Citation
MULINDI, Rwanda, April 9 (Reuter) - Rwandan rebels rejected a new
   interim government and said on Saturday troops would attack the capital
           where violence erupted after the president was killed.
    We cannot accept the new president. He is among those who are linked
      to the murder of civilians in Kigali,
 Major-General Paul Kagame,
        leader of the Rwanda Patriotic Front (RPF), said after Venat
     Sindikubwabo replaced Juvenal Habyarimana, killed on Wednesday in a
                         rocket attack on his plane.
      Reuters reporters with RPF rebels 75 kms (48 miles) north of the
   capital reported heavy fighting had broken out across a frontline which
    snakes through the north and northeast of the remote central African
                                   state.
       Heavy shelling started early this morning, the rebels are now
    advancing on three fronts,
 reporter Buchizya Mseteka told Reuters in
     Nairobi by satellite telephone from rebel headquarters in Mulindi.
    He said the sound of heavy artillery pierced the early morning air of
    the mountainous region, known to the outside world as one of the last
                     homes of the rare mountain gorilla.
      Anyone who attempts to stop them is our enemy. We are moving on
   Kigali,
 Kagame told reporters at the bush camp. Any government forces
                  that want to join us are free to do so.
     Kagame said his troops had made an irreversible decision to fight a
      clique he identified as two political parties close to the slain
      Habyarimana and to end bloodshed during which relief workers say
                    several thousand people were killed.
       Sindikubwabo, formerly parliament speaker, was a close ally of
                                Habyarimana.
      Top RPF official Patrick Mazimhaka said the heaviest fighting was
          raging at Byumba, some 50 kms (35 miles) north of Kigali.
   He added that the rebels wanted to restore a transitional government in
     Rwanda, under a peace agreement reached in Tanzania last year, and
   would not let the anarchy which has reigned in Kigali for the past few
                           days to go unpunished.
     The installation of transitional institutions under that accord has
                been put back five times since last December.
   Sindikubwabo's prime minister, Jean Kambanda, is from a faction of the
       splintered opposition Democratic and Republican Movement (MDR)
    dominated by the majority Hutu tribe. It opposes any cooperation with
                  the RPF, dominated by the minority Tutsi.
   The RPF launched its rebellion from neighbouring Uganda in 1990 with a
     force of about 10,000 fighters. It fought its way almost to Kigali
     until it was repulsed by Rwandan troops reinforced by soldiers from
                   Zaire, and later joined in peace talks.
   In an earlier broadcast on rebel radio, Kagame said anyone standing in
       the RPF's way would be considered an accomplice and dealt with
                                accordingly.
      Mazimhaka said he rebels had no objections to French, Belgian or
        American forces flying into Rwanda to rescue their nationals.
     French forces on an evacuation mission landed in Kigali and headed
                         downtown early on Saturday.
    The RPF has about 600 men in Kigali and the announcement on Saturday
     morning seemed to give a clear signal of an RPF move on the capital
              from its stronghold in the north of the country.
    A U.N. peacekeeping force, stationed in Rwanda to monitor a derailed
   peace accord between rebels and government forces, said late on Friday
               the security situation was still precarious
.
   The U.N. Assistance Mission in Rwanda (UNAMIR) has appealed to both the
     RPF and government forces to cease hostilies and act to rescue the
                               peace process.
     UNAMIR said in a statement that the RPF rebels had captured several
      positions previously held by an elite presidential guard loyal to
            Habyarimana, a Hutu in power for more than 20 years.
     Habyarimana died with Cyprien Ntaryamira, 38-year-old president of
     neighbouring Burundi, when a plane bringing them back from regional
       peace talks in Tanzania was hit by a rocket on Wednesday night.
                          (c) Reuters Limited 1994