Fiche du document numéro 12861

Num
12861
Date
Wednesday April 6, 1994
Amj
Taille
16324
Titre
Presidents of Rwanda and Burundi killed
Nom cité
Cote
lba0000020011120dq4600wqb
Source
Type
Dépêche d'agence
Langue
EN
Citation
UNITED NATIONS, April 6 (Reuter) - The presidents of both Rwanda and
Burundi were killed when their plane was fired on as it was landing at
Kigali, Rwanda, a senior U.N. official announced Wednesday.

Under-Secretary-General Chinmaya Gharekhan said the plane crashed over
Kigali airport and both presidents lost their lives.

He said he had been informed of the deaths of Rwandan President Juvenal
Habyarimana and Burundi President Cyprien Ntaryamira by the U.N.
special representative in Rwanda.

The two presidents were returning from a regional meeting in the
Tanzanian capital of Dar Es Salaam.

Gharekhan also reported that Rwanda's U.N. ambassador told members of
the Security Council that it was not an accident. It was an
assassination. There was rocket fire at the plane. ... The plane was
brought down as it was landing and the presidents were killed.


But he said the United Nations had no independent confirmation of the
alleged assassination.

The United Nations has a 2,500-member peacekeeping force in Rwanda,
which is still recovering from a three-year civil war between the
majority Hutu and the Tutsi ethnic groups.

Security Council President Colin Keating of New Zealand told reporters
that council members expressed concern and condolences to the
government and people of those two countries and to the families of all
the dead involved in this dreadful tragedy.


The tragedy is all the more acute because of the grave situation
facing those two countries,
Keating said.

Therefore the members of the Security Council have asked me to
reaffirm the council's desire that calm prevail in the next few days,

he added.

He said the United Nations would have to review the situation of U.N.
personnel immediately to ensure their safety and that they are being
deployed to the best effect.


At the meeting both presidents attended in Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania,
Kenya and Uganda agreed to send their foreign ministers to Burundi to
help rebuild confidence in the government.

But after a day of talks at an African summit called to find ways to
end Hutu-Tutsi tribal violence in Burundi and Rwanda, no mention was
made in a statement of Tanzanian proposals for sending a peacekeeping
force.

The leaders also called for reforms to the Burundian army, dominated by
the minority Tutsi and seen as largely responsible for clashes since
October with the Hutu majority.

Ntaryamira said he was grateful for neighbouring countries sheltering
800,000 Burundi refugees from the tribal fighting since renegade troops
killed Burundi's first Hutu president, Melchior Ndadaye, on October 21
last year in a failed coup.

The United Nations says 375,000 Burundians are registered as refugees
in Zaire, Rwanda and Tanzania.

Burundi is bleeding. I am aware it hurts your economies. Still, we
need your help.
said Ntaryamira.

On Rwanda, the African leaders said they were concerned at delays since
December in forming transitional institutions as agreed in the northern
Tanzanian town of Arusha last August.

The U.N. Security Council on Tuesday renewed the mandate for
peacekeeping forces for Rwanda for four months but threatened to pull
them out unless the Arusha peace agreements were honoured.

(c) Reuters Limited 1994

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