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Rwanda genocide survivor burnt to death by gang

KIGALI
Thu May 15, 2008 11:04am EDT
Photographs of some victims of the Rwandan genocide are hung on a gallery wall during a visit by U.S. President George W. Bush and first lady Laura Bush to the Kigali Memorial Centre in Kigali, Rwanda, February 19, 2008. A 90-year-old Rwandan genocide survivor has been stabbed and burnt to death by a gang that included four assailants who had confessed to taking part in the 1994 slaughter, a body representing genocide survivors said on Thursday. REUTERS/Jason Reed

KIGALI (Reuters) - A 90-year-old Rwandan genocide survivor has been stabbed and burnt to death by a gang that included four assailants who had confessed to taking part in the 1994 slaughter, a body representing genocide survivors said on Thursday.

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Generosa Mukanyonga, a widow who lost her husband and children during the 1994 killings, was murdered in retribution for her petition for compensation, Benoit Kaboyi, executive secretary of the Ibuka group, said.

She had sought compensation from her attackers for damage to her property during the genocide in which 800,000 minority Tutsis and moderate Hutus were killed within 100 days.

Since January, 12 genocide survivors have been murdered -- almost equal to the number of those killed in 2007.

"It's increasingly becoming a nightmare for genocide survivors," Kaboyi told Reuters. "This old woman was first stabbed and before she could die, she was locked in her house which was set on fire."

Police said they had arrested some suspects in the case.

Rwanda commemorated the 14th anniversary of the genocide last month.

Many survivors live alongside those who had been convicted, jailed and then released from prison for killing their families. Many say they live in fear for their security.

"It has almost become like terrorism. Since 1994, we have been talking and talking about security of survivors," Kaboyi said. "It's high time the government re-designed its security measures."

Genocide survivors have pushed for reparations though the government insists it has limited resources to compensate them. The Rwandan government allocates 5 percent of its national budget to the survivors' welfare, a sum they deem too small to cater for their needs.

(Reporting by Arthur Asiimwe; Editing by Stephen Weeks)

(For full Reuters Africa coverage and to have your say on the top issues, visit: africa.reuters.com/)



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