— Mohamed Hamdan Daglo (@GeneralDagllo) January 6, 2024
"Today I visited the Genocide Memorial Museum in the Rwandan capital, Kigali. It is one of the most important landmarks in human history, as it bears witness to an era of wounds and tragedies that Rwanda experienced during which it lost hundreds of thousands of victims due to racism, hatred, and attempts to monopolize power by force and commandments over the people.
The Rwandans alone faced their problems with courage and developed radical solutions to them through the experience of (kajaja), which is similar to (judiya) in Sudan. This practice established the principles of justice and transitional justice in society, achieved the concept of non-impunity, and changed the course of its history from division to unity, from hatred to love, and from war. To peace and sustainable development.
We, as Sudanese, must learn from Rwanda. The war that our country is witnessing today must be the last war, and we must work to create a just and sustainable peace for ourselves and for the future of our coming generations.
We must learn from the experiences of others and draw with our own hands the path that leads us to safety."