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Modern-day genocide

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Genocide in Rwanda April-July 1994 Many Tutsis ran to churches and missions to hide, thinking that they would be protected there. These became the sites of some of ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Modern-day genocide


1
Modern-day genocide
  • The past repeats itself

2
History of the word Genocide
  • In 1944, a Polish-Jewish lawyer named Raphael
    Lemkin coined the term genocide.
  • He took the Greek word geno (race or tribe) and
    combined it with the Latin word cide, which
    means killing.
  • On December 9th, 1948, the United Nations
    approved the Convention on the Prevention and
    Punishment of the Crime of Genocide.
  • The UN made it an international crime to commit
    genocide, with all of its member nations agreeing
    to undertake to prevent and punish the crime.

3
Definition of the word Genocide
  • Genocide is defined as any of the following acts
    committed with the intent to destroy, in whole or
    in part, a national, ethical, racial or religious
    group, as such
  • Killing members of the group
  • Causing serious bodily or mental harm to members
    of the group
  • Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions
    of life calculated to bring about its physical
    destruction in whole or in part
  • Imposing measures intending to prevent births in
    the group
  • Forcibly transferring children from the group to
    another group

4
CAMBODIA
5
Genocide in Cambodia 1975-1979
  • In 1975, Pol Pot, a radical communist leader,
    seized control of Cambodia and declared that this
    was year zero. He wanted to establish a society
    set in the past where farming the land was what
    everybody did to benefit the state.
  • The use of foreign languages was banned.
    Newspapers and television stations were shut
    down, radios and bicycles confiscated, and mail
    and telephone usage curtailed. Money was
    forbidden. All businesses were shuttered,
    religion banned, education halted, health care
    eliminated, and parental authority revoked.
  • He forced all people to evacuate the cities and
    work in the fields. As many as 20,000 people died
    in these evacuations.
  • The people were forced to work in these killing
    fields where they existed on one tin of rice per
    person every two days. Their workday began at 4
    am and ended at 10 pm, with only two small
    breaks. Many people died of malnutrition and
    overworking, as well as being shot by Pol Pots
    soldiers.

6
Genocide in Cambodia 1975-1979
  • Deadly purges were conducted to get rid of people
    from the old society, such as doctors, lawyers,
    teachers, police, the wealthy, monks, and former
    government officials.
  • Anyone suspected of disloyalty to Pol Pot was
    either shot or chopped to death with an ax.
  • What is rotten must be removed, was the slogan
    of Pol Pot.
  • Unsupervised gatherings of more than two people
    were forbidden young people were taken from
    their parents and forced to marry those they had
    never met.
  • 212,000 Chinese were murdered, and Muslims were
    forced to eat pork or be shot.
  • In 1979, Vietnam invaded and took Pol Pot out of
    power, but not before the death toll in Cambodia
    reached over 2,000,000 people.

7
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8
BOSNIA
9
Genocide in Bosnia 1992-1995
  • In April 1992, Bosnia declared themselves to be
    an independent country from Yugoslavia.
  • The president of Yugoslavia, Slobodan Milosevic,
    who was Serbian, attacked Bosnia, which was made
    up of mostly Muslims, who the Serbs viewed as
    ethnically inferior.
  • In the capital of Sarajevo, Serbian snipers
    targeted innocent civilians, including children
    (3, 500).
  • While the UN instructed its troops to do nothing,
    the Serbs rounded up Muslims, put the men and
    boys into makeshift concentration camps, and
    raped the women and girls.
  • President Bill Clinton eventually brokered a
    peace agreement in 1995, but the Serbs broke it
    when they captured UN troops and forced them to
    watch as they selected and slaughtered 8,000 men
    and boys between the ages of twelve and sixty and
    raped mass numbers of females.
  • In August of 1995, NATO stepped in and ended the
    conflict by bombing the Serbs, but not until the
    death toll in Bosnia reached 200,000 Muslims
    killed, 20,000 missing, and more than 2,000,000
    displaced.

10
Srebrenica Massacre in Bosnia (http//koz.vianet.c
a/boshis112.htm)
11
RWANDA
12
Genocide in Rwanda April-July 1994
  • The two main ethnic groups in Rwanda are the Hutu
    and the Tutsi. The Tutsi ruled until 1962, even
    though they only comprised ten percent of the
    population.
  • The Hutu and the Tutsi agreed to share power in
    1990 after a conflict. However, the Hutu despised
    sharing power with the Tutsis and when the
    President of the country tried to conduct peace
    talks with the Tutsis, they shot his plane down.
  • This began a systematic killing campaign where
    they killed all Tutsi leaders and set the Hutu
    population on a mission to rape and kill all
    Tutsi people, regardless of age, usually with
    machetes.
  • The UN had troops in Rwanda but forbid them to do
    anything to help the Tutsis. Their only function
    was to get all of the foreign diplomats out the
    country.
  • On April 21st, the UN voted to abandon Rwanda and
    pulled out all but 200 troops. Hundreds of
    thousands of people had already been killed.
  • Once the UN pulled out, the killings increased in
    number and speed. The radio system in Rwanda was
    used to broadcast propaganda and point out where
    people were hiding.

13
Genocide in Rwanda April-July 1994
  • Many Tutsis ran to churches and missions to hide,
    thinking that they would be protected there.
    These became the sites of some of the worst
    massacres because they were trapped.
  • In many local villages, Hutus were forced to kill
    their Tutsi neighbors or risk death for
    themselves and their families. They also forced
    Tutsis to kill their own families.
  • By mid-May, over 500,000 Tutsis had been
    murdered. The UN, under media pressure, agreed to
    send up to 5,000 troops to Rwanda, but never sent
    them in time to stop the massacre.
  • The butchering did not stop until July of 1994
    when 200,000 Tutsis from neighboring countries
    invaded and attacked Hutu forces, stopping the
    genocide.
  • The total death toll ended at 800,000 people.

14
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15
DARFUR
16
Genocide in Darfur 2003-present
  • Since 2003, the government of Sudan has sent
    their soldiers and their allies, the Janjaweed to
    fight rebels in the western region of Darfur.
  • The government has sent the Janjaweed to attack
    civilians in this region who are the same ethnic
    group as the rebels (they have darker skin than
    the main ethnic groups in the Sudan).
  • Janjaweed means a man with a gun on a horse.
    They are vicious soldiers allied with the
    government, who hires horse-owning Arab men and
    pays them 116 a month to join the Janjaweed.
  • The government denies any association with the
    Janjaweed, even though government-owned military
    helicopters survey and attack villages right
    before the Janjaweed appear.
  • The Janjaweed have raped thousands of women in
    the hopes of making them pregnant with
    lighter-skinned babies. They have killed
    thousands of men and boys. Those who dont die in
    the raids leave their homes and try to escape to
    neighboring Chad or stay trapped in make-shift
    towns in Darfur.
  • The Janjaweeds main mission is to drive these
    Black African Muslims from their land, never to
    return. They dump human and animal bodies in
    water to contaminate it and burn villages to the
    ground.

17
Genocide in Darfur 2003-present
  • About 2,500,000 people have been driven from
    their homes and are living in refugee camps in
    Darfur or in neighboring Chad.
  • The death toll now exceeds 300,000, with numbers
    rising every day.

18
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19
Words without deeds violates the moral and legal
obligation we have under the genocide convention
but, more importantly, violates our sense of
right and wrong and the standards we have as
human beings about looking to care for one
another. -Jon Corzine
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