Genocide In The Rwandan Genocide

1156 Words3 Pages

100 Days of Killing
War is where armies of opposing sides kill each other over political or religious reasons. Genocide is neither of these. Genocide is the killing of a certain group of people that is seen inferior and has no right to be on this earth. You saw this when Adolf Hitler deemed Jewish people of being inferior, and he was set of to kill them off by any means necessary. This was no different in Rwanda, Africa. This is where the Rwandan Genocide took place in 1994.
Before colonization in took place in Africa, the Hutu and Tutsi lived peacefully. There was a kingship and the Kings and Queens were Tutsis, and the Hutus were farmers. In the 19th and early 20th century Germany and Belgium started to divide the country. In 1933, Belgium produced racial I.D cards which favored the Tutsi (rwandanstories.org). They created a huge separation between the Hutu and Tutsis. They made the Hutus believe that Tutsis were foreigners and they needed to go back to their country. The Hutu overthrew the crown after the Tutsi king dies and killed many of the Tutsi. Many were forced to go in exile and migrated to other parts of Africa.
After many Tutsis migrated to other parts in Africa mainly to Uganda, the Tutsis acted on a counter attack on the Hutu. By 1963, the Hutu army killed about 10,000 Tutsi (rwadanstories.org). The persecution continues for years, back …show more content…

Even though there were no European forces in Africa, Africa was still being funded weapons. The United Nations didn’t want anything to do with a “country like that”. President Francois Mitterrand from France even went as far as saying, “In such countries, genocide is not too important."(Le Figaro, newspaper) With the death toll estimated to being 800,000 the UN Security Council send in forces and the capture Kigali, the capital city of Rwanda. The Hutu flee and the genocide

Open Document