Wednesday, June 03, 2026

 

Stop Weaponizing Everything!!!

by | Jun 3, 2026| Antiwar.com

Jan Marco Müller, the European Commission official who drafted the EU’s new science diplomacy framework, just said the quiet part out loud: “Science diplomacy is not about being nice to each other.”

Yes, it is, dumbass. That was the whole point.

For centuries, science diplomacy worked precisely because it allowed ordinary human beings to humanize one another on neutral ground while governments were busy failing.

My good friend, Norman Neureiter, former science advisor to the Secretary of State, defined science diplomacy as “an intentional effort to engage with other countries where the relationship is not good otherwise. The science allows you to deal with non-sensitive issues that both sides can work on together for the good of all.”

That was true for science. It was true for sports. It was true for music, academia, medicine, and cultural exchange more broadly. These were spaces where ordinary people from hostile societies could interact as human beings rather than abstractions, propaganda categories, or geopolitical chess pieces.

During the Peloponnesian War, Greek city-states suspended hostilities during the Olympic truce (ἐκεχειρία) so athletes could compete together despite ongoing conflict. During the Cold War, Soviet and American scientists collaborated through the WHO to eradicate smallpox because viruses, unlike diplomats, do not care about ideology. Apollo-Soyuz demonstrated that rival superpowers could cooperate in space even while pointing nuclear weapons at each other on Earth. The 1972 Summit Series between Canada and the Soviet Union became more than hockey. Millions of ordinary people on both sides suddenly saw the “enemy” as talented, emotional, funny, proud, exhausted, flawed, and recognizably human.

Even music mattered. In 1987, while the Cold War was still very real, my undergrad’s Peabody Conservatory Symphony Orchestra went to Moscow and Leningrad. The orchestra did not solve geopolitics, but simply engaged with Soviet music students, argued about phrasing, drank together, traded jokes, and discovered that the terrifying enemy looked remarkably like us.

In the 1950s, at the height of McCarthyism and Stalinism, Soviet scholars were welcomed at Columbia University. One of them was Alexander Yakovlev, who later became one of the principal intellectual architects of glasnost and perestroika under Gorbachev – a transformation I wrote about in my earlier piece, “The Marketplace of Ideas Works Only If We Leave the Doors Open.”

Today we do the opposite. We close Confucius Institutes, crack down on foreign funding, and impose severe student visa restrictions out of fear of foreign government influence. Yet at the very same time, we are dramatically expanding U.S. government control over science and education, allowing political appointees to override peer review, giving agencies the power to terminate grants at any time if they no longer serve current political priorities, and restricting collaborations and publishing with foreign scientists.

All of it reflects the same underlying assumption: that American students and scholars are apparently too naive or too fragile to encounter foreign propaganda without immediately succumbing to it.

We are terrified that foreigners might propagandize our students, while perfectly comfortable letting our own government dictate what science gets funded and who American researchers are allowed to work with. That is not confidence. It is insecurity masquerading as patriotism.

Governments distrust each other. People often do not – unless they are taught to.

Science is universal because reality is universal. The laws of physics do not recognize borders, sanctions regimes, diplomatic talking points, or government narratives. Gravity works the same way in Moscow, Pyongyang, Brussels, Tehran, Beijing, Doha, and Washington.

Music works the same way. Harmony, rhythm, resonance, breath, and acoustics are governed by physical laws no government controls. A brass quintet in Pyongyang tunes the same B-flat chord just as one does in New York. A trombonist in Vladivostok still argues about intonation exactly like one in Chicago.

Even hockey, despite endless arguments over rules, rink size, and fighting, still works because Canadians, Russians, Finns, Americans, Swedes, and Czechs all understand the same basic game the moment the puck drops.

These activities remind us that there are truths, standards, and forms of human connection that exist independently of politics.

Governments are deeply uncomfortable with that.

Now look at what governments have done to the same tools.

