NEW YORK, Nov 17 (UNHCR) - When the world closed its eyes to the 1994 genocide in Rwanda, Paul Rusesabagina opened his arms to its victims. Ten years later, an award-winning film is celebrating the ...
From April to July 1994, the world watched as genocide unfolded in Rwanda. A million people died as neighbors brutally attacked their neighbors with clubs and machetes. Thirty years later, the horror ...
From April to July 1994, the world watched as genocide unfolded in Rwanda. A million people died as neighbors brutally attacked their neighbors with clubs and machetes. Thirty years later, the horror ...
(PORTLAND TRIBUNE) — Paul Rusesabagina offered simple advice about the 1994 genocide in Rwanda, where he is credited with saving more than 1,200 lives in his hotel, and his more recent imprisonment ...
The human rights activist portrayed in the 2004 film “Hotel Rwanda” as a hero who saved hundreds of lives amid the genocide in his country will speak Wednesday evening in Manchester at an event about ...
Paul Rusesabagina flew from Dubai thinking he would be doing good works in the days ahead — speaking out at churches in the East African nation of Burundi against government oppression and human ...
Paul Rusesabagina wears a pink prison uniform as he arrives for a bail hearing at a court in the capital Kigali, Rwanda. [Courtesy] Paul Rusesabagina is seen by many as a man who did something right ...
I had long nursed the idea of visiting Kigali, Rwanda’s capital, given the exciting stories of infrastructure development, well-paved network of roads and other beautiful things I had heard about that ...
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