Genocide: The Role Of Prejudice In The World

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Pages: 7

Prejudices are an everyday occurrence; they are happening everywhere in countless forms and scales. Prejudice can be as simple as thinking that someone does or likes something based on their race or just a rumor, but can also be much more severe such as believing that all people of a particular religion or country are criminals or terrorists based on the actions of a few. How people act upon these thoughts and opinions vary exceedingly: and it is those actions that will determine how the prejudice will manifest itself in this world as well as how much it will impact others. It could be anything, from something as small as crossing the street to avoid walking near someone you judged suspicious, to something as extensive and widespread as using an executive order to restrict certain ethnicities you consider criminals from entering a country. There is, however, an even worse incarnation of prejudice in the world, which encompasses the destruction of the group being subject to the negative thoughts. It is called genocide. One example of this terrible act was the Rwandan genocide, which is one of the worst instances of genocide in history. This event was the result of decades of violence and centuries of prejudices and strongly impacted people all over the world, many of whom were not directly involved.
History:
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That moment occurs on the evening of April 6th, 1994. Rwandan President Juvenal Habyarimana and Burundian President Cyprien Ntaryamira are returning to Kigali (the capital of Rwanda) after signing a peace accord in Arusha, Tanzania to resolve some discord between the Hutu and Tutsi. Habyarimana agreed to stop funding the rebels and place more Tutsis in government positions. On the landing approach, however, the plane is shot down near the airport killing both presidents and igniting one of the worst events in