Fiche du document numéro 13074

Num
13074
Date
Sunday April 10, 1994
Amj
Hms
Auteur
Fichier
Taille
87217
Urlorg
Titre
Belgium tries to get paras into stricken Rwanda
Cote
lba0000020011120dq4a00zzb
Source
Type
Dépêche d'agence
Langue
EN
Citation
BRUSSELS, April 10 (Reuter) - Belgium struggled on Sunday to get 400
crack paratroops into Rwanda as part of an international force to
protect and evacuate foreigners from its former African colony, after
they were unable to land in the stricken country.

Belgium has 1,500 citizens -- the biggest contingent of foreign
nationals -- in the tiny central African state that has been plunged
into chaos by civil war and ethnic strife. Some Belgians have managed
to flee overland.

Although the Rwandan government had dropped earlier objections to the
troops landing in the capital Kigali, officials said government forces
at the airport were still opposed to their arrival.

Those forces had blocked the runway with fire trucks.

Our analysis is that at the moment we don't have a green light, said
Colonel Freddy van de Weghe, a spokesman for the Belgian armed forces.

Government sources said Belgium was making intense diplomatic efforts
to resolve the problem and hoped to get a final go-ahead later on
Sunday for the paratroops to fly into Kigali. For now, they have landed
in neighbouring countries.

The Belgians are unpopular among the majority Hutu tribe which believes
they support the rebels.

Officials said there were also strong rumours in Kigali that Belgium,
the former colonial power, had been involved in the assassination of
Rwanda's president last week.

Belgium had put a force of 800 paratroops on alert for Rwanda. Some 400
have left and others are expected to do so in the coming hours and
days. Military sources said earlier information that all 800 had left
was incorrect.

Four hundred French soldiers landed at Kigali airport on Saturday and
have already begun evacuating some 600 French nationals living in
Rwanda. More than 300 U.S. Marines have deployed to Bujumbura, the
capital of neighbouring Burundi.

Thousands are reported to have been killed in fighting this week which
followed the assassination of the presidents of Rwanda and Burundi last
Wednesday.

Rwanda has been gripped by a four-year civil war which has pitted the
Hutus against the Rwanda Patriotic Front (RPF) rebels of the minority
Tutsi tribe.

The Hutus accuse Belgium of covertly supporting the RPF which has its
main office in Brussels. Belgium insists that it has remained neutral
in the conflict.

The rebels, who have vowed to smash the interim government and are
sending major forces towards the capital, warned France, Belgium and
the United States on Saturday to limit their troop deployments to
rescuing their nationals.

The Rwanda Patriotic Front will not give any warning to those who seek
to transform what they claim as humanitarian missions into military
assistance for autocratic regimes which are close to the end,
said a
statement issued in Brussels.

Ten Belgian soldiers with the U.N. force were killed on Thursday,
trying in vain to protect Rwandan Prime Minister Agathe Unilingyimana.
They were disarmed and shot. The prime minister was also killed as she
tried to flee.

Some of the troops preparing to leave at the weekend were from the same
unit, based at Flawinne near the city of Namur.

(c) Reuters Limited 1994
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