Fiche du document numéro 13288

Num
13288
Date
Monday April 18, 1994
Amj
Taille
87315
Titre
Kigali gunmen killing wounded - witnesses
Cote
lba0000020011120dq4i01dpo
Source
Fonds d'archives
Type
Dépêche d'agence
Langue
EN
Citation
NAIROBI, April 18 (Reuter) - Gunmen in the Rwandan capital of Kigali
appeared on Monday to have started deliberately killing wounded people
in areas they controlled, witnesses said.

They said grinning gunmen at several checkpoints stopped Red Cross
vehicles, shuttling wounded between hospitals in the carnage-torn
capital, and told staff they had no wounded to be picked up.

It appears they are deliberately killing all casualties so none are
evacuated because they know that the Red Cross would take any
casualties to hospital,
said a diplomat who was based in Kigali.

It is another terrible step in this absolute nightmare.

The gunmen previously dumped dead and wounded on nearby roadsides or in
ditches. Frequently, unless Red Cross teams arrived first and were able
to check for signs of life, the badly wounded were assumed to be dead
and dumped in trucks with the corpses by clean-up crews of convicts who
took them to mass graves outside the city.

Witnesses reached by telephone said Rwanda Patriotic Front (RPF) rebels
and government forces fought sporadically across the city on Monday for
a 12th day but battles had eased since Sunday.

With supplies extremely short in Kigali, the International Committee of
the Red Cross (ICRC) distributed food on Monday to 5,000 Zaireans
trapped at the Zairean embassy near an army base.

But there an awful lot more people going hungry across this city and
we just cannot reach them,
said an ICRC delegate.

Aid workers said thousands of people were still streaming into southern
Rwanda in an exodus which began when tribal mayhem spread through
Kigali after the killing of Rwanda's president on April 6.

Concern was growing over the fate of an estimated 4,000 people --
including wounded -- who took refuge in Kigali's main sports stadium
without food or shelter last week near the worst battle zones.

Officials said RPF rebels for the first time used heavy calibre
Soviet-made Stalin Organ multiple rocket launchers to bombard
government-held parts of northeastern Kigali on Sunday.

They said the rocket fire from the Tutsi-dominated RPF appeared
concentrated on a private radio station operated by extremists of
Rwanda's Hutu majority who rose up in revenge when the president was
killed in a rocket attack on his plane.

The RPF also was reported to have seized the town of Murambi southeast
of Kigali on Sunday after rocket attacks, they said.

General Romeo Dallaire, commander of the U.N. peacekeeping force in
Rwanda, was said by diplomats to be concentrating on trying again to
arrange talks between the RPF and interim government to end the
carnage.

The U.N. Security Council has not yet decided on the future of the
2,500-member U.N. Assistance Mission for Rwanda (UNAMIR), set up last
year to help implement a peace pact to end three years of civil war.

Face-to-face talks on Friday failed over tough conditions each party
set ahead of real peace negotiations.

Government conditions for a ceasefire included an immediate halt to
fighting, setting up of patrols solely manned by state police, ending
what it called punitive expeditions by rebels and neutralisation of
stray soldiers committing abuses
.

The RPF said it wanted the presidential guard, which is blamed for much
of the anarchy in Kigali and the countryside, to be disbanded and joint
rebel-government patrols launched.

The rebels also wanted the interim government dissolved so it could
open talks with opposition groups on setting up an all-party
transitional administration of national unity.

The first Belgian paratroops started arriving home in Belgium on Monday
after evacuating Westerners from Rwanda. A later flight was expected to
bring out officers attached to the U.N. mission.

A military spokesman said Belgium's full contingent of about 420 U.N.
troops in Rwanda would start to withdraw fully from Tuesday, probably
by road via Tanzania because it appeared the safest route.

Belgium announced its withdrawal from the UNAMIR after 10 of its
paratroops were killed while trying in vain to protect the prime
minister, a Tutsi, who was killed after fleeing to a U.N. compound.

U.N. peacekeepers from Belgium, the former colonial power in Rwanda,
have been holding the airport in Rwanda's capital Kigali and will be
replaced there by about 800 Ghanaian soldiers.

(c) Reuters Limited 1994

Haut

fgtquery v.1.9, 9 février 2024