1 / 21

Other Genocides in the 20 th (and 21 st ) Century

Other Genocides in the 20 th (and 21 st ) Century. Cambodian Genocide. Led by Pol Pot 1975-1979 2,000,000 deaths Used mass starvation in the “killing fields” (targets: educated, artists, monks, former govt. officials, and minorities) Diet=1 tin of rice (180 grams) per person every 2 days.

nita
Télécharger la présentation

Other Genocides in the 20 th (and 21 st ) Century

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Other Genocides in the 20th (and 21st) Century

  2. Cambodian Genocide • Led by Pol Pot • 1975-1979 • 2,000,000 deaths • Used mass starvation in the “killing fields” (targets: educated, artists, monks, former govt. officials, and minorities) • Diet=1 tin of rice (180 grams) per person every 2 days. • Torture included pulling out fingernails, peeling off skin, etc.

  3. Cambodian Genocide Background • Pol Pot led the Khmer Rouge (an armed resistance movement) • Inspired by communism and Mao ZeDong • Claimed he was “purifying” society by removing capitalism, western culture, city life, and all western influences. • Cambodia was sealed off from outside world- $forbidden • Pol Pot deposed by Vietnam in 1979, he continued to lead resistance for next 17 years. • Died by heart attack before he could be tried for war crimes

  4. Rwandan Civil War (1994) • Tutsis – • Held most of the power, but was only 15-20% of the population. • Were given special treatment  better jobs, education. • Redistribution of land. • Hutu – • 80-85% of the population. • Mistreated by Tutsis. • Genocide – trying to kill off an entire ethnic group, religion, race, etc. • Hutu uprising – wanted a Hutu run government. • April-July 1994 • 500,000 Tutsis die. • Total death = 800,000 – 1,000,000.

  5. Tribal Makeup – divided between Hutus and Tutsis. Hutus – 85% of the pop. Tutsis – 15% of the pop. Pre-1800s – Tutsi royal family ruled the area (held most of the wealth).

  6. European Imperialism • 1800s – early 1900s – Rwanda controlled by Germany and then Belguim • Tutsis are favored over the Hutus by Europeans (over the years, creates tension btw. the two tribes)

  7. Rwandan Independence • 1959 – Rwanda given ind. by Belgium • Elections held – Hutu majority wins the election. • Hutus use power to begin to take rights/power away from Tutsi minority. • Violence breaks out causing many Tutsis to flee the nation. • 1985 – Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF) created by Paul Kagame to fight for Tutsi rights in Rwanda.

  8. 1990 – Civil war breaks out as RPF attacks Rwandan army. • 1993 – Civil war ends as RPF and Hutu govt. try to make peace. • Hutus in the army and govt. begin to gather arms and train militias in preparation for mass killings. • April 6, 1994 – Rwandan president Juvenal Habyarimana assasinated (plane shot out of sky)

  9. Genocide Begins • Moderate members of the govt. are all killed by the radicals to prevent their blocking of the killings. • April – July 1994 – Tutsis and moderate Hutus are rounded up and killed. (1 million dead)

  10. World’s Response? • VERY LITTLE IS DONE!!! • United States doesn’t want to get involved because of what happened in Somalia in 1993. • UN peacekeeping force in Rwanda is too small to accomplish anything. UN commander in Rwanda constantly asked for reinforcements.

  11. Genocide Ends • RPF immediately resumes its attacks after hearing word of the genocide. • July 1994 – RPF seizes control of the capital ending the genocide. • 2 million Hutus flee Rwanda to neighboring nations. • Paul Kagame becomes President of Rwanda in 2000 (still is today). • Trials held in Rwanda to punish those who participated in the genocide.

  12. Genocide in former Yugoslavia • Location: Bosnia-Herzegovina • 1992-1995 • 200,000 deaths • Comprised of three main ethnic groups: • Serbs (Orthodox Christians) • Croats (Catholics) • Muslims • Muslims and Croats were massacred by Bosnian Serbs

  13. Background: Bosnia • Serbs led by Slobodan Milosevic and Karadzic • Bosnian Muslims were put into concentration camps, gunned down and females were raped • Serbs referred to their policy as “Ethnic Cleansing” • UN was not allowed to intervene, watched atrocities • One day in 1993, 8,000 Muslims were executed by Serbs at a UN Safe Haven • US led a NATO supported bombing raid • Nov. 1, 1995 Peace talks were attended by Milosevic and others

  14. Darfur, Sudan (2003) • Aggressors • Sudanese government. • Janjaweed – Arab nomads. • Victims • Black African ethnic groups from southern Darfur. • Cause – nomads have invaded southern Darfur for access to better land. • As many as 450,000 dead from violence & disease.

  15. Darfur (Sudan) • Culture is divided between those of Arab background and those of African background. • Arabs control the government and have used this power to oppress the black population. • Janjaweed – Arab militia supported by the govt. have attacked black villages in Darfur (over 450,000 dead, thousands of women and girls raped, over 2.5 million displaced refugees) • International Court has issued a warrant for Pres. Omar al-Bashir. • Not enough action on the part of the world to stop this genocide.

More Related