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Lorsque les troupes françaises quittent Gisenyi, les maisons continuent de brûler dans la commune de Bisesero, à dix miles (16 km) du lac Kivu près de Kibuye

Numéro : 815
Date : 27 juin 1994
Auteur : Kiley, Sam
Titre : UN dithers on Rwanda rescue as Tutsi hail French troops
Source : The Times
Résumé : À Paris, les dirigeants français déclarent que leur expédition militaire s'est gagnée la population tutsi menacée et que le soutien international grandissant justifie leur décision d'engager des troupes. Le massacre des Tutsi par les partisans du gouvernement rwandais continue sans relâche en dépit d'une rencontre entre le gouvernement et l'envoyé du pape qui a plaidé pour la fin des massacres. Quand les troupes françaises ont quitté Gisenyi, où le cardinal Roger Etchegaray a rencontré des représentants du gouvernement rwandais, des maisons continuaient à brûler dans la commune de Bisesero, à l'intérieur, à seize kilomètres du lac Kivu, près de Kibuye.
Citation: From Sam Kiley in Bisesero, near Kibuye, and Charles Bremner in Paris. The United Nations yesterday put off an attempt to rescue a group of unaccompanied Rwandan children and orphans among 30,000 civilians it says are trapped in Kigali by the civil war. After days of intense fighting, the capital was ominously silent for much of the night but the UN said it had postponed plans to evacuate about 200 trapped Tutsi mostly children after failing to win guarantees of safe passage. As the UN hesitated, French troops fanned out across the southwest of the country to prevent fresh massacres after the killing of tens of thousands of people in two months of ethnic and related bloodletting. In Paris, French leaders claimed that their military expedition had won over the endangered Tutsi population and that growing international support was vindicating the decision to send troops in. "We have managed to get ourselves accepted as a force for peace," said Francois Leotard, the Defence Minister, in a report on the success so far of what France depicts as a purely humanitarian mission. He said that the main problem France now faced was to draw in the help of non-government humanitarian organisations to take care of the protected population and to encourage African states to send troops "to support and replace us". The slaughter of Tutsi by Rwandan government supporters continued unabated in spite of a meeting between the government and the Pope's envoy, who pleaded for an end to the killings. When the French troops left Gisenyi, where Cardinal Roger Etchegaray met representatives of the Rwandan government, houses continued to burn in the commune of Bisesero, ten miles inland from Lake Kivu near Kibuye. A source close to the cardinal said that his plans this week included meetings with members of the rebel Rwandan Patriotic Front. Murderer's mission: Sylvester Gscumbitsi, blamed for the massacre of 3,000 people in one of the worst atrocities in Rwanda, is in charge of distributing international food aid to members of Rwanda's majority Hutu tribe in a refugee camp in Tanzania, according to a BBC Panorama programme to be shown tonight.

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