Charles Onana
Charles Auguste Onana is a French-Cameroonian political scientist, investigative journalist, essayist, and publisher. In December 2024, he was convicted of genocide denial.
Education
A graduate of Sorbonne University, Onana obtained a Ph.D. in political science in 2017 from Jean Moulin University Lyon 3, with a doctoral thesis entitled Rwanda : l'opération Turquoise et la controverse médiatique .Rwandan genocide
Since 2002, Onana has published several books about the African Great Lakes region and the tragedies that have affected the four nations that border it: Burundi, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Uganda, and Rwanda, with particular emphasis on the 1994 Rwandan genocide.Onana has questioned the use of the term "genocide" in reference to the events that took place in Rwanda, and he has accused Paul Kagame of orchestrating the massacre of Tutsis and Hutus as well as the 6 April 1994 downing of the aircraft carrying Rwandan president Juvénal Habyarimana and Burundian president Cyprien Ntaryamira, a theory he details in his 2002 book Les Secrets du génocide rwandais : enquête sur les mystères d'un président. According to political scientist René Lemarchand, the book reveals few secrets and contains many biases.
In 2004, journalist Christophe Ayad published an article in the French daily Libération, in which he called Onana and the French-Canadian journalist Robin Philpot, who were invited to participate in an international conference on Rwanda at Sorbonne University, "denialists". The authors subsequently filed a defamation suit against Libération.
In 2005, Onana led a conference entitled "Silence on an attack: the scandal of the Rwandan genocide". He proceeded to investigate the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda and published a book on the topic the same year, containing information he supposedly obtained from the international jurist Carla Del Ponte.
Onana's 2009 essay "Ces tueurs tutsi au cœur de la tragédie congolaise" was cited by French historian of genocide Hélène Dumas in an article in which she notes Onana's racist accusations about Tutsi women and his validation of a supposed "plan for the conquest of the Great Lakes of Africa", a false narrative circulating since 1962.
In 2019, Onana published the book Rwanda, la vérité sur l'opération Turquoise, in which he declared that "the conspiracy theory of a Hutu regime planning a 'genocide' in Rwanda constitutes one of the biggest scams of the 20th century". In an article for the Fondation Jean-Jaurès think tank, academic Serge Dupuis calls the book an "investigation conducted exclusively to exonerate", very poorly supported by sources, and whose objective is "the pillorying of the RPF".
At an international conference held at the French Senate on 9 March 2020 on "60 years of instability in the Great Lakes region of Africa", Onana denounced the French-led 1994 Opération Turquoise and called out the crimes committed by the RPF during and after the genocide, as well as the inertia of the United Nations following the RPF's refusal of any humanitarian intervention in Rwanda.
Legal issues
In 2019, the International League Against Racism and Anti-Semitism filed a complaint against Onana for contesting crimes against humanity during a television interview about his book Rwanda, la vérité sur l'opération Turquoise.Onana was indicted in January 2022, following a complaint filed in 2020 by the non-governmental organizations Survie, International Federation for Human Rights, and Human Rights League for breach of freedom of expression in his denial of crimes against humanity in the book. He was put on trial in October 2024.
The rationale for the trial has been contested by two Nobel Peace Prize laureates, Denis Mukwege and Adolfo Pérez Esquivel.
On 4 October 2024, Onana filed a complaint against the current Rwandan head of state, Paul Kagame, with the Paris public prosecutor, following "public threats" made against him.
On 9 December 2024, Onana and his publishing director, Damien Serieyx, were found guilty by a Paris court of denying and downplaying the Rwandan genocide.
Other activities
Onana is the manager of Éditions Duboiris, the publishing house that has issued most of his books.He has written on the role and actions of African soldiers during the Second World War, on René Maran, on Josephine Baker and her involvement in counter-espionage on behalf of Charles de Gaulle from 1940, on the involvement of the charitable organization Zoé's Ark in the 2007 kidnapping of 103 minors in Chad, on the downfall of the former Ivorian president Laurent Gbagbo, on the diplomatic relations between France, Israel, and the PLO during the tenure of former French president François Mitterrand, and on Jean-Bédel Bokassa.
None of his books have been translated into English.