首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Back in【B1】______, civil war broke out in Burundi. Many were killed in a【B2】______ of inter-ethnic violence. This month, Bur
Back in【B1】______, civil war broke out in Burundi. Many were killed in a【B2】______ of inter-ethnic violence. This month, Bur
admin
2017-03-15
66
问题
Back in【B1】______, civil war broke out in Burundi. Many were killed in a【B2】______ of inter-ethnic violence.
This month, Burundi held its first【B3】______ elections since the war. A former【B4】______ group won the election. So people are looking forward to【B5】______ and【B6】______.
Mparamirundi is a village with over【B7】______ people—it’s a population that share some of the bitterest history in Africa. But Burundi’s horror is often【B8】______ by the genocide in Rwanda in【B9】______.
Up to when【B10】______ Melchior Ndadaye was murdered, members of the Tutsi minority had controlled the army and【B11】______. And later【B12】______ against the minority exploded and thousands of Tutsi were massacred. But the violence didn’t stop there—Burundi spiraled into civil war. Up to【B13】______ people were killed.
But finally there is real cause for hope. The new government to be signed in next【B14】______ and is to deal with Burundi’s bloody past.
The problem is that the killings go right back to【B15】______. In the biggest of the massacres— in【B16】______—【B17】______ Hutus are estimated to have been slaughtered by the government army. And all those involved in more than【B18】______ years of political violence.
Many Burundians are being【B19】______ now only hoping that their【B20】______ will be safe.
【B7】
Back in 1993, civil war broke out in the tiny central African republic of Burundi. Hundreds of thousands were killed in a decade of inter-ethnic violence between Hutus and Tutsis. Yet these atrocities were eclipsed by the genocide in neighbouring Rwanda.
Earlier this month, Burundi held its first parliamentary elections since the civil war. The vote was won by a former rebel group from the Hutu ethnic majority. For most of the time since independence, Burundi has been ruled by individuals from the Tutsi minority. Next month the new government will be sworn in—and survivors of the political and ethnic violence now hope that they’ll finally get justice and security.
It’s the dry season again in Burundi. The hillsides around the village of Mparamirundi are already changing from green to brown—and when the wind blows, the clouds of dust swirl through the streets.
Outside her mud brick house, Domatilla—like every year—is laying out the bean pods harvested from her fields. She puts them in the sun to dry—then beats the pods to release the beans from their dry brown husks. As she works—Domatilla greets her passing neighbours.
She points out Joseph—a slight man in his 30s. "He tried to kill me just over ten years ago", she tells me— wide eyed—as if even now she can’t believe it. "He beat me on the head with a club. And that is Vianney,"— she indicates an older man, smiling at us. "After they took my husband away, Vianney was the one that came to mock me." she says. "He asked me why I wasn’t cooking dinner for my husband that day. "
Mparamirundi is like any other village in Burundi; a tiny country packed with more than seven million people—it’s a population that share some of the bitterest history in Africa. But Burundi’s horror is often overshadowed by the genocide in neighbouring Rwanda in 1994. By then the killings had already started in Burundi.
It was at the end of the dry season in 1993—the first rains had come and Domatilla had safely stored her bean crop inside the house—when President Melchior Ndadaye was murdered. He was Burundi’s first elected Hutu president. Up to then members of the Tutsi minority had controlled the army and the government.
Tutsi soldiers assassinated the new President shortly after he took up office. And revenge against the Tutsi minority exploded. The wave of killing quickly reached Mparamirundi. And it washed away Domatilla’s family—her husband and 12 other relatives were killed. "I heard they cut them down with machetes and then threw them in the river," she says, "I never saw their bodies."
By "they" she means her Hutu neighbours. Across the country thousands of Tutsi were massacred in 1993. But the violence didn’t stop there. Up the street, another of Domatilla’s neighbours, Jean Claude, is repairing a car. Jean Claude was 11 at the time. But he remembers everything clearly. "After the killings of Tutsis," he says, "the Government army arrived in Mparamirundi, and they started killing Hutus."
Jean Claude’s mother was stabbed to death by the soldiers. He never saw his father again and he doesn’t know how he died.
As the Tutsi led army took revenge, young Hutu men streamed into the hills to join a new rebel group and Burundi spiralled into civil war. Up to 300,000 people were killed over the next ten years.
But finally there is real cause for hope.
Burundi has just held general elections—for the first time since the poll in 1993 ended in disaster. This vote was praised as peaceful and largely fair. A former Hutu rebel group won a majority of seats in the new national assembly and all sides have accepted the results.
But the new government to be signed in next month now has to deal with Burundi’s bloody past. And that means finding justice for victims in villages like Mpamirundi.
Many other countries coming out of war have had to wrestle with this same dilemma: how to account for past crimes while holding together a shaky peace deal.
