Blood and Hatred, 1994
Seen here is a Hutu man showing the scars that he sustained during a machete attack. He was a prisoner in a concentration camp during the Rwandan mass killings, which saw Hutu militias kill what is thought to be 500,000 - 1,000,000 people in 3 months.
Seen here is a Hutu man showing the scars that he sustained during a machete attack. He was a prisoner in a concentration camp during the Rwandan mass killings, which saw Hutu militias kill what is thought to be 500,000 - 1,000,000 people in 3 months.
The Rwandan Civil War was a brutal conflict that occurred in Rwanda between 1990 - 1994. It occurred between two ethnic groups, called the Hutus (majority) and the Tutsis (minority). It began when the Tutsi Rebel group, the Rwandan Patriotic Front, led an uprising against the Hutu government after the Hutus seized power in the 1950s.
The fighting lasted for 4 years and was marked by extremely brutal killings and rape.
In 1994, when the Hutu president was assassinated, Hutu extremists began to mass kill Tutsis and Hutus who did not support the mass killings. In 100 days, about 800,000 people were killed.
Outside of Rwanda, intervention by other countries was slow and afterwards was criticised for not helping the situation.
The man above was a Hutu who did not support the mass killings. He survived his wounds and the war itself and got aid from Red Cross medics. Continue reading
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