Fiche du document numéro 13390

Num
13390
Date
Monday April 25, 1994
Amj
Hms
Taille
86231
Titre
Hopes low for Rwanda ceasefire
Cote
lba0000020011120dq4p01q6r
Source
Fonds d'archives
Type
Dépêche d'agence
Langue
EN
Citation
NAIROBI, April 26 (Reuter) - A ceasefire declared by Rwandan rebel
forces was due to start on Tuesday morning, but few aid and U.N.
officials hold out much hope it will end nearly three weeks of
horrifying slaughter.

Hours before the unilateral ceasefire announced by the Rwanda Patriotic
Force (RPF) was supposed to come into force at midnight (2200 GMT) on
Monday, heavy shelling thundered across Rwanda's blood-soaked capital
Kigali.

I don't know what will happen after midnight, said Abdul Kabia,
executive director of the U.N. Assistance Mission in Rwanda (UNAMIR).
But I am hopeful maybe we will have a peaceful night.

U.N. officials note that government forces in Kigali are largely out of
control of the rump government in the town of Gityrama to the
southwest.

A government team signed a ceasefire agreement from Sunday brokered by
Zaire. But the RPF did not, and the fighting continued.

Most killings, which aid workers say have mounted to 100,000, are the
mass slaughter of unarmed civilian men, women and children rather than
battlefield losses in the war between the RPF and the military.

U.N. officials say the massacres, sparked by the death of president
Juvenal Habyarimana in a rocket attack on his plane on April 6, are the
work of sections of the government forces, particularly the
presidential guard, and militias of the majority Hutu tribe set up by
Habyarimana's ruling party.

The Tutsi-dominated RPF, which says it launched an offensive on Kigali
on April 8 to stop the killings and restore the rule of law, accuses
the international community of keeping silent in the face of evil.

Today everybody is talking of a ceasefire. The question of genocide
has been relegated to a secondary issue,
complained RPF
Secretary-General Theogene Rudasingwa on Monday in Tanzania's northern
town of Arusha where weekend peace talks failed to get off the ground.

Rudasingwa accused the United Nations of deliberately ignoring the
genocide in Rwanda in contrast to the world body's more forceful policy
in Bosnia.

UNAMIR spokesman Moctar Gueye denies the United Nations has kept silent
and said it would also seek justice for the torture and murder of 10
Belgian peacekeepers by presidential guards on April 7.

In recent days government artillery batteries have fired on U.N.
personnel, who have been reduced to 270 from 2,500 in Rwanda by a
Security Council resolution on Thursday, he said.

Even before the presidential plane was shot down, human rights groups
had for months warned of violence in Rwanda, saying Habyarimana
imported weapons from South Africa, France and Egypt.

The RPF warned that for the ceasefire to continue to be observed
government forces would have to stop massacres in areas they control
within 96 hours.

The United Nations says that adding to the horrors, a health disaster
is imminent.

In Kigali there is literally nothing by way of medication, no water,
no sanitation facilities, no materials to build latrines,
said Peter
Hansen, U.N. undersecretary for humanitarian affairs.

Hansen, who had just returned from the Rwandan capital, appealed for an
emergency $11.68 million as a preliminary step.

He told reporters in Nairobi: In Kigali, there are decomposing bodies
being eaten by dogs, rats, birds...


Fears violence would spread to neighbouring Burundi, where simmering
Hutu-Tutsi rivalry has so far been held in check, grew on Monday when a
paratroopers attempted a coup. It was foiled.

(c) Reuters Limited 1994

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