Europe terminated all science and research collaborations with Russia even before it closed its airspace or imposed economic sanctions in 2022. Russia and Belarus are now banned from the Olympics and IIHF hockey tournaments. Joint lunar missions were canceled the moment the invasion of Ukraine began. In 2017 the Trump administration banned all travel by U.S. passport holders to the DPRK — shutting down an academic exchange program between Columbia University and Kim Il Sung University, killing a music exchange program that took American musicians to Pyongyang to perform and teach masterclasses, and ending humanitarian aid programs aimed at addressing health and food insecurity problems. Broad sanctions and travel bans have strangled our Maracaibo Aging Project and other health and civil-society work that once survived societal collapse in Venezuela.

Washington elites enthusiastically cheer for Putin’s friend Alexander Ovechkin, the NHL’s all-time leading scorer, as long as he wears a Capitals jersey. Yet a team of Russian NHL all-stars is banned from the World Cup of Hockey because Finland and Sweden threaten to boycott if Russia is allowed to participate.

And the crackdown continues. The NIH continues to issue new notices treating any collaboration likely to produce foreign co-authorship as a reportable “foreign component.”

The Office of Management and Budget is finalizing sweeping rules that would prohibit federal funds from being used for collaborations with “covered foreign countries,” allow political appointees to override peer review, and give agencies the power to terminate grants at any time if they no longer align with current political priorities. The latest Federal Register proposal and the White House’s August 2025 action on federal grant-making make the direction unmistakable.

The ideology changes from country to country. The underlying assumption does not.

Whether the pressure comes from Brussels, Washington, Moscow, Beijing, or Pyongyang, the message is remarkably similar: science, education, culture, and human exchange must ultimately serve political priorities.

But that was never their purpose.

This is small-mindedness on a grand scale. They took the universality of science, sports, and music, the very activities that let ordinary people humanize each other when governments were at each other’s throats, and turned them into instruments of short-term foreign policy. In doing so, they negated the entire value of science diplomacy, sports diplomacy, music diplomacy, and academic exchange.

This linguistic sleight-of-hand is straight out of Orwell. They have literally Humpty-Dumpty’d the very word “science diplomacy.” As he wrote in “Politics and the English Language”: “Words like ‘democracy,’ ‘freedom,’ ‘justice’… have several different meanings which cannot be reconciled. It is almost universally felt that when we call something by one of these names we are praising it… The person who uses them has his own private definition, but allows his hearer to think he means something quite different.” That’s exactly what’s happening to “science diplomacy.”

The deeper truth is uglier: governments are deeply uncomfortable when ordinary people begin seeing designated adversaries as fully human rather than as abstractions, propaganda categories, or geopolitical threats.

Dennis Rodman playing basketball with Kim Jong Un didn’t “legitimize” the regime. Accordion diplomacy and orchestral performances of DPRK music didn’t erase North Korea’s human rights record. They simply created tiny, human cracks in the wall.

I’m not against governments holding each other accountable when their actions warrant it. But when governments decide that the neutral commons of human connection must be subordinated to the latest diplomatic objective, they destroy the one mechanism that repeatedly worked better than any “strategic tool” ever could.

Governments are supposed to serve society. Increasingly, however, they behave as though society exists to serve government.

Scientists become strategic assets. Athletes become propaganda tools. Musicians become messaging platforms. Students become security risks. Human beings become instruments.

That is a profound inversion of the proper relationship between citizen and state.

Scientists and universities must resist the growing demand that all research, collaboration, and intellectual exchange subordinate themselves to shifting political priorities.

As my colleague, Nobel Laureate Peter Agre of Johns Hopkins University, provocatively asked in the title of his recent memoir, “Can Scientists Succeed Where Politicians Fail?” Agre describes how he sat down for many hours of conversation about science with Cuban leader Fidel Castro, much as NBA legend Dennis Rodman and I conversed about sports with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.  That is the power of science and culture to build bridges to people and even leaders of rival nations, even when our governments seem constitutively unable to even pick up the phone and talk to each other.

Enough. Scientists, athletes, musicians, doctors, and everyone who values the neutral commons of human connection must actively refuse this attempt to nationalize science as a tool of foreign policy. We are not human bombs and bullets. Our work is not a weapon. Our job is to keep the bridges open, to keep humanizing each other, even – especially – when governments fail.

