Tito Rutaremara
Chief Ombudsman, Government of Rwanda
Focus: Civil Service
Topics: Extending services to insecure or remote areas
Keywords: Rwanda, Rwandese Patriotic Front
Interviewer(s): David Hausman
Country of Reform: Rwanda
Location: Office of the Ombudsman, Kigali, Rwanda
Date: Wed May 26 2010
Abstract
Tito Rutaremara, chief ombudsman of Rwanda and former secretary-general of the Rwandese Patriotic Front, offers an account of his role first in building the rebel movement and then in restoring basic services to the country after the rebel victory in the war of 1994. As the civilian leader of the RPF between 1987 and 1993, Rutaremara led the training of the movement's “political cadres”—civilian members who were in charge of organizing Rwandan refugees in exile and then organizing the Rwandan population immediately after the war. The political cadres, trained in the bush in an ideology that emphasized Rwandan unity and participatory democracy, built the RPF by founding cells, each of which had an elected executive committee. The committees resolved basic disputes within cells and contributed to the recruitment of new members. Finding that this decentralized structure helped the RPF grow quickly, Rutaremara adopted it as a method of restoring order in Rwanda both in the so-called demilitarized zone established by the Arusha negotiations in the early 1990s and immediately after the war and genocide of 1994. Using the country’s existing administrative borders, RPF political cadres held elections for executive committees to bury bodies and coordinate the delivery of basic services such as health care and food.
Case Study: Government Through Mobilization: Restoring Order After Rwanda's 1994 Genocide

