Fiche du document numéro 13271

Num
13271
Date
Saturday April 16, 1994
Amj
Hms
Auteur
Fichier
Taille
88166
Pages
2
Urlorg
Titre
Rwandan army, rebels meet; refugees blocked
Cote
lba0000020011120dq4g01ahl
Source
Fonds d'archives
Type
Dépêche d'agence
Langue
EN
Citation
NAIROBI, April 16 (Reuter) - Rwandan refugees fleeing fighting in the
capital Kigali and inter-tribal massacres were trapped on the fringes
of their blood-soaked country on Saturday.

The rebel Rwanda Patriotic Front (RPF), which held its first meeting
with the army late on Friday to discuss a possible ceasefire, made an
appeal for international aid for thousands of refugees.

Thousands of people are now taking refuge in RPF-controlled areas and
the RPF calls upon humanitarian organisations to provide emergency aid,
especially food, shelter and medicine,
RPF radio Muhabura said on
Saturday.

A U.N. spokesman said Rwandan border guards had closed the frontier
with Zaire, halting the flood of refugees fleeing ethnic reprisals.

Hubert Edongo, regional representative for central Africa for the U.N.
High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), said around 10,000 refugees had
fled into the Goma region of eastern Zaire, but there was no saying how
many were now blocked at the border.

We expect to see many more than 10,000 coming across if the border is
reopened,
he said.

Edongo confirmed reports Zaire had granted political asylum to 160
Rwandan government officials and their families who fled to the Burundi
capital of Bujumbura after the two countries' presidents were killed
when rockets hit their plane.

Many of the refugees are members of Rwanda's minority Tutsi tribe, but
they have also included Zaireans who had settled in Rwanda and a
sprinkling of Belgian, German, French, Canadian, Dutch and British
expatriates.

The refugees are being lodged in convents, hostels, schools and
makeshift camps as international aid agencies rush tents and blankets
to the area.

Western diplomats said Kenya had refused entry to some 350 Rwandans
evacuated to Nairobi.

We have pushed for the Rwandans to be admitted since late Thursday but
as you can see they are still here (in Nairobi airport),
said a
diplomat who declined to be named.

Kenyan Information Ministry permanent secretary David Andere told
Reuters the Rwandans were not being refused entry.

Kenya already hosts some 300,000 refugees -- mainly Somalis.

Fighting for control of the capital Kigali continued into Saturday.
Thousands of people have died in an orgy of ethnic violence between the
majority Hutu and minority Tutsi tribes.

Representatives of the Rwandan army and rebel forces held their first
face-to-face meeting at a secret location late on Friday to explore
terms for a ceasefire, the U.N. said.

The meeting was arranged by the U.N. Secretary-General's special
representative Jacques-Roger Booh Booh and held behind closed doors. It
explored conditions for a total ceasefire,
the U.N. Assistance Mission
in Rwanda (UNAMIR) said in a statement sent to Reuters in Nairobi.

There was no immediate word whether the meeting made progress. The RPF,
which draws its support mainly from Tutsis, has previously said it
could not discuss an end to fighting with a clique of murderers.

A French television station reported Kigali airport had fallen to RPF
forces early on Saturday but the UNAMIR office in New York said U.N.,
Belgian and French forces were still in control.

U.N. officials said that despite a week of fighting, neither the army
nor the rebels seemed in control of Kigali.

About 3,600 rebels have infiltrated the city but government troops,
including men of the presidential guard, were still resisting fiercely,
UNAMIR officials said.

In New York on Friday, the Security Council said the main priority in
Rwanda was establishing a ceasefire.

The U.N. made no decision on the future of the 2,500-strong UNAMIR, set
up last year to help implement a peace pact signed last August in
Tanzania aimed at ending a three-year civil war.

(c) Reuters Limited 1994
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