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Honor Rwandans with pledge to end genocide

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  • Honor Rwandans with pledge to end genocide

    Minnesota Daily, MN
    April 2 2004

    Honor Rwandans with pledge to end genocide
    The greatest tragedy of the Rwandan genocide will always be how
    easily it could have been prevented.



    here will be no shortage of memorials next week to mark the 10-year
    anniversary of genocide in Rwanda. U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan
    has called on people across the world to mark April 7, the day the
    killing began in 1994, with a minute of silence. It is only right
    that the anniversary be marked with solemn memorials in honor of the
    800,000 who died. But those memorials will do little justice to the
    victims if they fail to unite the world around preventing the next
    genocide.
    The greatest tragedy of the Rwandan genocide will always be how
    easily it could have been prevented. The Hutu extremists who carried
    out their bloody plan were armed with little more than machetes and
    transistor radios. A modestly sized peacekeeping force might have
    disarmed many of the killers and limited the bloodshed to isolated
    pockets. Instead, Western governments clung to the fiction that what
    was happening in Rwanda was not genocide, but chaotic tribal
    violence. U.S. and French troops were dispatched to rescue U.S. and
    French civilians, while Rwandans were left to fend for themselves.

    Addressing a recent memorial conference in Rwanda, Annan reminded his
    listeners that the United Nations must meet the next genocide with
    resolve. While many procedural steps can be taken to build that
    resolve, including appointment of a special U.N. rapporteur on
    genocide, efforts must start with the five permanent members of the
    U.N. Security Council: the United States, Britain, France, Russia and
    China. In an age of increasing globalization, the countries seeking
    to police the world must realize that with power comes
    responsibility. Genocide in sub-Saharan Africa should not be more
    tolerated than ethnic cleansing in the Balkans or tyranny in Iraq.

    Rwanda is not the first genocide to be met with silence. In 1915 the
    world sat by idly as the Turks used the cover of World War I to
    massacre 1.5 million Armenians. Hitler recalled that silence on the
    eve of World War II and the Holocaust when he asked, `Who today still
    speaks of the massacre of the Armenians?' Building a global resolve
    to stop genocide is the best way to honor the dead and ensure that no
    one ever asks the same question about Rwandans.
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