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The Hutus killed many Tutsis to scare them, so many fled (200,000 Tutsis, to be exact) from Rwanda/Burundi as refugees.
The Tutsis lost 800,000 to 1 million people, massacred by the Hutus. More Tutsis lived in a country near Rwanda and their rebel group(the Rwandan Patriotic Front) attacked and gained control of Rwanda. The Hutus fled to Congo and the surrounding areas to live in refuge camps. At first they boasted about their killing but later found that it was risky business. Tutsi survivors in Rwanda wanted to bring the guilty to court but the Hutu aids wouldn't and couldn't separate killers and the non-killers. In Arusha, Tanzania, International War Crimes Tribunal has set up a system to try the genocide leaders, at this point there has been many leaders found guilty, but without death penalty and 40 more to be tried. At the end of 2001 around 125,000 prisoners, crammed into overcrowded jails, still remained to be tried.
the neighbouring country
Yes he did. Genocide Watch holds the Castro regime responsible for the death of thousands of people (executed and died trying to flee the regime
why did were people forced to migrate from Rwanda? people are forced to migrate from Rwanda to get rid of the war that is coming to the and because they wat to be safe some of the people migrated in Rwanda and some of them get in the war and start shoting people.
There was an extremely destructive, genocidal civil war in Rwanda between the Hutu and Tutsi tribes. Hundreds of thousands of people were murdered. Some people chose to flee, to avoid being murdered.
The exact number of people who died in the Burmese Genocide is difficult to determine. Estimates vary, but it is believed that tens of thousands of Rohingya Muslims were killed during the violence and displacement that occurred in Myanmar from 2017 onwards. Hundreds of thousands more were forced to flee their homes.
It was because a ethnic group was made and Uganda,Rwanda, and Burundi supported it, then Zaire's army was unable to put down the rebellion.
The SS men fled the camp to avoid capture and punishment for their crimes committed during the Holocaust. They feared retaliation from Allied forces or being held accountable for their participation in the genocide.
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Those who were able to flee went to the town of Yavneh (Talmud, Gittin 56b).