Why Has the UN Ignored Its Own Reports About the Massacres of Hutu Refugees in the DRC? Introduction: A Neglected Chapter of International Criminal Justice The question of why the United Nations has not acted on its own evidence concerning the massacres of Rwandan Hutu refugees in what was then Zaire, now the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), represents one of the most significant unresolved human-rights failures of the post-Cold War era. Between 1996 and 1998, tens of thousands—and in some accounts hundreds of thousands—of Rwandan Hutu refugees were massacred, starved, hunted, or disappeared during and after the First Congo War. Multiple United Nations investigations, reports from Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International, Médecins Sans Frontières, and scholarly studies by Reyntjens, Prunier, Lemarchand, and others have documented systematic killings, deliberate obstruction of humanitarian access, and patterns of pursuit that targeted civilians on the basis of t...