The sidewalk doesn’t have to be completely mined. We can still clear it. And we must.

They can keep their “strategic” science diplomacy. The rest of us will stick with the old-fashioned kind that actually worked – the kind that was, yes, about being nice to each other.

Joseph D. Terwilliger is Professor of Neurobiology at Columbia University Irving Medical Center, where his research focuses on natural experiments in human genetic epidemiology.  He is also active in science and sports diplomacy, having taught genetics at the Pyongyang University of Science and Technology, and accompanied Dennis Rodman on six “basketball diplomacy” trips to Asia since 2013.

 

Berlin theatre puts up public pool to protest decaying infrastructure

02.06.2026, dpa

Photo: Soeren Stache/dpa

Berlin's Volksbühne, one of the city's most acclaimed theatres, is set to put up a free public pool outside its premises this summer to protest against the lack of funding to improve the city's crumbling infrastructure, according to its new artistic director.

Matthias Lilienthal revealed the plans at the start of his tenure on Tuesday, which saw him succeed long-time Volksbühne artistic director René Pollesch, who suddenly passed away two years ago.

The 25-metre pool on Rosa Luxemburg Square outside the Volksbühne, which is located in Berlin's central Mitte district, will be available to the public between August and October, Lilienthal said, adding that a stall would also be set up to offer fries - a staple at German public pools.

He described the stunt as an opportunity to show that the Volksbühne considers it to be a theatrical event "when two people splash water at each other."

However, the main aim was to protest the decay of Berlin's infrastructure, including schools, public transport, universities and public pools, he said.

Berlin has long been notoriously short on public funding, with the capital lacking the strong industrial base boosting other German regions.

Over recent years, the city's many public pools have become a flashpoint of the issue, with many closed for extensive stretches due to slow renovation work.

“We are delighted that we are able to alleviate the shortage of outdoor swimming pools, at least a little, for two months,” said Lilienthal. 

The "Volksbad" pool will be open to the public "free of charge and without the need for identification," the theatre said in a press release.

Another controversy linked to Berlin's pools has arisen in recent years, with police repeatedly called to outdoor pools amid a rising number of brawls between guests.

Public operator Berliner Bäder-Betriebe responded by introducing ID checks at the pools in 2023, which drew criticism from pro-migrant activists, among others, who argued that the measure prevents undocumented people from accessing the pools.

 

Norway hails 'sensational' cargo found in 18th-century shipwreck

02.06.2026, dpa

The contents of an 18th-century shipwreck found in the Skagerrak strait between Norway and Denmark are "the best-preserved cargo of this kind ever found in Northern Europe," according to the Norwegian Directorate for Cultural Heritage.

Norwegian Environment Minister Andreas Bjelland Eriksen described the find, made by a Norwegian diver at a depth of 600 metres, as "sensational."

The find includes porcelain believed to be Chinese in origin, chandeliers, goblets, textiles, grain and crates thought to contain tea, herbs and medicines.

"Work is continuing, and the archaeologists are constantly making new finds," the authority said on Tuesday.

The chandelier fragments could be of German or English origin. "A brick from the galley bear the stamp of the Lübeck brickworks that was in operation from the 15th century up to 1772," it said.

"Shipwrecks found close to the coast are often destroyed or have been looted," Nina Refseth, director of the Norwegian cultural history foundation, said in a statement.

"Investigating a find in the open sea and at this depth allows us to look into a virtually untouched time capsule," Refseth said.

The first exhibits are to be displayed in the Norwegian Maritime Museum in Oslo later this month.

 

Meta loses appeal against strict EU rules for Messenger app

03.06.2026, dpa

The European Union's second-highest court confirmed an earlier decision to subject Meta's messaging app Messenger to strict EU rules for digital platforms.

The EU General Court in Luxembourg on Wednesday also annulled an already revoked designation for the shopping service Marketplace.

Parent company Meta challenged the 2023 decisions by the European Commission to designate Marketplace and Messenger as so-called "gatekeepers" under the EU's Digital Markets Act (DMA).

The DMA imposes specific obligations on companies that are considered important gateways for businesses to reach consumers to safeguard competition in digital markets.

