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Consequences of the Rwandan Genocide - Definition |
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The traumatic aftermath of the genocide
Post-Genocide Ethnicisim
A destructured population
A very large number of orphans
A very large number of widows
The survivors must live amid the former killers
AIDS
Survivor associations
Population displacement in Rwanda and in neighbouring counries
The fight against genocide fighters infiltrating into Rwanda
The crisis of the Great Lakes region
The removal of Mobutu and the destabilisation of Congo
The refugees return to Rwanda
The reintegration in the Rwandan army and certain members of the former FAR
The composition of the Rwandan Diaspora in the world
Refugees fleeing the successive regimes of Rwanda
Genocide fighters who have become refugees and not always searched for
Political opposition of various origins
A country to reconstruct
A problematic reconciliation
A considerable judicial worksite
In Rwanda
Rwandan justice
130.000 prisoners out of a population of 7 million
The reestablishment of traditional justice: The Gacacas
At the international level
The International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda
The "universal competence" of the national justices
A political transition period from 1994 to 2003
The fight against ethnic divisions
A new constitution and the 2003 elections
The "duty of memory"
The devastated economy
The shaken international community
International aid
The French and Belgian parliaments examine the politics of their counties in an African county
The UN, the Organisation of African Unity, and human rights NGOs create and edit their reports
The USA, Belgium, and the UN ask the Rwandans for forgiveness
The genocide in Rwanda has become a reference in every genocidal character crisis
The negations of the genocide
The genocide's deadly impact on neighboring D.R. Congo
External link
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