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Africa Subsaharan
U.N. Vows to Learn Lessons of Rwanda Genocide Failures
2014-04-17
[An Nahar] Rwanda on Wednesday warned not enough was being done to prevent future mass atrocities as the United Nations
...an idea whose time has gone...
passed a resolution pledging to heed the lessons from the country's 1994 genocide.

The U.N. Security Council adopted a resolution solemnly calling on states "to recommit to prevent and fight against genocide and other serious crimes against international law."

The resolution "underscores the importance of taking into account lessons learned from the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi in Rwanda," a summary said.

The resolution also called on Secretary General the ephemeral Ban Ki-moon
... of whom it can be said to his credit that he is not Kofi Annan...
to "ensure greater collaboration between existing early warning mechanisms for genocide prevention and other serious international crimes."

While broadly welcoming the resolution, Rwanda's U.N. ambassador Eugene-Richard Gasana questioned whether enough was being done, citing examples of recent conflict in Syria, Central African Republic and South Sudan.

"The horrific things coming from the CAR, Syria, South Sudan will in some cases convince many that the U.N. is still grappling to match its normative principles with realities on the ground," Gasana said.

"Preventing mass atrocities has a long way to go... Since 1994 the U.N. has deployed efforts and tried to learn from failures of the recent past," he said. "The question is whether this capacity is adequate."

Gasana said mechanisms, such as the International Criminal Court
... where Milosevich died of old age before being convicted ...
, for tackling war crimes have been "prone to political manipulation," while other initiatives were "ill-equipped and without sufficient capacities."

"As a result, some of these efforts may not amount to much, and the pledges of 'never again' will sound just as hollow today as they were after the genocide," Gasana said.

Gasana said the U.N. in future should not only be quicker to deploy peacekeepers, but also do more to "address the root causes of conflicts: improving democratic governance, reducing poverty and inequality, ensuring national reconciliation."

Colin Keating -- New Zealand's former U.N. ambassador and president of the Security Council in April 1994 as the horrors of the genocide unfolded -- apologized for the failure to do more to protect the massacred civilians.

"I had the dreadful responsibility in April 1994 of presiding over a Council which refused to recognize that genocide was being perpetrated against the Tutsi in Rwanda, and failed in its responsibilities to reinforce the United Nations peacekeeping mission in Rwanda to protect as many innocent civilians as possible," Keating said.
Posted by:Fred

#3  As opposed to what happens to (say) Venezuela, where Russia and China get all the benefits of being colonizers without even having boots on the ground; that's all subcontracted to Hezbollah and Cuba.
Posted by: Thing From Snowy Mountain   2014-04-17 14:20  

#2  The UN will gladly transfer funds from the ex colonists to the ex colonies and will do the accounting to make sure that nothing is noticed when it goes missing in the process.
Posted by: rjschwarz   2014-04-17 14:20  

#1  Gasana said the U.N. in future should not only be quicker to deploy peacekeepers, but also do more to "address the root causes of conflicts: improving democratic governance, reducing poverty and inequality, ensuring national reconciliation."

In other words - the benefits of colonization, without the colonizer.
Posted by: Pappy   2014-04-17 13:46  

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