History, asked by michellebarraza21, 9 months ago

4.
RI.5
PART A: How do paragraphs 18 - 19 contribute to the development of ideas in the text?
A.
They show how despite the genocide being over, people who killed during the genocide remain in Rwanda and can’t all be punished.
B.
They prove that due to corruption, Rwandan leaders refuse to hold the guilty parties accountable for the genocide.
C.
They show that Rwanda will never be able to fully recover from the genocide while killers continue to walk free.
D.
They prove that most Rwandans are no longer bothered by the genocide, as it doesn’t worry them that some killers will never be brought to justice.

Answers

Answered by tejaswitapan2004
1

Answer:

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Answered by Anonymous
2

Answer:

Most of the dead were Tutsis - and most of those who perpetrated the violence were Hutus.

Even for a country with such a turbulent history as Rwanda, the scale and speed of the slaughter left its people reeling.

The genocide was sparked by the death of the Rwandan President Juvenal Habyarimana, a Hutu, when his plane was shot down above Kigali airport on 6 April 1994.

A French judge has blamed current Rwandan President, Paul Kagame - at the time the leader of a Tutsi rebel group - and some of his close associates for carrying out the rocket attack.

Mr Kagame vehemently denies this and says it was the work of Hutu extremists, in order to provide a pretext to carry out their well-laid plans to exterminate the Tutsi community.

Whoever was responsible, within hours a campaign of violence spread from the capital throughout the country, and did not subside until three months later.

But the death of the president was by no means the only cause of Africa's largest genocide in modern times.

History of violence

Ethnic tension in Rwanda is nothing new. There have always been disagreements between the majority Hutus and minority Tutsis, but the animosity between them has grown substantially since the colonial period.

The two ethnic groups are actually very similar - they speak the same language, inhabit the same areas and follow the same traditions.

However, Tutsis are often taller and thinner than Hutus, with some saying their origins lie in Ethiopia.

During the genocide, the bodies of Tutsis were thrown into rivers, with their killers saying they were being sent back to Ethiopia.

When the Belgian colonists arrived in 1916, they produced identity cards classifying people according to their ethnicity.

1994: RWANDA'S GENOCIDE

6 April: President Habyarimana killed in plane explosion

April - July: Some 800,000 Tutsis and moderate Hutus killed

July: Tutsi-led rebel movement RPF captures the capital Kigali

July: Two million Hutus flee to Zaire, now DR Congo

Q&A: Search for justice

Organised gangs of government soldiers and militias hacked their way through the Tutsi population with machetes, or blew them up in churches where they had taken refuge.

The extremist ethnic Hutu regime in office in 1994 appeared genuinely to believe that the only way it could hang on to power was by wiping out the ethnic Tutsis completely.

Encouraged by the presidential guard and radio propaganda, an unofficial militia group called the Interahamwe (meaning those who attack together) was mobilised. At its peak, this group was 30,000-strong.

Soldiers and police officers encouraged ordinary citizens to take part. In some cases, Hutu civilians were forced to murder their Tutsi neighbours by military personnel.

Participants were often given incentives, such as money or food, and some .

And a Congolese Tutsi rebel group remains active, refusing to lay down arms, saying otherwise its community would be at risk of genocide.

The world's largest peacekeeping force has been unable to end the fighting.

Explanation:

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