Fiche du document numéro 13464

Num
13464
Date
Monday May 9, 1994
Amj
Hms
Auteur
Taille
86974
Titre
Air cargo mercy flights help Rwandan refugees
Cote
lba0000020011106dq5903ojp
Source
Fonds d'archives
Type
Dépêche d'agence
Langue
EN
Citation
LONDON, May 9 (Reuter) - The provision of a mobile airport unit at
Mwanza in Tanzania last Thursday has so far enabled 12 cargo flights to
land with emergency supplies for refugees from war-torn Rwanda, said
the U.K. Overseas Development Administration (ODA).

The ODA said it transported the unit from Kent International Airport
last Wednesday on a 40-tonne capacity IL-76 freighter wet-leased from
Russian carrier Dobrolet Airlines. Wet-leasing covers the hire of both
plane and crew.

At Mwanza, there is just a concrete landing and take-off strip in the
bush. We flew out the mobile airport unit to allow relief supplies
arriving to be unloaded without them being damaged,
said ODA emergency
aid spokeswoman Tansin Leakey.

She added that the flight, costing 200,000 stg, carried a device known
as a high unloader', which enables cargo pallets to be safely unloaded
from large aircraft with side cargo doors onto trucks.

Since it arrived, at least 12 flights have landed at Mwanza carrying
relief supplies, which have been safely unloaded. These flights have
been organised by agencies including the Red Cross, Oxfam and the
United Nations Commission for Refugees, said Leakey. More flights
will arrive daily, she added.

Apart from the high unloader, last week's ODA flight also carried a
machine that helps re-start aircraft engines, mobile battery-charged
power units for aircraft, mobile tractors to pull cargo, and satellite
telephones,
said Leakey.

Mwanza airport in north-west Tanzania is the closest to the Rwanda
border at which large freighter aircraft can land, she said.

Leakey added that the ODA had so far given 1.1 million stg to
organisations such as Oxfam and Save the Children in order to help
Rwandan refugees and would shortly allocate a further two million stg
to this cause.

For more than a month Rwanda has been engulfed by tribal killings
sparked by the death of Rwandan President Juvenal Habyarimana and the
Burundian president in a rocket attack on their plane at Kigali airport
on April 6.

More than 200,000 people are estimated to have been killed in
massacres, mostly of Tutsis by Hutu troops and militiamen, across the
central African state since the killing of the Hutu president.

Rebels have advanced on Kigali's Kanombe airport in Rwanda since last
Wednesday, theatening to cut the only air link with the outside world
for the 270-strong U.N. force and relief agencies in Rwanda. Only one
U.N. flight has landed at Kigali since last Thursday.

Air France recently switched its Rwandan flights to Burundi. It has
been involved in carrying emergency supplies such as medical equipment
flown on behlaf of French medical agency Medecins Sans Frontieres. --
Air Cargo Newsroom Tel + 44 71 324 8982; Fax + 44 71 510 5017

(c) Reuters Limited 1994

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