Citation
NAIROBI, April 15 (Reuter) - Rwandan rebels and government forces
      battled with artillery and mortars on Friday for control of their
                    country's bloodsoaked capital Kigali.
    The U.N. Assistance Mission in Rwanda (UNAMIR) said fighting between
   Rwanda Patriotic Front (RPF) rebels and government units was raging at
    key points of the city where thousands of people have died in an orgy
   of ethnic violence between the majority Hutu and minority Tutsi tribes,
    Former colonial power Belgium called on the United Nations to suspend
     its paralysed peacekeeping operation in the central African state,
                        saying it had lost its point.
    U.N. officials said that despite six days of fighting, sparked by the
   death of President Juvenal Habyarimana in a rocket attack on his plane
        last week, neither group seemed to be in control of the city.
     Hundreds of rebel fighters have infiltrated the city but government
    troops, including men of the presidential guard, were still resisting
                     fiercely, the U.N. officials said.
    Fighting was continuing despite a U.N.-brokered agreement to allow a
              further 24 hours to evacuate trapped foreigners.
     The agreement was meant to allow Belgian and French forces to avoid
     direct combat with either rebels or government army units on roads
                    leading to the international airport.
   It was not clear how many foreigners remained trapped in the country of
                            eight million people.
    Belgium said it was withdrawing its contingent of about 420 men from
   the U.N. team and said the 2,500-strong peacekeeping deployment should
    be suspended and leave Rwanda because of the brutal rupture
 in the
                        peace and democracy process.
   That is why the government is in favour of the suspension of the U.N.
       mandate and the withdrawal of troops,
 the government said in a
                                 statement.
   U.N. officials said it was impossible to keep the mission going without
                         the well-equipped Belgians.
    In Geneva, the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) said more
    than 20,000 people, many of them refugees from neighbouring Burundi,
                   had fled the current unrest in Rwanda.
     UNHCR spokeswoman Sylvana Foa told reporters that 12,000 people had
   fled to Burundi, around 9,100 to Zaire, several hundred to Tanzania and
                            around 100 to Uganda.
     Of those that had fled to Burundi, 11,000 were Burundians who fled
      ethnic violence in their own country last year. There are around
                275,000 Burundi refugees in camps in Rwanda.
      Of the 9,100 who had fled to Zaire, 8,000 were Rwandans and 1,100
      refugees from Burundi. Those who fled to Zaire and Tanzania were
                                  Rwandans.
     Foa said a U.N. team had managed to get into Burundi refugee camps
    around Butare, near the Burundi border, where about 140,000 refugees
                               were holed up.
   The team had reported that the situation in the area was stable and had
    given the green light for cross-border aid convoys from Tanzania via
                    northern Burundi to go to the camps.
     Foa said there was about a week's supply of food in the camps, even
             with all the refugees in them only on half-rations.
   She added that High Commissioner for Refugees Sadako Ogata had released
     $5 million from an emergency fund to tide the operation over until
             donor governments responded to an appeal for funds.
      The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) has suspended
     operations in the country after gunmen pulled six wounded civilians
   from vehicles belonging to the local Rwandan Red Cross and killed them
                      on the spot, ICRC officials said.
                          (c) Reuters Limited 1994