Fiche du document numéro 12975

Num
12975
Date
Friday April 8, 1994
Amj
Taille
16325
Titre
Belgium wants U.N. troops to use force in Rwanda
Cote
lba0000020011120dq480116y
Source
Type
Dépêche d'agence
Langue
EN
Citation
UNITED NATIONS, April 8 (Reuter) - Belgium would like the United
Nations Security Council to change its mandate for peacekeepers in
Rwanda and permit U.N. soldiers to use force, diplomats said Friday.

Brussels is also considering asking that the peacekeeping force be
expanded to include, under a U.N. flag, any troops it may send to
rescue its citizens in the central African country, they said.

Government leaders in Brussels contacted Secretary-General Boutros
Boutros-Ghali, currently in Geneva, with the request but the U.N. chief
said he needed to think about it, the envoys reported.

Since Brussels already has more than 400 soldiers as part of the U.N.
peacekeeping contingent, Belgium wanted any new troops it might send to
be included under U.N. control also.

They didn't want them wearing two hats, one envoy said.

A major problem is getting control of the airport in Kigali, Security
Council president Colin Keating told reporters late Thursday.

He said it was contolled by Rwanda's presidential guard, responsible
for much of the violence after the president Juvenal Habyarimana as
well as President Cyprien Ntaryamira of Burundi were killed in a rocket
attack on their plane as it flew into the city Wednesday night. It is
not clear who was responsible.

No proposal from Belgium has been put to the Security Council which
must make any final decision on the mandate. The 2,500 U.N. contingent
is not authorised to use force except in self-defence.

Council members have been hesitant in allowing any more peace
enforcement missions after the debacle of U.N. troops in Somalia where
they were allowed to use force.

The U.N. troops first went into Rwanda to monitor the Rwanda-Urgandan
border which was used by rebels and then observe a ceasefire and
protect government leaders.

The operation was instituted last autumn at the urging of France, which
which wanted to pull out its contingents from Kigali after they were
accused of siding with the government.

Evacuating foreigners was not part of the mission.

Belgium has put paratroops on alert to evacuate its 1,500 nationals in
from Rwanda, a former Belgian colony, after 10 Belgian soldiers were
killed trying in vain to protect the country's prime minister.

France also was considering using troops stationed in the Central
African Republic to evacuate its 600 nationals from Rwanda and the
United States said it would evacuate its 255 citizens but did not say
how.

Red Cross officials reported Friday up to 400 bodies in just one
hospital in the Rwandan capital Kigali and said thousands were now
feared killed in a two-day orgy of ethnic violence.

Rwanda and Burundi have a bloody history of tribal rivalry pitting the
majority Hutu against the Tutsi, the former feudal overlords. Tens of
thousands of members of both tribes have died in recurring bouts of
ethnic bloodletting.

(c) Reuters Limited 1994

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