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Major Stefan Stec


The 1994 genocide in Rwanda has claimed another victim with the death of Major Stefan Stec, Polish military officer and a peacekeeper with the United Nations Assistance Mission for Rwanda -- UNAMIR. Stec was a recipient of the Polish Cross of Merit for Bravery, awarded to him for exceptional courage in Rwanda, saving lives at risk to his own. He was personally thanked by Polish President Lech Walesa, a singular honour.

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Stec was tall, strong with fearsome energy. He went to Warsaw’s military academy at eighteen wanting to be a military scientist but it was the time of post Cold-War UN renaissance, and Stec volunteered for international service. He was accepted for training at the Polish peacekeeping centre in Kielce. His first UN mission was to Phnom Penh where most of his time was spent investigating traffic accidents for the UN Transitional Authority in Cambodia, (UNTAC). Then came Rwanda, a small and most ill-equipped mission. Described by optimistic politicians as “classic” peacekeeping it was intended to oversee a transition from dictatorship to democracy. Stec arrived in Rwanda in November 1993 and said how almost immediately UN soldiers called it Mission Impossible. The racism, the Hutu Power militia, the human rights abuses -- Rwanda was a powder-keg. At that time Stec remembered: “Genocide hung in the air”. But no one could ever have imagined the scale of what was to come.

At the first massacre site to be discovered by the peacekeepers at Gikondo on Saturday, April 9, Stec found a large pile of charred identity cards, all bearing the Tutsi designation. He filmed the bodies in the streets and believed he had evidence of genocide, the first UNAMIR officer to use the word. “But we were explicitly forbidden to use the word genocide in our correspondence to New York”, he said. Massacres like this would become commonplace.

There were an estimated 10,000 people being killed each day. Stec and four fellow officers created a Humanitarian Action Cell to coordinate and organise rescue teams. They devised a plan for the creation of secure zones, the co-ordination of relief agencies and protection of the population. But in New York the Security Council, at the instigation of the UK, had determined that UNAMIR be withdrawn leaving a “token force” to “appease public opinion” and to negotiate a ceasefire in the renewed civil war.

Stec believed stopping the killing was more important. The rescue and protect missions continued, each one posing a direct threat to the lives of UNAMIR soldiers. At one point five thousand people a day were dying for the want of food and water. The Council failed even to send supplies to the remaining peacekeepers. Stec wrote begging cables to New York. “We never got anything”, he said. Once he sent one line: "immediate help necessary". It was for the want of petrol, not courage, that more people were not saved. Stec said his loyalty to the UN was taxed beyond measure and he even thought that perhaps he should join the Rwandan Patriotic Front to try to stop the killing.

Stec left UNAMIR after the genocide was over and determined that the story of the failure over Rwanda be correctly understood, and he found his voice with students who were riveted by his direct experiences. His contribution at the Imperial War Museum, London, during the tenth commemoration, organised by the international student group Never Again, was forthright. “Everybody pretends”, he said. “The politicians pretend they don't know. The media pretend that they provide us with the truth”.

He made a home in The Hague and working in computer technology saved enough money to create The Amahoro Foundation, a charity to assist children in Rwanda, particularly orphans, to advance education and relieve poverty. It proved successful. There were no plush offices, no salaries, no costly four-by-four vehicles. The foundation had a website designed by Stec, its Chief Executive Officer, and relied on volunteers. One aim was “to connect people of good will” which Stefan certainly achieved. He continually proved his own maxim - so much can be achieved with so little.

The film Hotel Rwanda does not fully recognise the righteous stand and heroism of Stec and his fellow UN officers. It had been Stec who had stood in the lobby of the Hotel des Mille Collines and read the names of those who were to be evacuated to the airport. “I had a Schindler list of the people we were allowed to save”, he said, “only those with the right visas to enter Belgium”. A few blocks away, at the St. Famille church, 5,000 starving people were trapped. Every night militia came to kill. “We did nothing for them because no one there had any visas ….”. There were 91 such sites throughout the country, but only enough UNAMIR soldiers to stand guard at four of them.

Stec had been ill for several months. His devoted partner Heather Kilner was with him when he died.


Major Stefan Stec: Born Warsaw: November 11, 1964. Died in The Hague, September 29, 2005.

This article was written by Linda Melvern and published in the Independent on the 7th of October 2005


 
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