In 2025, the commission revoked the designation for Marketplace as the required threshold for commercial users had not been met.

The court annulled the revoked designation of Marketplace as a gatekeeper, arguing the commission had wrongly assessed data and that its reasoning leading to the decision was "hypothetical and incomplete."

Regarding Messenger, the court sided with the commission and upheld the designation.

Both Meta and the commission may appeal against Wednesday’s ruling to the European Court of Justice, the EU’s highest court.

Next to Messenger, several other services provided by Meta are currently designated as gatekeepers. These include Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp and Meta Ads.

 

Germany struggling with tofu shortage amid rapid rise in demand

03.06.2026, DPA

Photo: Daniel Bockwoldt/dpa

German supermarkets are suffering from a shortage of tofu, with shelves remaining empty at many retailers due to supply bottlenecks and demand that has increased in recent years.

Stock availability remains limited, a spokesman for the Rewe Group, one of Germany's biggest supermarket chains, told dpa on Wednesday.

"One reason is the rapid rise in demand, which remains very high," he said.

In addition, several manufacturers are currently struggling to supply retailers due to capacity bottlenecks, with both own-brand and branded products affected, the spokesman said. 

And tofu lovers should not expect full shelves any time soon, with a full return to normal levels not expected until the end of the year, according to Rewe.

Other retailers also reported a rise in demand. Some products might be temporarily unavailable, a spokeswoman for the Kaufland supermarket chain said.

Taifun Tofu, a German company that makes organic tofu, has published a statement on the supply shortages on its website.

"Unfortunately, we have not been able to provide all products in the quantities recently," the company writes. "This was due [to] temporary difficulties within our production process, which resulted in a significant reduction of the amount of natural tofu, which is the basis of all our products."

"In order to continue fulfilling orders in recent weeks, we had to draw on our stock levels. These have been significantly reduced as a result, which is why products are not as readily available in retail outlets here and there."

 

EU Commission plans to ease debt rules for green energy expenses

03.06.2026, DPA

Photo: Sina Schuldt/dpa

The European Commission plans to give EU countries more budgetary leeway for investments in green energy infrastructure in a bid to ease the economic pressure from rising fuel costs.

Under the plans presented on Wednesday, capitals are to be allowed to take on additional debt to finance green energy projects without risking disciplinary measures for exceeding EU debt and deficit limits.

EU countries which use the euro as a common currency are obliged to keep their annual deficits below 3% of gross domestic product (GDP) and debt below 60% of GDP.

The proposal aims to reduce the European Union's dependence on imported fossil fuels and to make the bloc more resilient in the long term.

The EU's economy was weakened by soaring fuel prices after Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022 and again this year because of the blockade of the Strait of Hormuz.

The lucrative market behind viral fake news


Public debate is increasingly disrupted by viral misinformation circulating on social media. Behind this sensationalist content regularly lie actors driven by pure profit. To truly understand the spread of online misinformation, author and academic Carlos Diaz Ruiz suggests it must be analysed as the outcome of a market system in its own right.


Issued on: 02/06/2026 -
By:  The FRANCE 24 Observers/
Aurélia ABDELBOST


Behind viral misinformation content regularly lie actors driven by pure profit.
 © Observers



In December 2025, French President Emmanuel Macron revealed that an African head of state had contacted him, believing a coup d'état was under way in France. The confusion was caused by an AI-generated video posted on Facebook by a Burkinabe teen.

The creator of the video, which garnered more than ten million views, told French daily Le Monde that his sole motivation was to make money.

More recently, in late April, CBC News and Radio-Canada revealed that a network of disinformation YouTube channels campaigning for Alberta's independence was actually being run by creators based in the Netherlands.

To produce their sensationalist and misleading videos, the creators hired actors and used AI, all while keeping their own faces entirely off-camera. The network amassed 40 million views. Once again, their sole motivation appeared to be profit, driven by YouTube monetisation.

The market of misinformation

The proliferation of fake news on social media is driven by more than just actors with geopolitical or ideological agendas – sometimes, the motives are purely financial. Carlos Diaz Ruiz, author of “Market-Oriented Disinformation Research”, argues that to better combat fake news, we must view this ecosystem as a market "rather than an occasional aberration caused by some evil person out there".

