Fiche du document numéro 13252

Num
13252
Date
Friday April 15, 1994
Amj
Hms
Taille
85283
Titre
End U.N. peacekeeping role in Rwanda, Belgium says
Cote
lba0000020011120dq4f01cee
Source
Fonds d'archives
Type
Dépêche d'agence
Langue
EN
Citation
BRUSSELS, April 15 (Reuter) - Belgium said on Friday the United Nations
should suspend its peacekeeping operation in Rwanda and stepped up the
withdrawal of troops sent in last weekend to evacuate foreigners.

An army spokesman said the last of the 400 troops were expected to be
flown out Friday evening. About 12 flights had left Friday for Nairobi.

Belgian U.N. forces were at the airport in the capital Kigali and were
awaiting orders to leave, he said.

The troops had fired a warning salvo to stop Rwandan army soldiers
attacking the Rwandan Patriotic Front from the airport. We shot 50
metres beyond their battery range as a warning after asking them to
stop twice and the battery was moved,
the spokesman said.

A government statement said the U.N. mission in Rwanda, which has been
mired in violence since the assassination of the president last week,
had lost its point 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,
it added.

Ten Belgian soldiers serving with the U.N. were killed in the violence
that followed the death of President Juvenal Habyarimana in a rocket
attack on his plane.

Belgian Foreign Minister Willy Claes said on Thursday that Belgium, the
former colonial power in Rwanda, would withdraw its U.N. contingent of
about 420 men.

Claes said the presence of the U.N. troops had not prevented the deaths
of tens of thousands of people and there was such an anti-Belgian
climate in Rwanda that Belgium could no longer take the responsibilty
of endangering its soldiers further.

The government statement said that more than 1,500 people had been
repatriated to Belgium and the evacuation was in its final phase.

Luxembourg's Foreign Ministry said its honorary consul, Charles
Shamakiga, had been killed on April 7 in the violence following the
president's death.

The international medical agency Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) said a
six-person surgical team which travelled to Rwanda via Burundi was
operating from an annex to Kigali's Centre Hospitalier.

But another team flown in via Nairobi could not reach the centre of
Kigali due to the fighting and had to return to Nairobi.

MSF also said it had teams in some other regions. Tension was high in
the southern Butare and Bugesera provinces between the local population
and refugees from Burundi who had left certain camps to return to
Burundi, the statement said.

It said that refugees were being attacked on the road by armed groups.
Corpses of 11 women, their hands tied behind their backs and mutilated
by machetes, arrived at Butare hospital on Thursday afternoon,
it
said.

(c) Reuters Limited 1994

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