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Wolfowitz offers world apology for Rwandan genocide News
Wolfowitz offers world apology for Rwandan genocide
Jamie Sterling
June 16, 2005 02:05:00 pm

[JURIST] World Bank President Paul Wolfowitz [official website] visited a Rwandan genocide memorial Thursday and apologized on behalf of the international community [World Bank press review] for its failure to prevent the 1994 mass genocide [BBC backgrounder]. Wolfowitz is on his first visit to Africa since his March approval as World Bank president [JURIST report]. Reuters has more.

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Maurice Papon convicted of war crimes

On April 2, 1998, Maurice Papon was convicted of war crimes for his role in deporting French Jews to concentration camps during the Nazi occupation of France. Under German occupation, Papon served as the supervisor of the Service for Jewish Questions in Bordeaux from which he collaborated with the Nazi S.S. and oversaw the deportation of 1,560 Jewish men, women, and children to concentration camps.

Read an biography of Maurice Papon from the BBC.

Massachusetts enacted Vietnam antiwar bill

On April 2, 1970, the Governor of Massachusetts signed into law an anti-Vietnam War bill providing that no inhabitant of Massachusetts inducted into or serving in the armed forces "shall be required to serve" abroad in an armed hostility that had not been declared a war by Congress under Article I, Section 8, clause 11 of the United States Constitution.

Supporters of the legislation hoped that the US Supreme Court would seize on the obvious conflict that the bill created between state and federal law and would rule on the constitutionality of the Vietnam War itself, but the Court refused to exercise original jurisdiction, forcing the case into the lower federal courts. See Anthony D'Amato, Massachusetts In The Federal Courts: The Constitutionality Of The Vietnam War [PDF], 4 Journal of Law Reform (1970).

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