Genocide
Jetpak is Public
Created By: fluid
Last Modified: 02/20/06
Summary: ACT NOW! Stop the Killing; Darfur and information on other genocides

Rwanda after the genocide

Rwanda after the genocide

Summary: (click to enlarge)
From: http://www.yale.edu/gsp/images/rwanda_1995_lrg.jpg

Rwanda Before the Genocide. Mosaic of Landsat TM images of Rwanda from 1990. The country border is shown

Rwanda Before the Genocide. Mosaic of Landsat TM images of Rwanda from 1990. The country border is shown

Summary: (click to enlarge)
From: http://www.yale.edu/gsp/images/1990_rwanda_sml.jpg

The Genocide Convention was adopted by the United Nations General Assembly on 9 December 1948. The Convention entered into force on 12 January 1951. More than 130 nations have ratified the Genocide Convention and over 70 nations have made provisions for the punishment of genocide in domestic criminal law.


DARFUR:

History Of The Conflict Open warfare erupted in Darfur in early 2003 when the two loosely allied rebel groups, the Sudan Liberation Movement/Army (SLA) and the Justice and Equality Movement (JEM), attacked military installations. This was followed closely by peace agreements brokered by the United States to end the twenty-year-old civil war in the south of Sudan which allocated government positions and oil revenue to the rebels in the south. At that time rebels in Darfur, seeking an end to the region's chronic economic and political marginalization, also took up arms to protect their communities against a twenty-year campaign by government-backed militias recruited among groups of Arab extraction in Darfur and Chad. These "Janjaweed" militias have over the past year received government support to clear civilians from areas considered disloyal to the Sudanese government. Militia attacks and a scorched-earth government offensive has led to massive displacement, indiscriminate killings, looting and mass rape, all in infringement of the 1949 Geneva Convention that prohibits attacks on civilians. The war, which risks inflicting irreparable damage on a delicate ethnic balance of seven million people who are uniformly Muslim, is actually multiple intertwined conflicts. One is between government-aligned forces and rebels; a second entails indiscriminate attacks of the government-sponsored Janjaweed militia on civilians; and a third involves a struggle among Darfur communities themselves. Its implications go far beyond Darfur's borders. The war indirectly threatens the regimes in both Sudan and Chad and has the potential to inspire insurgencies in other parts of the country.






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