“If we think about it as a system that makes money for a lot of actors, then it becomes much easier to fix.”


‘A system that rewards attention’

The social media ecosystem is designed in a way that pressures influencers to produce increasingly extreme content just to maintain their viewership – and their income – week after week.

“When we pay creators to come up with highly engaging content, we create a system that rewards attention,” Diaz Ruiz says. “And we know that this attention is driven either by sensational content, but also by anxiety and fear.”

In fact, publishing sensationalist or anxiety-inducing misinformation is actively rewarded by algorithms, according to a recent report by the SIMODS research project, which tracks online disinformation across major platforms.

For instance, the study estimates that a YouTube account that frequently posts false or misleading content receives 11 times more engagement than a credible source with the same subscriber count. On X, engagement is roughly ten times higher, and on Facebook, nine times higher. While Instagram and TikTok perform slightly better – with engagement multipliers of four and two, respectively – LinkedIn is the only platform that appears to avoid the trap.


Opaque distribution of advertisements

For influencers, every view, click, and interaction translates into more revenue from advertisers. “Most influencers don't make a lot of money, but a few influencers make a lot of money from that,” Diaz Ruiz says.

This attention economy is fueled by advertising, which drives platform profits.

“We call them ‘big tech’ because we view them as technology firms, a neutral term,” Diaz Ruiz says. “But if you actually study how they make money, they are advertising firms. They make money from advertising, and from brands, companies and people who use their services.”

On major platforms, advertisements are distributed automatically through ad networks such as Meta Ads, which serve as intermediaries.

Algorithms deliver these ads to user accounts based on targeting criteria such as location or age group. As a result, a legitimate brand's advertisement can end up on an account that matches the advertiser's target demographics but happens to spread misinformation. Diaz Ruiz says:


“You give money for social media advertising, and then it goes to some provocative, incendiary influencer. The influencer says, ‘I'm just putting content – free speech.’ The platform says, ‘I'm just a platform’, and the advertiser says, ‘I don't know where my money goes’. So no one is responsible in the end.”
A system benefiting platforms

In some cases, advertisers themselves are violating platform policies. According to Reuters, Meta anticipated that it would bring in roughly 10% of its total annual revenue – around $16 billion – from illicit ads and scams in late 2024.

“If 10% of your income comes from scam ads – not counting fraud and not counting all the other categories that we discussed before – we are talking about a non-insignificant amount of money that platforms benefit from,” Diaz Ruiz says. “Of course, they can always say that they did something against these scams, but they did not return the money.”


How can we regulate better?

To prevent ads from legitimate companies from ending up funding disinformation accounts, Diaz Ruiz calls for better regulation of the platform advertising market:

“If marketers had a duty of due diligence over where their money is going and what exactly they are funding, then they would be more cautious. We have done that with banks, for instance.”

This refers to “Know Your Customer” (KYC) regulations, which require banks to verify their clients' identities to prevent activities such as terrorist financing and money laundering.

“The idea is that the bank, even though it’s only a bank, has the responsibility to know where the money goes, who the client is, and what the purpose of this money is. We don't have that for digital advertising in any way,” Diaz Ruiz says.

This type of regulation, for instance, would establish traceability and hold digital players accountable.

This article has been translated from the original in French.
Japan keeps traditional samurai horse festival alive by adapting to climate change

For more than a millennium, Japan has celebrated its samurai heritage with armoured horseriders charging through the countryside during its annual Soma Nomaoi festival. Up until two years ago, the tradition was threatened by soaring summer temperatures brought on by climate change. Organisers have decided to adapt, relieving riders and horses alike by switching the event to the spring.

Issued on: 03/06/2026 


The thousand-year-old Japanese festival of Soma Nomaoi began as a way to train mounted warriors. © Yuichi Yamazaki, AFP

Japan's thousand-year-old samurai horse festival has survived wars, earthquakes and a nuclear disaster. Now it's battling a new challenge – climate change.

