Corruption among officials is not as widespread as among other governments in this part of Africa, thanks in part to a policy of zero-tolerance for graft.

ARE THERE TROUBLES ON THE HORIZON?

Though mostly peaceful, Rwanda has had troubled relations with its neighbors. Recently, tensions have flared with Congo, with the two countries’ leaders accusing one another of supporting various armed groups.

Congo claims Rwanda is backing M23 rebels, who are mostly Tutsi fighters based in a remote area of eastern Congo. The M23 rebellion has displaced hundreds of thousands in Congo’s North Kivu’s province in recent years. Rwanda says Congo’s military is recruiting Hutu men who took part in the 1994 massacres.

U.N. experts have cited “solid evidence” that members of Rwanda’s armed forces were conducting operations in eastern Congo in support of M23, and in February, amid a dramatic military build-up along the border, Washington urged Rwandan authorities to withdraw troops and missile systems from Congo.

Rwanda Genocide Anniversary Explainer© Provided by The Associated Press

In January, Burundi, whose troops are fighting alongside the Congolese military in eastern Congo, closed its border with Rwanda and started deporting Rwandans. This happened not long after Burundian President Evariste Ndayishimiye accused Rwanda of backing Congo-based rebels opposed to his government. Rwanda denies the allegation. 

Rwanda has also been in the news recently over a deal with Britain that would see migrants who cross the English Channel in small boats sent to Rwanda, where they would remain permanently. The plan has stalled amid legal challenges. In November, the U.K. Supreme Court ruled the plan was illegal, saying Rwanda is not a safe destination for asylum-seekers.

Rwanda Genocide Anniversary Explainer© Provided by The Associated Press
FILE - Rwandan refugees cross the bridge of Rumumo river which marks the border between Tanzania and Rwanda, Dec. 14, 1996. Hundreds of thousands of Rwandan refugees who fled their country after the 1994 civil war started their way towards Rwanda. (AP Photo/Ricardo Mazalan, File)© Provided by The Associated Press
FILE - Rwandan refugee children plead with Zairean soldiers to allow them across a bridge separating Rwanda and Zaire where their mothers had crossed moments earlier before the soldiers closed the border, in Zaire, now known as Congo, Aug. 20, 1994. (AP Photo/Jean-Marc Bouju, File)© Provided by The Associated Press
FILE - Some of the 334 inmates in a prison who are accused of committing war crimes and participating in the genocide, sit in the prison in Kibungo, Rwanda, Aug. 17, 1994. (AP Photo/Javier Bauluz, File)© Provided by The Associated Press
Rwanda Genocide Anniversary Explainer© Provided by The Associated Press
Rwanda Genocide Anniversary Explainer© Provided by The Associated Press
FILE - A Rwandan Hutu refugee child desperately tries to waken his mother from a diseased sleep in the Munigi camp outside Goma, in Zaire, now known as Congo, July 27, 1994. (AP Photo/Javier Bauluz, File)© Provided by The Associated Press

FILE - A young orphan, his legs amputated below the knee, rests on a foam cushion near his artificial limbs at an orphanage in Nyanza, about 35 miles southwest of the capital Kigali, Rwanda, June 9, 1994. (AP Photo/Jean-Marc Bouju, File)© Provided by The Associated Press
FILE - A young orphan, his legs amputated below the knee, rests on a foam cushion near his artificial limbs at an orphanage in Nyanza, about 35 miles southwest of the capital Kigali, Rwanda, June 9, 1994. (AP Photo/Jean-Marc Bouju, File)