In April 1994 in Rwanda (East Africa) began the genocide of Tutsi - an ethnic minority, which for centuries dominated the Rwandan majority - Hutu. During the 100 days of incredible violence, about 800 000 Tutsi and moderate Hutu were murdered. The international community, unfortunately, didn't respond to this event on time. The conflict was considered as an internal case and the Security Council of the UN didn't decide to intervene. Even though the scale and character of the conflict was well known the United States didn't want to get involved because of a painful experience from its intervention in Somalia in 1993 (the story was presented in the movie Black Hawk Down).
The UN troops arrived in Rwanda when the major fights were over. They assisted only by the burial of deaths and protected the survivors. Today we know that other countries (for example France and China) were selling arms to the Rwandan government.
What could be the response? The international community could prevent the growing hostility and animosity between Hutu and Tutsi already before the genocide. They should have introduced an embargo on arms in order to prevent the escalation of violence. When the conflict had begun, a military intervention should have taken place.
• the Americas were less densely woven than in the afro-Eurasian region. There was no equivalent to the silk, sea, or sand roads. • Spread of agricultural products was slower and less pro owned on the Americas • Spread of distinct cultural traditions like Buddhism, Christianity, or Islam · Americas did have zones of interaction • River networks of North America, where commerce plays an important role in regions where contact was possible, the dense communication lays between rather than within the regions that housed the two great civilizations of the Western Hemisphere- mesoamerica and the Andes.
Answer:
An ethnic category or group is a group of people identify with each other. Typically based on language, history, ancestry, culture
Explanation:
What are the examples?
The great rift valley was formed by violent subterranean forces that tore apart the earth's crust. These forces caused huge chunks of the crust to sink between parallel fault lines and force up molten rock in volcanic eruptions.