The Soma Nomaoi began as a way to train mounted warriors and it still looks the same a millennium later, with riders dressed in samurai armour competing in horseback events.

Until 2024, the festival took place at the height of Japan's gruelling summers, which had become so hot that riders and spectators were collapsing and horses dying of heatstroke.

That prompted organisers to switch the festival to the cooler temperatures of late May.

Records suggest that Soma Nomaoi has been held uninterrupted for at least the last 400 years. © Yuichi Yamazaki, AFP


Mitsukiyo Monma, who has been taking part in the event for 54 years, told AFP that the change had given the festival a new lease of life.

"You have to wear a kimono under the armour, which is not like going out in just a T-shirt in the summer," said the 69-year-old, adding that he needed medical attention on a day when the mercury was close to 40C.

"Your clothes would be so soaked that you could wring out the sweat," he said.

"When the festival moved to May, it was the first time I could drink hot coffee before going out."

Scientists say climate change is making extreme weather events more frequent and severe, and temperatures around the world have soared in recent years.

Japan is no exception. Last year, the country had its hottest summer since records began in 1898.

Temperatures rising to 40C and above have become so common that Japan's weather agency recently created an official designation for them, labelling them "cruelly hot" days.
'Truly a samurai'

Such conditions are hardly ideal for the Soma Nomaoi, where participants compete on horseback in samurai armour weighing around 25 kg.

The main event starts with races around a flat, oval track, with riders carrying giant flags on their backs.

The festival used to take place at the height of summer, with riders and spectators collapsing in the heat. © Philip Fong, AFP


Hundreds of riders then gather in a large grass field and compete to grab coloured flags that drift to the ground after being fired high into the air.

On the last of the festival's three days, participants try to grab wild horses with their bare hands and offer them to the gods.

The action is fast and furious, and Monma says it is serious business for the riders taking part.

"I feel like I've truly become a samurai," he said.

"I feel more courageous, and on the day itself, my whole body and mind tighten."

The Soma Nomaoi takes place around Minamisoma, almost 300 kilometres north of Tokyo.

It started around 1,000 years ago and records suggest it has been held uninterrupted for at least the last 400 years.

Mitsukiyo Monma has taken part in the Soma Nomaoi for 54 years. 
© Yuichi Yamazaki, AFP


The festivities kept going even in the aftermath of a 2011 earthquake and tsunami that left over 18,000 people dead or missing and caused a devastating meltdown at the Fukushima nuclear plant.

Fumihiko Futakami, director of the Minamisoma City Museum, says the Soma Nomaoi was a source of comfort when he was evacuated to Tokyo after the disaster.

"Even for people who have left here and now live elsewhere, when they think of their hometown, they think of mounted warriors," he said.

"It's the identity of our town."


Uncertain future

The festival's warrior roots meant only samurai could take part until the feudal system was abolished in the late 19th century.

Women were admitted after World War II, and festival veteran Monma fulfilled a lifelong dream when his two granddaughters joined him for this year's event.

Organisers have switched the Soma Nomaoi festival to the cooler temperatures of late May. © Yuichi Yamazaki, AFP


It took place under cloudy skies, with the temperature hovering around a pleasant 18C.

There was little chance of a repeat of the 2023 Soma Nomaoi, when more than 100 horses and dozens of people needed treatment for heatstroke, and two animals died.

"There isn't much shade anywhere, so I think this is the most comfortable temperature for everyone," said 25-year-old Haruto Inoue, who was visiting from nearby Tochigi to watch the festival for the first time.

"They look so cool in their samurai gear, racing through the mud and giving it everything they've got."

Anyone can participate in the Soma Nomaoi, but owning or hiring a horse is not cheap.

The number of participants is steadily declining, and Japan's ageing population is a major factor.

With Japan's ageing population, Soma Nomaoi has seen the number of participants decline and its future is uncertain. © Yuichi Yamazaki, AFP


Monma worries that the festival might not survive another 100 years unless organisers can come up with solutions.

Museum director Futakami believes moving it away from the punishing summer heat has been a good start.

"The horses are livelier and the participants aren't so exhausted that they can barely move the next day," he said.

