Photo Credit: Getty Images

French President Emmanuel Macron and Rwandan President Paul Kagame inaugurated a memorial in Paris on Tuesday to honor the victims of the 1994 genocide against the Tutsis in Rwanda. Macron stated that the monument places the tragedy "at the heart of our capital and our history." He added that the memorial represents the culmination of a long and painstaking effort to uncover the truth of the genocide. 

In May 2021, during a ​visit to Rwanda, Macron recognised his country’s responsibility ​in the Rwandan genocide and said he hoped for forgiveness, seeking to reset relations after years of Rwandan accusations that France ​was complicit in the 1994 slaughter of an ​estimated 800,000 people — mostly ethnic Tutsis. However, he stopped short ‌of ⁠issuing a formal apology.

This was after a commission established by Macron concluded in March 2021 that France had been blinded by its colonial attitude to events ​leading up to ​the genocide ⁠and bore a "serious and overwhelming" responsibility for failing to foresee the slaughter.

The memorial ​on the banks of the Seine ​river in ⁠the heart of Paris is named "L'Archive".

It was designed by Portuguese artist Grada Kilomba. It consists of ⁠two ​black steles and bears an engraved ​tribute to the hundreds of thousands of men, women, and children ​massacred between April and July 1994.

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