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Date Submitted: 03/23/2011 03:34 PM

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NRM REVOLUTION.

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History of the Great Lakes Region of Africa |

Written by Eric Kashambuzi on 2009-12-23 04:40 |

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Why this essay and why now?Some readers of my blog www.kashambuzi.com and my two books titled (1) Uganda’s Development Agenda in the 21st Century and Related Regional Issues, and (2) Rethinking Africa’s Development Model, in which I wrote about ethnic rivalries in the Great Lakes region, have asked me to condense the scattered information into one very brief and user-friendly essay for easy reference and wider readership. Many commentators feel that there has been an overemphasis on events of the 1994 Rwanda genocide in which moderate Hutus and Tutsis were murdered but ignored war crimes against Hutus that took place inside Rwanda and in eastern DRC during and after the genocide and subsequent human rights abuses. There is also a strong feeling that ethnic relations should be studied in a comprehensive, historical, impartial and regional context to be able to draw informed conclusions and make appropriate recommendations. For example, the 1972 genocide in Burundi in which Hutus were murdered by Tutsis which may have encouraged the 1994 genocide in Rwanda was totally ignored by the international community including then Organization of African Unity (OAU).This essay will therefore go beyond Rwanda and 1994. It will cover the Great Lakes region with a focus on Rwanda and southwest Uganda in a comprehensive and historical manner going as far back as the earliest settlements in the region; origins of the two ethnic groups (Bantu-speaking and Nilotic Luo-speaking people) who inhabit the region; and economic activities and lifestyles of each group before and after the two ethnic groups interacted with each other in the region. We shall use ethnic and not linguistic categorizations...