The Moral Obligation to Intervene in Rwanda
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2014-04-26
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Citation of Original Publication
The Moral Obligation to Intervene in Rwanda. (2014, April 16). E-International Relations. Retrieved Oct 4, 2017 from http://www.e-ir.info/2014/04/16/the-moral-obligation-to-intervene-in-rwanda/.
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Abstract
On April 6, 1994, violence erupted in the Rwandan capital of Kigali and quickly spread
throughout much of the country. During the 100 days that followed, an estimated 800,000
children, women, and men were slaughtered by their fellow citizens. The victims were sought out
and killed because they were Tutsi or Tutsi sympathizers. As Clea Koff has noted, and perhaps
most startling given the magnitude and unprecedented speed with which the killing was carried
out, the death toll was not the result of the efficiency of violence made possible by modern
weaponry; rather, the implements of the Rwandan genocide were clubs and machetes wielded by
citizens and neighbors.[1]