-
animosity toward the
Rwandophone immigrants. This
bitterness persisted beyond the
death of
Mukogabwe in 1930, a
juncture at
which Rwandophones,
having sought...
-
AfricaNews (June 16, 2022). "DRC:
Authorities decide to
fight "the hunt" for
Rwandophones". Africanews.
Archived from the
original on June 16, 2022. Retrieved...
- Lars-Christopher (2015). No
Mistaken Identity: Kinshasa's
Press and the
Rwandophone 'Other' (c. 1990-2005). Zürich: LIT Verlag. ISBN 9783643906434....
-
protected area.
Between the late 1930s and 1955, an
estimated 85,000
Rwandophone people were
moved to
nearby Masisi in
North Kivu. In 1934, the Institut...
- Nyanga, and Tembo,
collided with
those they
referred to as non-indigenous
Rwandophones,
predominantly Hutu.
Local ethnic militias were formed, and the violent...
-
claims to
fight for
democracy and
against the
purported invasion of
Rwandophone po****tions in the east of the
Democratic Republic of the Congo. Yakutumba...
- This
period witnessed political and
military elites,
predominantly Rwandophone Congolese,
acquiring vast land
concessions through semi-legal and often...
- no heirs. The
conflict escalated during the
First Congo War when the
Rwandophone-dominated AFDL
rebellion supported the
Butsitsi clan's
claim to chieftaincy...
- Lars-Christopher
Huening (March 2013). "Making use of the past: the
Rwandophone question and the 'Balkanisation of the Congo'".
Review of
African Political...
- the
Rwandan Government supports M23
politically and militarily. All
Rwandophone politicians and
officers were
instructed to join M23, or
otherwise leave...