That is a very difficult question. Genocide is a crime that creates a vast gulf in the community where it is perpetrated. We are not going to see Hutus and Tutsis communicate openly overnight. It is difficult to be among the survivors of the genocide, but it is even harder to belong to the group that committed the genocide, because people do not want to accept that their ethnic group committed a genocide. This reflects on them and attaches to them.
So long as the Hutus do not accept that there was a genocide in Rwanda, it is difficult to reach out a hand and meet somewhere along the way. The first step should be made by the other community, which should say: “We know you have lost your dear ones and we sympathise with you.” That would be the first step, but they have not made it yet, and I think I can say that they never will.