Rwanda: In Brief (CRS Report for Congress)
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Release Date |
Revised Feb. 23, 2021 |
Report Number |
R44402 |
Report Type |
Report |
Authors |
Arieff, Alexis;Terrell, Katherine Z. |
Source Agency |
Congressional Research Service |
Older Revisions |
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Summary:
Rwanda
, a small landlocked country in central Africa’s Great Lakes region,
has
become
known
for its rapid development
gains in the wake of the 1994 genocide, in which some 800,000 people
were killed.
Since then, efforts by t
he
Rwandan Patriotic Front
-
led government
to
improve
health
outcomes
, boost agricultural output, promote investment,
and increase women’s participation in
politics have
been lauded internationally
. Yet,
analysts
debate whether Rwanda’s authoritarian
political system
—
and
its government’s
periodic support for rebel movements in neighboring
countries
—
could jeopardize this p
rogress in the future, or undermine the case for donor support.
President
Paul
Kagame
, in office since 2000,
won reelection to a
new
seven
-
year term in August
2017 with
nearly 99
% of the vote
, after a
new constitution adopted
in 2015 carved out an
exceptio
n to term limits for
him
.
His
overwhelming
margin of
victory
was interpreted by some
observers
as reflecting
popular support
for
the president’s
efforts to stabilize and transform
Rwandan society
, while others
view
ed
it as the product of a political system
that involves
tight
constraints on opposition activity
and close government scrutiny of citizen behavior
.
In response
to
external criticism of Rwanda’s political system and human rights record,
Rwandan officials
,
including Kagame,
have
often
assert
ed
that
some
restrictions on civil and political rights are
needed to prevent the return of ethnic violence.
The United States and Rwanda have cultivated close ties since the 1990s, underpinned by U.S.
development aid and support for Rwanda’s
participation
in international peacekeeping
missions
.
Congre
ss has helped shape U.S. engagement
through the aid appropriations process, other
legislative initiatives, oversight activities, and Member
outreach to Rwandan officials
.
O
ver the
past decade, U.S. officials, i
ncluding
some
Members of Congress, have
continued to hail
Rwanda’s development and peacekeeping record while voicing
growing
criticism of
the
government’s human rights record
and
its
role in regional conflicts.
Congress has
notably
placed
restrictions on c
ertain types of U.S. military aid if Rwanda is found to be supporting rebel groups
in neighboring countries.
The Obama Administration periodically applied such restrictions, and
others under separate child soldiers legislation, citing Rwandan support for r
ebels in the
Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and Burundi.
Trump Administration officials have
continued to pair
support for U.S.
-
Rwanda partnership on
shared objectives
with
statements of
concern
regarding
political
conditions
with
in
Rwanda
.
U.S.
interest in partnering with Rwanda on Africa
-
wide initiatives may increase in 2018 as President
Kagame assumes the
yearlong
rotating chairmanship of the African Union (AU). President Trump
met with President Kagame at the World Economic Forum in Davos
, Switzerland, in January
2018, after which
President Trump
expressed appreciation for U.S.
-
Rwandan economic ties,
Rwanda’s contributions to peacekeeping
,
and
Kagame’s pursuit of
AU institutional reforms.
In line with
its
proposals to decrease foreign aid worldwide,
the Administration’s
FY2018 aid
budget request
would
lower
annual
U.S.
bilatera
l aid to Rwanda from $159 million to
$105
million
(not including peacekeeping support)
.
T
he Administration
has also
initiated an out
-
of
-
cycle review of Rwanda’s eligibility for trade benefits
it receives
under the African Growth and
Opportunity Act (AGOA,
reauthorized under
P.L. 114
-
27
)
in response to
alleged market barriers
to U.S. exports resulting from
policies
in the East African Community
, to
which Rwanda
belongs