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Rwanda: Ki-Moon Recognises Genocide Survivors

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  • Rwanda: Ki-Moon Recognises Genocide Survivors

    RWANDA: KI-MOON RECOGNISES GENOCIDE SURVIVORS
    Edwin Musoni

    The New Times (Kigali)
    May 2 2007

    The United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon has recognised Rwandan
    genocide survivors calling what happened in Rwanda 'humbling'. While
    officiating the Rwanda Genocide exhibition at the UN headquarters in
    New York, Ki-Moon said that the UN's thoughts were the survivors,
    fallen colleagues of the UN family: peacekeepers and civilians who
    lost their lives in the line of duty as the Genocide unfolded. "As
    we open this exhibition, our thoughts go to the victims of the 1994
    Rwandan Genocide, innocent people who lost their lives in such a
    short period. May they continue to rest in peace," he said.

    The exhibition highlights the failure of the international community
    to prevent the Genocide, examines what happened in Rwanda, emphasizes
    the plight of victims, particularly those who suffered from sexual
    violence and details the warning signs for genocide.

    The Rwandan Minister of Foreign Affairs, Dr Charles Murigande, told
    The New Times on phone yesterday that Rwanda is fully represented
    at exhibition.

    "We are represented by our Special Envoy to the UN, Dr Zac Nsenga.

    Our embassy in New York will follow up the exhibition to the last day,"
    he said.

    He also added that the Minister of Youth, Sports and Culture, Joseph
    Habineza, is in the US and is expected to attend the exhibition.

    Meanwhile, media reports say that Ki-Moon recalled his visit to the
    Rwandan memorial sites before becoming Secretary-General, saying the
    impression would stay with him forever.

    "Anybody who visits Rwanda cannot leave without crying, without being
    very humbled about what happened and what the international community
    failed to react," he said.

    The exhibition on Rwanda Genocide at UN Headquarters was postponed
    three weeks ago as a result of the Turkish objections to a reference
    to the murder of a million Armenians in Turkey during World War I.

    But Ki- Moon, in a gesture to Turkey, said the exhibit did not
    'attempt to make historical judgments on other issues'

    The exhibition which will be on display for the next three weeks is
    sponsored by Aegis Trust, a British non-governmental organization
    (NGO) that fights against Genocide.

    The exhibition includes information panels and a film containing the
    testimony of three female survivors of the Genocide.
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