Fiche du document numéro 27324

Num
27324
Date
Mercredi December 22, 1999
Amj
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Taille
30068
Pages
2
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Titre
'We couldn't believe the UN was going to let us die'
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Résumé
Last week, Kofi Annan expressed "deep remorse" for the UN's shortcomings in Rwanda five years ago, after an independent report offered a damning assessment of the organization's failure to even attempt to stop the genocide of the Tutsi. The UN Secretary General, who was head of UN peacekeeping in 1994, has not been spared. The report accuses him of having ignored repeated warnings that genocide was in preparation. He also condemns members of the Security Council, including Britain but mainly the United States, for blocking calls for rapid intervention.
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Article de journal
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FR
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The last time Helena Nwitizina saw United Nations soldiers they were driving off to rescue white people. She was not among those Rwandans who begged the Belgian peacekeepers to administer a quick death rather than abandon them to the men with machetes. But the 30-year-old petrol pump attendant was no less terrified.
A few hours later Ms Nwitizina was one of the few survivors to crawl out of the first big massacre of the Rwandan genocide. "We could not believe that the United Nations was just going to let us die," she said. "We were always hearing on the radio how they were there to help us. But when the killers were looking us in the eye and saying we were going to die, what did the UN do? It saved white people."
Last week Kofi Annan expressed his "deep remorse" for the UN's shortcomings in Rwanda five years ago, after an independent report offered a damning assessment of the organisation's failure to even attempt to halt the murder of 800,000 Tutsis.
The UN secretary-general was not spared. He was head of UN peacekeeping in 1994. The report criticises him for ignoring repeated warnings that a genocide was in the offing. It also condemns members of the Security Council, including Britain but principally the United States, for blocking calls for rapid intervention.
The most prescient warning came from the head of the UN military contingent in Rwanda, General Romeo Dallaire. It told of a plan to kill 1,000 Tutsis every 20 minutes.
The general also said the murderers intended to drive the UN out by killing some of its Belgian peacekeepers. Mr Annan's office responded by telling Gen Dallaire to take the information to the very government that was planning the slaughter. Ten Belgian soldiers were duly butchered on the first day of the genocide. As the extremists hoped, Belgium insisted on pulling its troops out.
When the order came to wind down the mission, the UN political adviser in Kigali, Shahryar Khan, turned on his bosses in New York. "Ten Belgians are dead, so you don't give a damn that thousands of Africans are about to be slaughtered," he said.
The Belgian commanding officer in Rwanda, Colonel Luc Marchal, later said he considered the order to pull out an act of cowardice. "We were perfectly aware of what was about to happen," he said. "Our mission was a tragic failure. Everyone considered it a form of desertion. Pulling out under such circumstances was an act of total cowardice."
The first few thousand Tutsis died within hours of the beginning of the UN withdrawal. Lieutenant Luc Lemaire was in command of a contingent of Belgian troops guarding about 2,000 Tutsis at a technical school in the capital, Kigali. They had sought shelter there precisely because of the UN peacekeepers, but Lt Lemaire was ordered to abandon the school.
The Belgian officer says his men were redeployed to help to evacuate white foreigners, though the UN has denied this. "We received a series of clear messages that showed me that the UN's mission was to be the evacuation of expatriates to the airport," Lt Lemaire insists.
As the Belgian soldiers pulled out of the school grounds, groups of Tutsis rushed their vehicles, clinging to the doors in an attempt to stop the troops leaving. Nwitizina was among them. "We knew the UN was abandoning us," she said. "We cried for them not to leave. Some people even begged for the Belgians to kill them because a bullet would be better than a machete."
The Belgians fired into the air to drive the refugees back. The Tutsis then decided their best hope was to walk across the city to the UN headquarters. But they were intercepted by the Hutu army and the interahamwe militia and driven to a gravel pit. There, about 2,000 Tutsis were murdered just hours after the UN troops had abandoned them. "The army started throwing grenades and shooting," Ms Nwitizina recalled.
"Then the interahamwe came in with machetes and bayonets. Most those who tried to escape were cut down. It went on for hours. Almost everyone was dead, but the interahamwe were climbing over the bodies saying: 'Whoever is still alive and has money should identify themselves and we will take their money and let them go.' They still killed them.
"Once the interahamwe left I managed to climb out from under the bodies. I thought I had been shot in the legs because I could not feel them but it was just the weight of corpses."
The UN also left behind its Rwandan staff. And even those Tutsis who were able to clamber on board the organisation's lorries were not guaranteed safety. The interahamwe pulled victims off the trucks at roadblocks and butchered them in front of French or Belgian soldiers who said they had no mandate to intervene.
There was never much doubt as to what was unfolding, but Washington and Britain were united in their refusal to spend more money by expanding the peacekeeping force in Rwanda, and beefing up its mandate.
After the US debacle in Somalia, where an American-led force slaughtered hundreds of civilians in a crude attempt to impose order and lost 18 men in the process, the White House issued a directive setting out the conditions for future US peacekeeping operations. Rwanda met none.
The White House was at least frank about its policy. Gerald Gahima, a representative of the Rwandan Patriotic Front, which fought the Hutu extremist government, tried to lobby UN ambassadors, including Sir David Hannay, Britain's representative on the Security Council. "I didn't get the impression he cared at all," Mr Gahima said. "We might have been talking about slaughtering chickens."
All the Security Council managed was a tepid statement calling for a ceasefire. It was to seal the fate of hundreds of thousands of Tutsis. Once it was clear that the UN was abandoning Rwanda, the killing spread rapidly - from Kibuye in the west, where 17,000 people were murdered in two days in the local church and stadium, to Butare in the south, where a speech by President Theodore Sindikubwabo launched the mayhem. The message had gone out that the murderers had nothing to fear from the rest of the world.
Gen Dallaire later said he could have stopped the genocide in Kigali with 5,000 troops and thus prevented it spreading. There was no shortage of soldiers available. Belgium and France sent about 1,000 troops for the evacuation. Two hundred and fifty US Marines were on standby in Burundi. The British Army regularly trained in Kenya, less than two hours away by air.
Mr Annan now says the lessons have been learned. Ms Nwitizina doubts it. "Do you think anything has changed?" she asked. "We are still poor Africans. Why should they want to help us now when they would not help us before?"
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