For example, ten times as name people died in the Syrian civil war.
The Syrian civil war wasn’t one crime; it was a war by multiple actors none particularly committed to human rights. Also Syria’s population is more than ten times that of Gaza.
The person in the OP is talking about their experience in the 50 years part, so it’s entirely possible they simply weren’t involved in aid during or after the Rwandan genocide.
This year is the 50th anniversary of the start of the Cambodian genocide.
The Gaza genocide is, in fact, keeping pace with or beating the Cambodian genocide in terms of percentage of population killed per unit time; it’s just that most of them are via malnutrition, disease or outright starvation and therefore not counted in official statistics. In Gaza the deaths are also only the most extreme effect of Israeli crimes; there’s also the widespread (read: near-universal) starvation and disease, and the ridiculous number of injuries. Also Israeli crimes against children trump anything the Khmer Rouge did in that department, so I’m gonna agree with the OP on this one.
The Syrian civil war wasn’t one crime; it was a war by multiple actors none particularly committed to human rights. Also Syria’s population is more than ten times that of Gaza.
The person in the OP is talking about their experience in the 50 years part, so it’s entirely possible they simply weren’t involved in aid during or after the Rwandan genocide.
The Gaza genocide is, in fact, keeping pace with or beating the Cambodian genocide in terms of percentage of population killed per unit time; it’s just that most of them are via malnutrition, disease or outright starvation and therefore not counted in official statistics. In Gaza the deaths are also only the most extreme effect of Israeli crimes; there’s also the widespread (read: near-universal) starvation and disease, and the ridiculous number of injuries. Also Israeli crimes against children trump anything the Khmer Rouge did in that department, so I’m gonna agree with the OP on this one.