A title on the right of humanitarian intervention in international law is timely at this crucial time, when the countries of the Great Lakes region of Africa have become a powder keg fuelled from outside under the pretext of a so-called right of humanitarian intervention. With his legal expertise, the author debunks the monster of the right to humanitarian intervention, which hides behind the mask of generous humanism. He sets out and imposes guidelines to prevent the right of interference from crash-landing. Humanitarian interference must be carried out in accordance with the law that is supposed to govern it if it is not to fall into the trap of violating the fundamental principles of international law, of which it claims to be a corrective. For the academic, it is difficult to accept the existence of any right of humanitarian intervention, as certain powerful states would seek to use it for their own selfish interests. This sui generis book is an exceptional scientific contribution by this young researcher. It is a vade mecum for intellectuals that will help them to row against the storms that litter the sea of humanitarian interference in international law.