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Abstract
JUDICIAL RESPONSES TO GENOCIDE:
The International Criminal Tribunal For Rwanda And The Rwandan Genocide
Courts.
Paul J. Magnarella
Following Rwanda's 1994 appalling
eruption into genocide, the UN Security Council, having created an international
criminal tribunal for humanitarian law violators in the European States
of the former Yugoslavia, decided it could do no less for African Rwanda.
Because the Rwandan conflict was internal rather than international,
the statute for its tribunal complements rather than replicates that
of its Yugoslavian counterpart. The statute for the UN's International
Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda contains a number of legal innovations;
as a result, it will contribute significantly to the development of
the humanitarian law of internal armed conflict. In addition to analyzing
these innovations and the creation of the Tribunal, this article briefly
discusses the background to the genocide and Rwanda's own attempts at
judicial justice.
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