Crimes Of War Project > The Book: "The hate-mongering journalists of RTLM stayed on the air until the very last moment of the Rwandan genocide. In July 1994, when the RPF—the Tutsi army that came from neighboring Uganda—defeated the Rwandan army and put an end to the genocide, the RTLM staff took a mobile transmitter and fled to Zaire, together with Hutu refugees. Ferdinand Nahimana, a well-known historian who served as RTLM’s director, fled to Cameroon. There he was arrested and delivered to the Arusha tribunal, where he will have to answer to a very special charge: incitement to genocide.
The new Tutsi-led government closed RTLM, but the message continued when Hutus launched another clandestine radio station in Kivu, Zaire, to incite hatred against Tutsis in Burundi, using the same slogans."
Tuesday, January 19, 2010
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yeh and tell me any country in the world that portrays junkies as other than liars and thieves.their isnt one so much for anti discrimination its only designed to silence the masses .from having a fair say on issues when it comes down to victimized groups like junkies they have no right to the protection of the law because those in power make mooney out of their exploitation but dont recognize the source of their wealth as human .just ring anti discrimination and ask if its ok to discriminate against addicts and they will tell you YES go on try it
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