The 1994 Rwandan genocide against the Tutsi was the signature moral
horror of the late 20th century. Andrew Wallis reveals, for the
first time, the personal lives and crimes of the family group
(`Akazu') that destroyed their country and left one million dead.
Wallis' meticulous research uncovers a broad landscape of terror,
looking back to the `forgotten' Rwandan genocide of the early 1960s
and the failure by the international community, to learn lessons of
prevention and punishment, a failure that would be repeated thirty
years later. Taking the rise and fall of Akazu personalities and
their mafia-like network as its central strand, Stepp'd in Blood
reveals how they were aided and abetted by western governments and
the churches for decades. And how post-1994, many successfully
evaded international justice to enjoy comfortable retirements in
the same countries that supported them when they were in power.
Stepp'd in Blood publishes in the year of the 25th commemoration of
the Rwandan Genocide.
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