Citation
UNITED NATIONS, April 7 (Reuter) - The United Nations said Thursday
      that three Belgian U.N. infantry soldiers were killed in Rwanda's
   capital Kigali which fell into chaos after the killing of the country's
                        president and prime minister.
    U.N. spokesman Joe Sills had said the Belgian soldiers were military
    observers but U.N. officials as well as Belgian diplomats later said
        they were part of the more than 400 troops Belgium has in the
                           peacekeeping operation.
    A spokesman for Belgium's U.N. mission said the troops were guarding
         the prime minister of Rwanda's house before she was killed.
    He said Belgium had lost track of 10 soldiers serving with the United
     Nations. It is possible that the three bodies who have been sited
     might be one of the 10,
 he added. But he said Belgium still had to
                            identify the bodies.
        A U.N. spokesman in Kigali said Rwandan Prime Minister Agathe
      Uwilingiyimana was killed Thursday near the presidential palace.
     U.N. officials in New York said the prime minister left the palace
    under U.N. guard. The guard was disarmed and she fled to the compound
    of the U.N. Development Programme in Rwanda, which includes civilian
     aid volunteers. Armed men then broke into the compound and took her
                                    away.
      Her husband and two children as well as prime minister designate,
     Faustin Twagiramungu, currently are in U.N. protective custody, the
                               officials said.
      Rwandan President Juvenal Habyarimana, 57, and Burundi President
   Cyprien Nytaryamira, 38, were killed late Wednesday when rockets downed
   their plane as they came back from a peace conference in Tanzania. Both
   were from the majority Hutu tribe long at odds with the Tutsi minority
                             in both countries.
     The United Nations has a peacekeeping force of 2,500 in Rwanda and
     about 250 civilians in Burundi in a now-futile effort to maintain a
    ceasefire between the Hutu-dominated government and the rebel Rwanda
                              Patriotic Front.
    U.N. spokesman Fred Eckhard said the United Nations was attempting to
    form a peace committee
 of political parties, military officers and
     police in an effort to establish some authority in Kigali that can
                               restore order.
     He said there was calm in Burundi at the moment but fears that the
                 bloodletting in Rwanda would spread there.
     Bitter rivalry between the Hutu and Tutsi, former feudal overlords,
     predates Rwanda's and Burundi's independence from Belgium in 1962.
    Tens of thousands of Tutsi and Hutu have died in ethnic slaughter in
   both countries over the years. The death toll in Burundi since renegade
   troops killed its first Hutu president, Melchior Ndadaye, on October 21
                              is up to 50,000.
                          (c) Reuters Limited 1994