Fiche du document numéro 9378

Num
9378
Date
Friday April 15, 1994
Amj
Auteur
Fichier
Taille
15469
Pages
2
Titre
Kigali Gunmen Kill Injured In Red Cross Van
Nom cité
Source
Type
Article de journal
Langue
EN
Citation
From Catherine Bond in Kigali.

The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) suspended the
collecting of wounded in Kigali, the Rwandan capital, yesterday shortly
after six injured civilians were shot dead in the back of a vehicle
belonging to the National Rwandan Red Cross.

The victims shot dead in the van were said to have been killed by
government soldiers or militiamen manning one of the numerous
checkpoints in the city.

Earlier, Philippe Gaillard, the ICRC's delegate in Rwanda, visited a
suburb, Nyamirambo, in the south of the city. It was carnage. There
were hundreds of dead, all civilians, mostly men,
M Gaillard said,
visibly shaken.

The majority of the killings are carried out by militias, trained at
the instigation of Juvenal Habyarimana, the Rwandan President, who was
killed when his aircraft was shot down last week. The militiamen
belonged to two political parties which are opposed to sharing power
with rebels from Rwanda's minority Tutsi tribe, who now control
northeastern areas of the city. The rebels and militiamen continued
fighting yesterday in spite of attempts by the United Nations to
organise negotiations between the rebels and the government troops.

Increasingly in the past two days, the militiamen have appeared on the
streets armed with guns and stick grenades given to them by the
remnants of a government led by extremists from the majority Hutu
tribe.

Some streets in an area lying between the city centre and the
international airport are covered with corpses. On the other side of
the front line, eye-witnesses said that the rebels shot dead and then
cut up at least two men in civilian clothes near the rebel headquarters
yesterday. A United Nations officer said that the rebels had put five
people in a house and slaughtered them. There is a 2,000-strong UN
force in the country, but it has a humanitarian rather than
peacekeeping mandate. The authority of the force will be further
undermined by the imminent withdrawal of well-equipped Belgian troops.

Yesterday General Romeo Dallaire, the Canadian head of the UN forces in
Rwanda, spoke of the trauma that military observers experienced after
seeing the killings and the disregard of the blue beret, the UN's
insignia of neutrality. You want to be there, you want to assist, you
want to help by the presence of your blue beret ... and there is no
respect,
he said. It is a terrible experience.

General Dallaire said the rebels had stepped up their bombardment of
the northern garrison town of Byumba, about 45 miles north of Kigali.
He said about 20,000 government troops were still in their defensive
positions in and to the north of the capital.

UN-brokered talks between the two sides failed to take place yesterday,
but General Dallaire said that the UN was still trying to act as a
channel and could play a useful role.
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