Fiche du document numéro 13347

Num
13347
Date
Friday April 22, 1994
Amj
Hms
Taille
87735
Titre
Rebel reinforcements push on Kigali despite talks
Cote
lba0000020011120dq4m01n1p
Source
Fonds d'archives
Type
Dépêche d'agence
Langue
EN
Citation
NAIROBI, April 22 (Reuter) - Rebel reinforcements advanced on
government forces in the beleaguered Rwandan capital of Kigali after
both sides agreed to peace talks and the U.N. voted to withdraw all but
a few hundred of its peacekeepers.

United Nations officials in Kigali said Rwanda Patriotic Front (RPF)
reinforcements were heading for the capital after they were reported to
have captured the town of Rwamagana, about 25 miles (40 km) to the
east.

The officials, speaking by telephone, said they had fresh reports of
massacres of civilians near the southern towns of Butare, Gityrama and
Gikondoro but had no figures for the dead.

Hundreds of thousands of people are feared to have been slaughtered
since the presidents of Rwanda and neighbouring Burundi were killed
when their plane was shot down near Kigali on April 6.

In New York, the U.N. Security 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 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 pledged to consider promptly any recommendations to
increase the force level, 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
.

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
.

Aid agencies have said a total U.N. withdrawal from Rwanda would put at
risk thousands of displaced people who rely on the U.N. presence to
deter roaming gunmen and U.N. officers are worried about the
effectiveness of such a small force.

With that number (270), we simply cannot accompany convoys, monitor
any ceasefire or investigate problems as well as take over control of
the airport, as is planned,
a U.N. officer said.

A force of 270 would also have a lot of manpower problems if it was
required to stay near places where the refugees are.


But a senior U.N. official in Kigali said he had no evidence to support
a British Broadcasting Corporation report that thousands of displaced
people in the city's main stadium were threatening to commit suicide if
all U.N. forces pulled out.

The people at stadium have expressed their great concern at the news
that the United Nations was leaving but none of them have threatened
suicide,
said UNAMIR's executive director, Abdul Kabia.

The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), which said it had
rarely seen a human tragedy on the scale of the massacres, urged U.N.
peacekeepers to stay in the country, now bordering on famine.

In neighbouring Burundi, state-radio said President Sylvestre
Ntibantunganya held a meeting of ministers and representatives of the
security fores and local government to find a lasting solution to
sporadic violence in the past week.

The radio said fighting was continuing in the capital of Bujumbura.
Diplomats fear Burundi, which like Rwanda has a long history of
bloodshed between its Hutu majority and Tutsi minority, may soon
explode.

(c) Reuters Limited 1994

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