Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Anti-Genocide Act

The Mass Killing of Ethic or Religious Groups Prevention Act


    This law is to be hereby enforced and obeyed by all members of the United Nations. By this act, the members of the United Nations are to take any sign whatsoever, including but not limited to oral reports, electronic messages, or telephone calls, of a mass killing of a certain group, meaning the organized killing of 100 or more people of a certain group, ethnic or religious, and investigate the area or country where the signs have come from. If it revealed that a group or entity is attempting the amount and type of killing described above, then at least five of the members of the United Nations are to take whatever action is necessary to stop the killing. Whether or not the term, ‘genocide’ is used in the situation is irrelevant. Also, if it is discovered that the killing is not aimed at any particular group, but it is still a threat to the lives of over 100 people, then action must still be taken. Also, any reports on the events under investigation that come out of the country are to be allowed to become public knowledge. This law is mainly in response to the atrocious response of the world to the Rwandan killings, which many countries refused to call genocide, when in reality it was.

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