A petition to take lessons from the past by commemorate the victims of the Tutsi community in Rwanda

0
1
A petition to take lessons from the past by commemorate the victims of the Tutsi community in Rwanda

The genocide against the Tutsi community in Rwanda in the 5th began on April 7 and it lasted for more than 100 days. At this time, about 10 million children, women and men died.

Most of them were from the Tutsi community, but many more people were also targeted in opposition to the Hutu community and genocide.

The UN chief attended a function held at the United Nations Mahasabha Hall on Monday, with the survivors, diplomats, representatives of civil society, where the chapter was remembered when the chapter was created in human history.

“This horrible violence and madness did not suddenly begin, but it was intentionally planned,” said general secretary Goghash. It was planned. It was planned, with disgusting speech, which preached the cracks and lies and inhumanity … “He expressed anger that it was a result of the failure of the action.

Recalling the insertion of the international community, UN General Assembly President Philomon Young said, “Despite the clear alert and destructive signs, the world remains silent viewer, while the killings have continued. Governments have continued to argue when the government has continued to argue, and the calls for help were not heard.”

“Today, when we consider our failure, we should ask: Have we learned the truth from the past? Have we made enough effort to make sure that this kind of brutality should never be anymore?

The victims caused pain

Global Health Researcher and Writer German Tuisenz Mayula is a surviving person surviving the massacre who shared their horrible experience in the General Assembly.

He said that after the massacre began, he was only nine years old and lived in the capital Kigali with his mother. One of his relatives came there with his two children to meet him.

He said, “Our country was immersed in unimaginable circumstances. The families were severed, children were killed, women were killed, women were raped, often in front of their own relatives and the whole community was killed because of Tutsi.”

At that time, he separated from his loved one in search of protection and he continued to get news of his death. There was a time when he was alone in an empty house for Tuisenz Muller for two months, where he spent the day with milk in rain water and spent the day with sugar.

He was able to see his mother again seven months later, who was shot in the early stages of genocide. At that time his mother was living with 5 members of his family from other regions of the country. The biggest was his grandmother, who came to stay after killing her with her husband.

Tuisang Mayular said that today he is sharing this experience to commemorate more than a million people killed during the genocide. “I am also talking on behalf of the survivors: our tolerance, our courage, (this event) for our firm determination to remember.”

The surviving global health researcher and author, German Tuisang Mayula, shared his painful experience in this genocide.

The lesson must be remembered

Referring to the prevailing cracks in the present era, the UN general secretary said, “When we consider how these crimes were committed, we too should consider echoed words in our time.”

He cautioned that the great lex region of Africa and the ‘we’ we ‘thought’ we ‘because of the thoughts, the associations are being polarized quickly, when digital technology is being persuaded by weapons, the cracks are being deemed deeper and false.

The UN chief expressed concern over the rise of “racism, famel anti -anti -and genocide” and the rise of tendencies such as false, conspiracy stories and deep fake materials at dangerous pace.

He said that we need to stop dissatisfaction with the conversion of our speeches and sections and violence. In this order, he requested the countries to fully implement the ‘Global Digital Compact’, which made important promises to deal with false and hatred.

According to General Secretary Gutresh, “We should all work to prevent human rights violations and those who execute them should make accountability decisions.”

He has appealed to all countries to join an agreement on the prevention of genocide so that ordinary citizens can be protected from crime, war crimes, ethnic cleansing and crime against humanity.

A program was organized in honor of the massacre and the survivors in the 31st anniversary of the massacre at the UN headquarters in New York.

A program was organized in honor of the massacre and the survivors in the 31st anniversary of the massacre at the UN headquarters in New York.