Africa. Today, African leaders listen more to:
• Russia
• China
• Turkey
• Gulf countries
• The United States
• Regional African alliances
than to France.
France's inability to speak clearly about Rwanda's role in the DRC, especially when Congo is a Francophone giant, created a sense of betrayal not only in Kinshasa but across French-speaking Africa. For many African elites:
If France cannot defend Congo against Rwandan aggression, France is useless as a geopolitical ally.
France has
• lost its role as guarantor
• lost its respect
• lost its image of firmness
• lost its position as a major power in Africa
This is directly connected to the Rwanda paradox: France appears strong only where it should not intervene and weak where it should.
6. A Weak France Accelerated Africa's Shift Toward Multipolarity
France's ambiguous submissiveness toward Rwanda accelerated Africa's pivot away from Western powers. African states interpreted France's behaviour as a sign that Europe is internally divided, morally fragile, and psychologically unstable in post-colonial relationships.
This created space for:
• Russia's return to Francophone Africa
• China's expansion in infrastructure and diplomacy
• Turkey's entry into the Sahel
• Gulf states' influence in the Horn of Africa
• New South-South alliances among African nations
France, once the centre of gravity in many regions, is now increasingly irrelevant.
7. The Rwandan Case Has Become a "Warning Example"
African governments now study the Rwanda–France case as a political lesson:
If you challenge France hard enough, France bends.
If you denounce France loudly enough, France apologises.
If you threaten France's moral image, France retreats.
Instead of gaining respect through cooperation, France unintentionally showed that confrontation is more effective. This has fundamentally damaged France's authority.
Conclusion: The Rwanda–France Paradox as a Case Study in Power, Guilt and Geopolitical Manipulation
The France–Rwanda relationship challenges traditional concepts of post-colonial diplomacy. It shows that:
Power is not only military or economic.
Power is psychological.
Power is moral.
Power is the ability to trigger guilt in your opponent.
Rwanda understood this better than any African country.
By aggressively attacking France, dismantling its influence, rewriting historical narratives, and exploiting French guilt, Rwanda transformed France from a former colonial power into a submissive, apologetic partner.
The paradox remains:
Rwanda insulted France, denigrated its leaders, destroyed its institutions, replaced its language, destabilised its regional allies, and yet France responded with money, political support, military cooperation and respect.
This is why Africans say:
"When you don't respect the French, they respect you."
Because France respects those who confront its guilt, not those who bow to its authority.
The consequences of France's behaviour toward Rwanda are far-reaching. Rwanda may be a small country, but it exposed France's vulnerabilities in ways that changed African geopolitics. France is no longer respected as a hard power, no longer seen as a reliable partner, and no longer treated as a decisive actor.
The disengagement of Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger from France is part of this broader collapse of confidence. Other Francophone countries—from Chad to the Central African Republic, from Senegal to the DRC—are increasingly distancing themselves as well.
The paradox remains:
France tried to gain moral credibility by pleasing Rwanda, but instead lost strategic credibility across all of Francophone Africa.
France believed that treating Rwanda with exaggerated humility would rehabilitate its global image.
Instead, it weakened its influence, lost allies, and accelerated its marginalisation in Africa.
REFERENCES
1. United Nations Reports
UN Group of Experts on the DRC
– United Nations Security Council (various years). Final Report of the Group of Experts on the Democratic Republic of Congo. New York: UN.
(Especially reports from 2012, 2013, 2020, 2022, 2023 detailing Rwanda–M23 links.)
UN Mapping Report
– United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (2010). Democratic Republic of the Congo, 1993–2003: Mapping Exercise Report. Geneva: OHCHR.
UN Security Council Resolutions & Debates on DRC and M23
– UNSC Verbatim Records, 2022–2024.
2. French Government Documents
The Duclert Report (controversial report)
– Duclert, V. et al. (2021). La France, le Rwanda et le génocide des Tutsi (1990–1994). Commission de recherche sur les archives françaises. Paris: Présidence de la République.
(The report itself.)
French Parliamentary Documents
– Assemblée Nationale (1998). Mission d'information parlementaire sur le Rwanda.
(France's earlier official inquiry.)
3. Key Academic Books and Scholarly Sources
– Melvern, L. (2000, 2004, 2010). A People Betrayed; Conspiracy to Murder; Intent to Deceive. London/New York.
– Prunier, G. (1995, 2009). The Rwanda Crisis: History of a Genocide; Africa's World War. London.
– Reyntjens, F. (2004, 2013). Rwanda, Politics of Genocide; Political Governance in Post-Genocide Rwanda. Cambridge.
– Stearns, J. (2011). Dancing in the Glory of Monsters. New York.
– Mamdani, M. (2001). When Victims Become Killers. Princeton.
– Lemarchand, R. (2009). The Dynamics of Violence in Central Africa. Philadelphia.
– Beswick, D. (2011). Rwanda, Military and Democracy in Post-Genocide Governance.
– Callamard, A. (2014). Human Rights Narratives in Post-Genocide Rwanda.
4. Rwanda–France Relations (scholarly & journalistic)
– Vidal, C. (2012–2021). Various articles on France–Rwanda relations in Le Monde, Jeune Afrique.
– Smith, D. (The Guardian). Multiple reports on France–Rwanda diplomatic tensions.
– Chris McGreal (The Guardian). Articles on France's role from 1994 to present.
– BBC News Africa. Extensive coverage of Rwanda–France tensions and Macron's visits.
– Human Rights Watch. Reports from 1994–2023.
– International Crisis Group. Rwanda and the Great Lakes reports.
5. Rwanda's Role in DRC and M23
– Stearns, J. (2022–2023). Congo Research Group, NYU.
– Human Rights Watch (2022, 2023). Reports on M23 abuses and Rwanda's involvement.
– International Crisis Group (2012–2024). Eastern Congo briefings.
– Amnesty International (2013–2023). Reports on Rwanda/M23 involvement.
6. France's Military Cooperation With Rwanda & TotalEnergies in Mozambique
– The Economist (2021–2023). Articles on Rwanda's intervention in Cabo Delgado.
– The Financial Times (2021–2023). Reports on TotalEnergies security in Mozambique.
– Al Jazeera (2021–2024). Coverage of Rwandan deployment to Mozambique.
– ISS Africa (Institute for Security Studies). Analyses of Rwanda's military projection.
7. Articles on Kagame, Realpolitik & Western Guilt
– Wrong, M. (2021). Do Not Disturb: The Story of a Political Murder… London.
– Reyntjens, F. (multiple articles 2010–2023). On Kagame's authoritarian governance.
– Straus, S. and Waldorf, L. (2020). Remaking Rwanda: State Building and Human Rights after Mass Violence.
8. French–African Relations & "Françafrique"
– Verschave, F. (2000). La Françafrique.
– Bayart, J.-F. (2009). The State in Africa: The Politics of the Belly.
– Chafer, T. (2002). The End of Empire in French West Africa.
– Marchal, R. (works on French policy in the Great Lakes).
9. Media & Investigations on the Duclert Report's Controversies
– Jeune Afrique (2021–2022). Critical analyses of the Duclert Report.
– Marianne (France), Le Figaro, Le Canard Enchaîné: articles questioning the political motivations.
– The Conversation academic critiques of Macron's approach and the report's omissions.
– Mediapart (2021–2022). Investigations about the report's biases and omissions.
Prepared par :
Sam Nkumi, Chris Thomson & Gilberte Bienvenue
Africa Context, London, UK
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