"I think most people would say it's been a good thing."
Macron unveils Rwanda genocide memorial in Paris, marking 'quest for truth'


French President ⁠Emmanuel Macron and ​his Rwandan counterpart Paul Kagame on Tuesday inaugurated a ​memorial in Paris honouring the victims of the 1994 genocide. Unveiling the installation on the banks of the Seine, Macron said the monument marked "the culmination of a long and patient quest for truth" in confronting France's failure to heed warnings of the impending massacres more than 30 years ago.


Issued on: 02/06/2026 
By: FRANCE 24

Rwandan President Paul Kagame and French President Emmanuel Macron inaugurate a monument in Paris honouring the victims of the Rwandan genocide on June 2, 2026.
 © Sarah Meyssonnier, AFP
03:34


President Emmanuel Macron on Tuesday hailed France's "unprecedented" rapprochement with Rwanda as he unveiled a monument to victims of the east African country's 1994 genocide in the presence of Rwandan leader Paul Kagame.

The monument on the banks of the Seine river in the heart of Paris is part of France's efforts to acknowledge its role in one of the 20th century's worst atrocities.

"An unprecedented reconciliation has emerged between Rwanda and France," said Macron, adding that the memorial was "the culmination of a long and patient quest for truth".

"This monument, while it is an achievement, is not an end. It is a milestone on a path we have opened," he added.


In a historic speech in Kigali in 2021, Macron acknowledged France's failure to heed warnings of impending massacres in Rwanda.

Macron has said Paris and its Western and African allies did not have the will to halt the genocide, in which an estimated 800,000 people were slaughtered, mostly ethnic Tutsis.

But he has stopped short of issuing a formal apology.

Speaking at the ceremony, Kagame hailed France's efforts to assume its share of responsibility, and praised Macron for his "courage and humanity".

"France was not alone in falling short, far from it," said Kagame, who had long accused France of "complicity".

"Many other countries did so as well, but none has gone as far as France in setting the record straight and accepting its part in the tragedy.

"Confronting historical responsibilities requires real courage because it generates a fierce opposition by those with a case to answer," he said.

The monument, dubbed "L'Archive" (The Archive), is designed by Grada Kilomba, a Berlin-based Portuguese artist.

It consists of two black brass steles and bears an engraved tribute to the hundreds of thousands of men, women and children massacred between April and July 1994.

"Here, like an archive, rest the voices and words, the memories and experiences, the feelings and hopes of the victims and the survivors," it reads.


© France 24
05:45


'Abandonment'

A survivor, speaking in a trembling voice, recounted the days of April 1994, when her family was massacred. She herself narrowly escaped and was evacuated to France, seriously injured, at the age of 16.

Jeanne Uwimbabazi spoke of the "abandonment" by UN peacekeepers, saying they had left behind terrified Tutsi sheltering in a school surrounded by ethnic Hutu militias, even though "their mere presence would have been enough to protect us".

Franco-Rwandan musician and writer Gael Faye, speaking on the sidelines of the ceremony, said: "We must strengthen this work of remembrance, because we never know who might come to power or how official narratives might change."

The assassination of Rwanda's Hutu President Juvenal Habyarimana on April 6, 1994, when his plane was shot down over Kigali, triggered a rampage by Hutu extremists.

At the time, France had been a long-standing backer of Rwanda's Hutu-dominated government, leading to decades of tensions between the two countries, including a break in diplomatic ties between 2006 and 2009.

A commission set up by Macron and led by historian Vincent Duclert concluded in 2021 that there had been a "failure" on the part of France under president François Mitterrand, while adding there was no evidence Paris was complicit in the killings.

Duclert said the unveiling of the monument was a "powerful" step.

"The genocide against the Tutsi is now fully part of France's public history," he said.

The French courts, acting on the principle of universal jurisdiction to try the most serious crimes committed worldwide, have convicted several Rwandans for their part in the massacre.


In May, France's judiciary ordered the resumption of an almost two-decade investigation into accusations that Habyarimana's widow, who has lived in France since 1998, was involved in the genocide.

(FRANCE 24 with AFP)