New Zealand Listener

Wrong Message

It has been 30 years since the Rwandan genocide, a mass murder carried out across the geographically tiny African nation over a period of 100 days, killing between 500,000 and one million civilians –the fastest genocide in history. In New Zealand, this anniversary was marked in a curious fashion with a social media campaign directed against a British journalist touring the country.

Michela Wrong, an award-winning African correspondent for Reuters, the Financial Times and BBC, covered the original 1994 massacres, in which extremists in the nation’s Hutu ethnic majority massacred members of the Tutsi minority, along with perceived Hutu moderates and collaborators. “The entire country smelled of carrion,” she recalls. She also documented the period of recovery and reconstruction after the genocide.

Then in 2021, Wrong published a book documenting the current Rwandan government’s policy of “trans-national repression”. Do Not Disturb: The Story of a Political Murder and an African Regime Gone Bad was about the persecution and assassination of critics and perceived enemies of the authoritarian government and its leader. The regime is not amused.

For more than 20 years, Rwanda has been ruled by Paul Kagame, a former military officer described by the as “the global elite’s favourite strongman”. Kagame is much celebrated for his nation’s rapid

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from New Zealand Listener

New Zealand Listener1 min read
Friday July 5
Season five! It seems to be going well. As with The Great British Bake Off, contestants can often make a career out of a win. “The show is such a springboard – that’s what I love about it,” Alan Carr told House Beautiful. “[2022 winner] Banjo Beale h
New Zealand Listener2 min read
Short Cuts
Can you really summarise a giant continent in 463 pages? Zeinab Badawi, a Sudanese-British journalist, travelled to more than 30 countries and conducted dozens of interviews for AN AFRICAN HISTORY OF AFRICA (WH Allen). It’s not an academic book, nor
New Zealand Listener1 min read
Monday July 1
Beyoncé’s eighth studio album Captain Carter seemed to cause a great deal of consternation among the country music establishment, for no other reason than she is a black woman who stepped out of her lane. But as this doco makes clear, she really didn

Related Books & Audiobooks