Humanitarian Interventions between Moral Responsibility and State Sovereignty. The Case of the Failed Intervention in Rwanda Cover Image

Humanitarian Interventions between Moral Responsibility and State Sovereignty. The Case of the Failed Intervention in Rwanda
Humanitarian Interventions between Moral Responsibility and State Sovereignty. The Case of the Failed Intervention in Rwanda

Author(s): Diana Maria Popa
Subject(s): Politics / Political Sciences, Political Theory, Governance, Public Law
Published by: Editura Universității de Vest
Keywords: ethnicity; genocide; R2P, hatred; Rwanda; intervention; sovereignty; morality;

Summary/Abstract: Following the second half of 20th century, the debate on the humanitarian intervention has gained momentum on the international scene. Tensions have raised between the “solidarists” whose claims are related to the promotion of human rights and state’s moral obligation to intervene to alleviate human suffering based on the Preamble, Article 1, Article 55 and Article 56 of the UN Charter and “realists” who affirm that state sovereignty and the banning of outside interference in the internal jurisdiction of states are crucial because they are also legally stipulated throughout the UN Charter, more specifically in Article 2. By the end of the century, Rwanda has faced one the roughest genocides in the world as a result of hatred between two groups who have been ethically constructed as being totally different. The response from the international stage did not materialize. In this study I will address how the motives behind Rwanda’s intervention can be attributed to one of the two conceptions. It might seem intuitive to consider that the failed intervention is due to the state sovereignty rule, but in fact the naming of genocide as being a civil war prevented the external forces to act. The findings will provide an analysis of how morality and the respect for human rights have been quantified in number of deaths needed to use the force in a humanitarian mission. However, the new doctrine of Responsibility to Protect(R2P) transformed the traditional way of thinking about humanitarian interventions.

  • Issue Year: 2/2021
  • Issue No: 1
  • Page Range: 121-136
  • Page Count: 16
  • Language: English