Citation
GENEVA, April 8 (Reuter) - U.N. secretary general Boutros Boutros-Ghali
 said on Friday that he had asked his special representitive in Rwanda
 to take steps to guarantee security throughout the country and
 especially in the capital.
 
 In a statement issued by his spokeswoman in Geneva, he also said he was
 preparing an urgent report for the Security Council on measures to
 protect the 2,439 U.N. personnel and their dependents now in Rwanda.
 
 Boutros-Ghali has been in touch with the warring tribes and with his
 special representative, Jacques-Roger Booh-Booh, a former foreign
 minister of Cameroon named to the top U.N. post in Kigali last
 November, the statement said.
 
 The secretary-general has been in touch with all parties concerned and
 his special representative in Kigali. He asked him to take all measures
 immediately to guarantee security throughout the country and
 particularly in Kigali,
 it said.
 
 The secretary general is urgently preparing a report to the Security
 Council on the measures to take so as to protect the U.N. personnel in
 Rwanda.
 
 U.N. sources said any decision on evacuating U.N. staff from Rwanda
 would be taken directly by Boutros-Ghali, who arrived in Geneva on
 Thursday for a five-day visit.
 
 He deplored the deaths on Thursday of Rwanda's Prime Minister Agatha
 Uwilingiyimana as well as the 10 Belgians serving as U.N. peacekeepers
 who were assigned to guard her.
 
 The flags at the U.N. European headquarters flew at half-mast on Friday
 in tribute to the Belgian blue helmets.
 
 The U.N. Security Council last week renewed for four months the mandate
 of the 2,131 peacekeepers it now has in Rwanda, a former Belgian
 colony.
 
 There are also 92 civilian staff working for the U.N. Mission for
 Assistance to Rwanda, as well as 102 employees of other U.N. agencies
 and their 114 dependents, according to a list provided by a U.N.
 spokeswoman in Geneva.
 
 Many of the U.N. staff in Rwanda work in refugee camps taking care of
 people who fled Burundi when tribal massacres followed a coup attempt
 last October.
 
 (c) Reuters Limited 1994