Change
Immediately after the genocide it was not hard to find Hutus in refugee camps to which around 2 million had fled fearing retribution. In the refugee camps immediately after the genocide it was common to see Hutus admitted to taking part in the killings even going so far as to boast about it. About a year after this however it seemed many realized how risky it was to admit that it was a genocide they usually referred to it as a civil war and massacres. Even after the Rwanda Patriotic Front had seized Rwanda the genocide was not over as most of the Hutu leaders had fled to the refugee camps, the camps were later closed and the refugees returned to Rwanda. The Rwandan government later declared moratorium on arrests of suspects of genocidaires which let most of them go back into society. Only two years after the end of the genocide survivors and killers were once again forced to rejoin communal life side by side. The government also urged the welcoming of returning refugees back to Rwandan society. However some of the genocidaires took this opportunity to continue killing especially witnesses to their actions as a way to protect themselves. However, the country as a whole is struggling to rebuild after the genocide but is developing very quickly and hope to have a stronger society.