Women's Participation in the Rwandan Genocide: Mothers or Monsters?

Monday, March 1, 2010
Author: 
Nicole Hogg
Africa
Central Africa
Rwanda

The participation of women in the 1994 Rwandan genocide should be considered in the context of gender relations in pre-genocide Rwandan society. Many ‘ordinary' women were involved in the genocide but, overall, committed significantly fewer acts of overt violence than men. Owing to the indirect nature of women's crimes, combined with male ‘chivalry', women may be under- represented among those pursued for genociderelated crimes, despite the broad conception of complicity in Rwanda's Gacaca Law. Women in leadership positions played a particularly important role in the genocide, and gendered imagery, including of the ‘evil woman' or ‘monster', is often at play in their encounters with the law.

‘No women were involved in the killings … They were mad people; no women were involved. All women were in their homes.'

Female genocide suspect, Miyove prison

‘I believe that women are just as guilty of this genocide as men.'

Female genocide suspect, Kigali Central Prison


Nicole Hogg is a former legal adviser for the International Committee of the Red Cross in the Pacific region. She has a Master of Laws from McGill University, for which her thesis research involved extensive interviews in Rwanda, including with 71 detained female genocide suspects.

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Women's Participation in the Rwandan Genocide, Hogg, March 2010