Fiche du document numéro 13368

Num
13368
Date
Saturday April 23, 1994
Amj
Hms
Auteur
Fichier
Taille
87296
Urlorg
Titre
U.N. peacekeepers step up departure from Rwanda
Cote
lba0000020011120dq4n01n5i
Source
Fonds d'archives
Type
Dépêche d'agence
Langue
EN
Citation
NAIROBI, April 23 (Reuter) - U.N. peacekeepers scrambled out of chaotic
Rwanda where, amid the bloodshed, aid agencies struggled to get food
and emergency medicines to thousands of people fleeing civil war.

A United Nations spokesman said 1,000 peacekeepers would leave the
chaotic central African state by Saturday night.

Their departure leaves about 600 U.N. soldiers who will be reduced
within days to the 270 mandated by the Security Council, a spokesman
for the U.N. Assistance Mission in Rwanda (UNAMIR) told Reuters in
Nairobi by telephone from Kigali.

Critics of the pullout, such as the Organisation of African Unity and
humanitarian groups, say the U.N. is abandoning the thousands of
Rwandans it was guarding around a country where tens of thousands have
already been killed in ethnic slaughter.

The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said a medical
convoy with 20 staff, including doctors and surgeons, had managed to
get through to the embattled Rwandan capital of Kigali from Burundi
late on Friday.

The convoy was to supply two hospitals in Kigali operating under the
Red Cross emblem and another hospital near the town of Gitarama. The
ICRC has around 45 international staff in Rwanda, two-thirds of them in
the capital.

A U.N. team to evaluate Rwanda's humanitarian needs was expected to
land in Kigali on Saturday where according to a military official small
arms fire erupted early in the day but eased later.

The 10-member group is headed by undersecretary-general for
humanitarian affairs Peter Hansen, UNAMIR officials said.

The U.N. spokesman said the United Nations had sought guarantees from
the rebel Rwanda Patriotic Front (RPF) and government army units that
aid agencies would not be attacked.

He did not say whether the guarantees were given. But he had no word
that emergency aid supplies had reached the city.

In Washington, the White House called on the warring sides to agree to
an immediate ceasefire and said it was prepared to help efforts to
arrange a political settlement of their dispute.

We call on the Rwandan army and the Rwandan Patriotic Front to agree
on an immediate ceasefire and return to negotiations called for and
facilitated by the government of Tanzania,
a White House statement
said on Friday.

It added that Washington was prepared to participate, as in the past,
in renewed negotiations in the context of the Arusha Agreement of
August 4, 1993.
That agreement called for a negotiated settlement and
power-sharing between rival groups.

U.N. special representative Jacques-Roger Booh Booh was heading the
U.N. mediation team in the northern Tanzanian town of Arusha where the
Rwandan foes were due to meet later on Saturday for peace talks.

The mass killings, mainly pitting the majority Hutu tribe against the
minority Tutsi, started 17 days ago when a plane carrying the Rwandan
and Burundian presidents was shot down by a rocket as they were about
to land in Kigali.

At the United Nations in New York, a spokesman for Secretary-General
Boutros Boutros-Ghali said on Friday the U.N. chief would have
preferred a beefed-up U.N. operation in Rwanda but realised the
Security Council felt differently.

The council voted late on Thursday to cut the beleaguered force, once
2,500-strong, to about 270 to help negotiate a truce in the civil war.

(c) Reuters Limited 1994
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