Fiche du document numéro 13353

Num
13353
Date
Friday April 22, 1994
Amj
Hms
Auteur
Fichier
Taille
87381
Pages
2
Urlorg
Titre
UN Council to reduce Rwanda peacekeepers to 270
Cote
lba0000020011120dq4m01ozi
Source
Fonds d'archives
Type
Dépêche d'agence
Langue
EN
Citation
UNITED NATIONS, April 21 (Reuter) - The Security Council late Thursday
voted unanimously to pull out most U.N. troops from Rwanda where a
bloody civil war is raging and tens of thousands of civilians have
perished.

The council interrupted a marathon debate on Bosnia to adopt a
resolution reducing the Rwanda force, once numbering 2,500, to a bare
minimum of 270 military and civilian personnel.

The resolution would leave the force commander, Canadian General Romeo
Dallaire, and his staff in Kigali as an intermediary between the
warring Hutu and Tutsi groups and to assist relief operations.

He would be protected by an infantry company of about 150 soldiers as
well as some military observers. Remaining also would be the chief U.N.
civilian representative, Jacques-Roger Booh Booh of Cameroon, who would
attempt to restart peace talks.

The council, however, pledged to consider promptly any recommendations
to increase the force level and mandate of the U.N. operation,
depending on developments.

But Rwanda's ambassador, Jean Damascene Bizimana, told the council the
international community had been more concerned with the evacuation of
foreigners than the anguish of the Rwandan people and their need for
order and aid.


He said some U.N. operations were enhanced, not reduced, when security
deteriorated, an obvious reference to the former Yugoslavia, where the
United Nations has 30,000 peacekeepers.

This is not a proper response to this crisis, he said.

Nigeria's deputy ambassador, Isaac Ayewah, said he voted for the
resolution with reluctance because he understood that additional forces
could not be raised quickly.

But he asked whether we as a community have really exerted our best
efforts to assist the people of Rwanda
or whether the United Nations
will turn its back on Rwanda.


The U.N. Assistance Mission For Rwanda, known as UNAMIR, was created in
October at the instigation of France as a traditional peacekeeping
force to help implement an August peace agreement leading to elections.

But the U.N. troops, who did not have a mandate to use force except in
self-defence, were caught in tribal violence set off by the
assassination of Hutu President Juvenal Habyarimana on April 6.

UNAMIR has already been reduced from 2,500 troops and support
personnel. Only 1,570 military personnel remain, including 180 unarmed
military observers.

Belgium had unilaterally withdrawn its 430 peacekeepers after 10 were
killed, presumably by the late president's personal guard. On
Wednesday, 213 soldiers from Bangladesh left the Rwandese capital of
Kigali, along with 114 Ghanaians.

Boutros-Ghali earlier Thursday gave the council the alternative of
reinforcing UNAMIR with several thousand troops and changing its
mandate to coerce combatants into a ceasefire. He said Ugandan
President Yoweri Museweni urged him to maintain a large operation and
had offered to recruit troops from the region.

He also made it clear that the killings, estimated in the tens of
thousands, were started by the late president's unruly guard. In
response, the predominantly Tutsi Rwandese Patriotic Front fought
government troops.

He said the country's provisional government then disintegrated, some
of them assassinated in the violence by Hutu government forces,
including the country's prime minister, Agathe Uwilingiyimana.

(c) Reuters Limited 1994
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