In
100 days - between April 6 and July 16, 1994 - an estimated 800,000
men, women and children were brutally killed in the obscure African
country of Rwanda. The victims - many horrifically hacked to death with
machetes - were Tutsi, and moderate Hutus who supported them.
One man was tasked by the United Nations with ensuring that peace was
maintained in Rwanda - Canadian Lieutenant General Roméo Dallaire.
But unsupported by U.N. headquarters and its Security Council far away
in New York, Dallaire and his handful of soldiers were incapable of
stopping the genocide.
After
ten years of mental torture, reliving the horrors daily and more than
once attempting suicide, Roméo Dallaire has poured out his soul
in an extraordinary book. Shake Hands With The Devil is a cri de coeur.
The General pulls no punches in his condemnation of top UN officials,
expedient Belgian policy makers and senior members of the Clinton administration
who chose to do nothing as Dallaire pleaded for reinforcements and revised
rules of engagement.
Dallaire is convinced that, with a few thousand more troops and a mandate
to act pre-emptively, he could have stopped the killings. His impotence,
at a time of extreme crisis, preys on his conscience still.
The experienced Canadian documentary production company, White Pine
Pictures, secured the documentary rights to General Dallaire’s
book and exclusive access to follow him during his first return trip
to Rwanda, in April 2004 - the 10th anniversary of the genocide. We
were there as he revisited the killing fields that haunt him.
Shake Hands With The Devil is the most powerful documentary produced
about the Rwandan genocide. Unflinching. Gut-wrenching. Challenging.
Hard-hitting. This is appointment television for viewers throughout
the world who care about human rights and international justice.