The problem for Burundi is that the killings go right back to independence. In the biggest of the massacres in 1972, 150,000 Hutus are estimated to have been slaughtered by the government army. The choice now is whether to try to bring justice to all those involved in more than 40 years of political violence. Or whether to search only for the ringleaders. Whether to concentrate on punishing the guilty—or on trying to reconcile divided populations.
But many Burundians are sceptical of seeing any justice at all. Political and military leaders who faced each other during the civil war will now sit together in the new parliament and the new united army. Many fear these leaders have a shared interest in slowing down investigations into the crimes that all sides committed.
Back in Mpamirundi, Domatilla is waiting for the wind to bring back the rains. She’s getting ready to plant again like every year. She says she’s waiting for justice. She wants those who killed her husband and relatives to be punished. But most of all she says—she wants them to recognise what they did and come to ask her for forgiveness. "Then I can really be sure they will never try to do the same thing again." She says, "And it’s only then—I can know my children will be safe."
选项
答案
7000000
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://www.kaotiyun.com/show/MjSO777K
本试题收录于:
NAETI高级口译笔试题库外语翻译证书(NAETI)分类
0
NAETI高级口译笔试
外语翻译证书(NAETI)
相关试题推荐
Butstill:asrailtravelisdisrupted,thousandsofpeoplewillonceagainseethewithfuryattheoperatingcompanies’shortco
Canweforgeagainsttheseenemiesagrandandglobalalliance?
实行改革开放以来,中国进入了发展最快、进步最大、变化最深刻的历史时期。1979年至2003年,中国经济年均增长9.4%,居民消费水平年均提高7%,进出口总额年均增长16%,成为世界上发展最快的国家之一。2003年,拥有13亿人口的中国,人均国内生产总值第一
世界著名的《格萨尔王传》是藏族人民在漫长历史长河中创造出来的一部珍贵的长篇英雄史诗,是中国乃至世界文学宝库中少有的珍品,但一直是通过民间说唱艺人口头流传为了保护藏民族的这一文化瑰宝,西藏自治区于1979年成立了抢救、整理《格萨尔王传》的专门机构,进行全面搜
A、19years.B、5months.C、10months.D、2monthsandahalf.D根据题干中关键词“离职再工作期”找寻到原文相关信息处,即第二段第二句“...theaveragejobsearchhasst
A、Efficiencyofgovernment.B、Environmentalprotection.C、Decentralization.D、Trafficconcerns.C根据题干要求找寻到有关韩国总统的说法,发现原文第三段“hes
A、Thelibraryissacrificingbooksinfavorofinternetaccessandotherfacilities.B、Moreandmorepeoplegotothelibraryre
A、30B、31C、32D、33B本题纯粹是数字听力题。从“AuditCommissionandNationalAuditOffice’repointingoutit’staken31experts18monthsto
A、AlexatefruitforThanksgiving.B、Alexcamedowntoourhousefordinner.C、Alexwasabletogohomefortheholiday.D、Alex
A、Three.B、Four.C、Morethanfour.D、Notmentioned.A
随机试题
A、Theyareshrinkingfast.B、Theydependontourism.C、Theyaregrowingfast.D、Theydependongoldexports.B
密执安大学的双中心论研究发现员工导向的领导者与高群体生产率和高工作满意度呈正相关。()
以下常用的高级程序设计语言中,主要用于数值计算的是_______。
极限=______.
女,60岁。主诉戴假牙后反复出现口底部疼痛2个月。检查:舌系带附着处有一线状溃疡,约2.0cm×0.2cm大小,周边有组织增生,戴义齿后,义齿舌侧基托边缘正好压迫于二溃疡处最可能的诊断是
A.心电图各导联ST段呈弓背向下抬高,无动态改变B.心电图各导联(除aVR外)ST段呈弓背向下抬高,有动态改变C.ST段呈鱼钩状压低D.ST段在某些导联向上抬高,随症状缓解而恢复正常E.心电图某些导联T波高尖型,数小时内有演变规律
A公司的记账本位币为人民币,对外币业务采用交易发生日的即期汇率进行折算,按月计算汇兑损益。2017年5月17日进口商品一批,价款为4500万美元,货款尚未支付,当日的市场汇率为1美元=6.75人民币元,5月31日的市场汇率为1美元=6.78人民币元,6月
苏霍姆林斯基说:“教师的语言修养在极大程度上决定着学生在课堂上的脑力劳动的效率,高度的语言修养是合理地利用时间的重要条件。对教师的语言要求有()。
根据下列资料,回答问题。2014年,某自主创新示范区输出境内的技术合同总数为11456项,技术合同成交额为211.92亿元,分别占全市输出境内的47.55%和49.66%。该示范区输出境内合同中,上述五类技术领域的输出境内合同总数约占:
一、注意事项 1.申论考试与传统的作文考试不同,是分析驾驭材料的能力与表达能力并重的考试。 2.作答参考时限:阅读资料40分钟,作答110分钟。 3.仔细阅读给定的资料,按照后面提出的作答要求依次作答在答题纸指定位置。 4.答题时请认准题号
最新回复
(
0
)