Fiche du document numéro 13024

Num
13024
Date
Saturday April 9, 1994
Amj
Hms
Taille
88204
Titre
Belgium sends paras to Rwanda as fighting rages
Cote
lba0000020011120dq4900zp8
Source
Type
Dépêche d'agence
Langue
EN
Citation
BRUSSELS, April 9 (Reuter) - Belgium sent crack paratroops to Rwanda on
Saturday as part of an international force to protect and evacuate
foreigners from its former African colony, torn apart by a civil war
along ethnic lines.

Military sources said an advance detachment of paratroops, including
eight C-130 transport planes packed with military equipment, left
Belgium for the Rwandan capital Kigali.

Most of the force of 800 paratroopers -- two battalions -- was expected
to leave later on Saturday, taking plenty of heavy equipment and
vehicles in case the troops are caught up in the fierce fighting
between rebels and government forces.

Some 280 French paratroops had flown in to secure the airport in Kigali
before dawn on Saturday and Paris said 120 more would be sent later to
prepare for the possible evacuation of some 600 nationals living in
Rwanda.

Belgian Deputy Prime Minister Elio di Rupo said the main mission was to
protect the 1,500 Belgian nationals living in the tiny central African
state but that provision had been made for evacuation if people wanted
to leave.

For now, the chief concern of the government is to do everything to
protect our nationals,
di Rupo said.

The United States, which has ordered its 230 citizens there to leave
the country and is making plans for an evacuation, sent 330 Marines and
seven military aircraft to neighbouring Burundi, as well as four C-141
transport aircraft to Kenya.

The United States also agreed to lend a C-5 Galaxy transport plane to
help the Belgian paratroops with their deployment from Brussels.

Although savage fighting which broke out in Kigali after the presidents
of Rwanda and Burundi were assassinated on Wednesday had abated
initially by early Saturday, a ceasefire reported by the United Nations
then appeared to break down completely.

Colonel Luc Marchal, the commander of Belgian forces serving with a
2,500-strong U.N. mission in the country, said Rwanda Patriotic Front
(RPF) rebels and government forces were still fighting. Aid workers
said heavy weapons were being used.

Rwandan rebel leader Paul Kagame rejected a new interim government and
said his troops would attack and take the city.

Marchal said government forces had blocked the airport runway with fire
trucks after the French troops landed.

Belgian radio said the paratroops from Brussels might be forced to land
at Entebbe airport in Uganda or in Burundi.

A spokesman for the Belgian branch of Medecins sans Frontieres (MSF),
an international medical charity, said the rebels had launched an
attack on the northern town of Ruhengeri.

The spokesman said there were some 350 dead at the main hospital in
Kigali, where a team from MSF was working.

Hundreds of people have been reported killed in this week's violence,
including political leaders, aid workers, nuns, priests and Belgian
U.N. peacekeepers.

The Belgian government said on Friday it had decided on measures to
guarantee the safety of its nationals in Rwanda.

Ten Belgian soldiers with the U.N. force were killed on Thursday,
trying in vain to protect Rwandan Prime Minister Agathe Unilingyimana.
They were disarmed and shot. The prime minister was also killed as she
tried to flee.

Some of the troops preparing to leave on Saturday were from the same
unit, based at Flawinne near the city of Namur.

Diplomats at the United Nations said Belgium was also considering
asking that the peacekeeping force be expanded to include, under a U.N.
flag, any troops it sent to Rwanda.

But the United Nations force currently has no mandate to evacuate or
protect foreign nationals.

Kigali was plunged into an orgy of ethnic violence and looting after
the presidents of Burundi and Rwanda were killed on Wednesday. The
plane they were travelling in was downed by a rocket but it is not
clear who was responsible for the attack.

Rwanda, one of the poorest African states, has suffered from a civil
war along tribal lines for four years, pitting the Hutu majority
against the Tutsi minority.

Belgium, which built up a huge empire in central Africa in the 19th
century, has often sent troops to restore order or rescue nationals
since it gave up colonies such as Zaire and Rwanda. Rwanda became
independent in 1962.

(c) Reuters Limited 1994

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