Fiche du document numéro 13297

Num
13297
Date
Tuesday April 19, 1994
Amj
Hms
Auteur
Fichier
Taille
86217
Urlorg
Titre
Rights body says Rwanda death toll may be 100,000
Cote
lba0000020011120dq4j01h9o
Source
Fonds d'archives
Type
Dépêche d'agence
Langue
EN
Citation
UNITED NATIONS, April 19 (Reuter) - A leading human rights group said
Tuesday as many as 100,000 people may have been killed in civil
war-torn Rwanda over the past two weeks.

In a letter to Security Council President Colin Keating of New Zealand,
Human Rights Watch said: At this time, the atrocities have spread, and
international humanitarian organisations have estimated that there may
have been as many as 100,000 killed in the past two weeks.


The carnage followed the April 6 downing of a plane carrying Rwandan
President Juvenal Habyarimana and President Cyprien Ntaryamira of
neighbouring Burundi as they were about to land in Kigali, the capital.

Human Rights Watch said the campaign of killing was planned weeks
before Habyarimana's death, when army officers trained, armed and
organised some 1,700 young men into a militia affiliated with the
president's political party.


It said the Rwandan defence ministry also made broadcasts attacking the
political opposition and inciting violence against civilians
sympathetic to the Rwanda Patriotic Front (RPF), making clear it was
referring to members of the Tutsi tribe.

Immediate after the president's death, the army and militia engaged in
targeted killings of political opponents of the regime, including both
Hutu and Tutsi human rights activists and moderates within the
government, including the prime minister.


Human Rights Watch also said the Rwandan authorities had cut telephone
links with the rest of the world in the past 48 hours.

U.N. sources said Secretary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali was expected
to make a recommendation to the Security Council Wednesday on the
future of the 2,000-man U.N. Assistance Mission for Rwanada (UNAMIR),
deployed last year to help implement an agreement meant to end three
years of civil war between the government and the RPF.

The options are to leave the force intact and give it a new mandate;
leave only a small token force; or carry out a complete withdrawal.
Council members said last week they did not intend abandoning Rwanda.

A U.N. official who briefed council members Tuesday said the situation
in Kigali was deteriorating. He said a shell landed on the UNAMIR
building but did not explode.

A spokesman for the RPF, Claude Dusaidi, told reporters at the United
Nations he was beginning to smell racism in these corridors as the
reason for the world body's failure to stop the killings.

He said genocide was taking place in Rwanda on a scale not seen
elsewhere and contrasted the inaction with what he said was done when
the Germans committed crimes of genocide in the Second World War ...
when in Yugoslavia there were acts of genocide.


(c) Reuters Limited 1994
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