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NTRODUCTION

As we saw in Chapter 2, present-day gacaca is the result of years of dif­ficult argument in Rwandan society about the most appropriate social, legal and political responses to the backlog of genocide cases.

Since gacaca was codified and operational, it has become embedded within, and heavily reliant upon the success of, a complex process involving the transfer of detainees from prison to their home communities, where eventually they face gacaca trials. It is necessary therefore to explore the personal, emotional responses of the population to the provisional release of genocide suspects, which affect popular interpretations and perceptions of gacaca. This chapter and the rest of the book refer to what I call the �gacaca journey'. This journey comprises six phases: the imprisonment of genocide suspects; the release of selected suspects into eighteen ingando around Rwanda; suspects' three-month-long civic edu­cation in the camps; their release into their home communities; suspects' trials at gacaca; and finally, their sentencing and, in cases where they are found guilty of serious enough crimes, their return to prison and/ or participation in TIG. This is fundamentally the detainees' journey. However, it unavoidably affects the wider population, especially when detainees return to live among survivors in the same locations where they are accused of committing genocide crimes.

In this chapter, I provide a narrative of the entire gacaca journey, based on first-hand observations of key events during that period and interviews with participants. The journey is ongoing, as consecutive waves of detainees are released from prison to eventually face gacaca. The episodes in this chapter centre on interviews with three detainees whom I tracked through all stages of the gacaca journey and with their communities, recording changes over time in their views and inter­pretations of gacaca and its impact. My purpose here is to provide the narrative context within which gacaca operates and to lay the foun­dation for a more detailed analysis of gacaca in Chapters 5-11. This chapter begins with an overview of the first three phases of the gacaca journey. It then uses my interviews and field observations to describe the later stages.

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Source: Clark Phil. The Gacaca Courts, Post-Genocide Justice and Reconciliation in Rwanda: Justice without Lawyers. Cambridge University Press,2010. — 400 p.. 2010

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