Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

UN In Genocide Exhibition Controversy

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • UN In Genocide Exhibition Controversy

    UN IN GENOCIDE EXHIBITION CONTROVERSY

    SABC News, South Africa
    April 11 2007

    The United Nations has been hit by a controversy after a photography
    exhibition on the massacre of thousands of Rwandans in 1994 was
    suspended. This after Turkey protested that it carried a mention of
    the massacre of Armenians after World War I.

    The exhibition was meant to open early this week to mark the 13th
    anniversary of the Rwanda genocide. It was organised by a British
    based Aegis Trust and approved by the UN secretariat.

    On the day of the exhibition, with pictures on the wall and the UN
    secretary-general already issued the copy of his speech, the event
    was abruptly cancelled. The cancellation follows an objection by the
    Turkish government about a reference in the exhibition to a genocide
    in Turkey during the World War I.

    Over a million Amernians were killed in what historians refer as the
    first genocide of the 20th century. Turkey denies that the murders
    constituted genocide saying that they resulted from civil war and
    unrest. Turkey has been accused of denying and distorting history.

    However the UN refuses to get involved.

    Organisers express disappointment However, it has now emerged that
    there is more to the cancellation than just the Turkish objections. The
    UN secretariat has also made a blunder in allowing the exhibition. But
    the question is, how did the exhibitors get to a point of hanging
    pictures in the exhibition area of the world body and even have the
    secretary-general of the organisation ready to bless the occasion
    which has now been found to have skipped proper procedures?

    The organisers of the exhibition have expressed disappointment
    at its cancellation saying it undermines the values of the UN in
    preventing genocide. The saga has refreshed memories and opened old
    wounds about how the UN stood by and watched while the Tutsis and
    Hutus were killing each other in a 100 day slaughter in Rwanda.

    The UN security council gave a restrictive mandate at the time ordering
    the UN not to get involved. The exhibition was scheduled to be at the
    UN until next month and then go on a tour of Africa, including Rwanda,
    Ghana, Senegal, South Africa and Tanzania.

    http://www.sabcnews.com/world/north_ame rica/0,2172,146940,00.html

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X