This is from counterpunch.org
April 24, 2006
Setting the Record Straight

Hotel Rwanda

By AMADOU DEME

A small convoy of refugees is confronted by a murderous mob at a roadblock in 
the widely praised film Hotel Rwanda. The UN troops protecting the convoy, led 
by a bold white commander, brandish their weapons. After some scuffling, 
threats and a few shots being fired, the refugee trucks are turned around and 
the passengers safely returned to the Hotel Rwanda. The hero upon whom the film 
is based has now written a book, An Ordinary Man, in which he describes that 
terrible incident in much the same way as the film.

But in fact the crisis did not happen as depicted in the film and book. And 
that troubles me because I was one of the UN soldiers with the convoy. Mr. 
Rusesabagina, as he acknowledges, was not there, though his wife and children 
were among the refugees.

The convoy was saved through tense but patient dialogue with leaders of the 
unruly roadblock. There is no question in my mind, or in the minds of those who 
served with me, that many could have died if anyone had fired a shot or said 
the wrong thing. At one point I said to a Tunisian sergeant manning a 50mm 
machine gun, "Don't start firing" and he answered "Don't worry captain; we're 
not crazy". The talking went on, the armed crowd calmed down, and the refugees 
were safely returned to the hotel from whence they had come. No fighting took 
place between army and militias to provide diversion as mentioned in 
Rusesabagina's book and the movie.

I wonder why the story has been changed and the truth hidden. A possible answer 
occurs to me: The man who confronted the angry crowd and did the most to save 
all our lives is known to Mr. Rusesabigina. His name is Georges Rutaganda. He 
is an old friend of Paul Rusesabagina and is portrayed as a villain in the film 
Hotel Rwanda. Sometimes the truth can be very awkward.

I know that Mr. Rutaganda came to that roadblock because I am the one who 
brought him there. The UN and Rwandan leaders had agreed that refugees from the 
hotel should be transferred to the rebel side of the battlefront. Many in the 
convoy were prominent individuals opposed to the government. The crowd at the 
roadblock were very close to the front lines and very agitated. When the mayor 
tried to speak to them they slashed tires on the trucks. In this atmosphere of 
confrontation I made the decision to try to locate Rutaganda, who I knew ran a 
business nearby and was the 2nd Vice President of the Interahamwe.

As we raced back to the roadblock I told him what the situation was. Then he 
joined with me in trying to convince the angry crowd to let us pass and not to 
harm anyone. Rutaganda met the same rage we had encountered, but he persisted 
and eventually got some of the apparent leaders to enter into a grudging 
dialogue. That crowd did not know or like Mr. Rutaganda. They saw him as 
traitor trying to help their enemies. What he did was very dangerous. The 
afternoon was growing dark, soon killers and looters would be in charge. Had he 
been the cynical brute as depicted in the film he would have turned away. 
Fortunately, for our UN mission and everybody at that barricade, Rutaganda is 
in fact a large, friendly, soft-spoken and intelligent man who saved the day.

It is interesting to me that establishing a dialogue and listening even to 
angry armed people is one of the ideas stressed in Rusesabagina's story as 
portrayed in the movie and the book. Paul should know and should respect that 
it was his old friend Georges who showed that skill on that afternoon in 
Kigali. Maybe it is possible they learned this together in the schools of the 
Seventh Day Adventists. Paul's wife and children were in our trucks. Paul was 
back at the Mille Collines Hotel and Georges was the one without a weapon 
facing the machetes and guns at the barricade. By listening and reasoning, he 
found among them the "cooler heads" and got the convoy released.

There are other details wrong in the Rusesabagina account. No Bangladeshi UN 
soldiers stood with their hands up. There were no Bangladeshi soldiers on that 
mission. The soldiers were Tunisians and Ghanaians, all under a Ghanaian 
commander and they behaved professionally.

"Truth and Reconciliation" is said to be part of the mandate of international 
justice. Averting our eyes from the truth because it is personally or 
politically awkward is bad for our collective conscience. Georges Rutaganda is 
today serving a life term for crimes against humanity. I would like to hope 
that Paul Rusesabagina would join me in acknowledging that on May 3rd, 1994, 
Georges Rutaganda risked his life to save refugees, including Paul's wife, at a 
roadblock in Kigali.

In the film, a UN officer resembling General Dallaire takes Georges' place as 
saviour ... using a gun. In fact, there were no white commanders there that day 
and General Dallaire was not even in Kigali but in Rwamagana.

If this can be done to Rutaganda in book and film with nary a word of 
objection, I think it is also possible that he is an innocent man, as he still 
maintains.

Amadou Deme was a Senegalese Army Officer who served in the intelligence team 
of the UN Mission for Rwanda from August 1993 to July 1994. To hear an 
interview with Amadou Deme on this question www.taylor-report.com March 13, 
2006.

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