Fiche du document numéro 13295

Num
13295
Date
Tuesday April 19, 1994
Amj
Hms
Taille
84876
Titre
Agency sends first aid flight to Rwandan refugees
Cote
lba0000020011120dq4j01gz8
Source
Fonds d'archives
Type
Dépêche d'agence
Langue
EN
Citation
LONDON, April 19 (Reuter) - British aid agency Oxfam said its first
relief flight bringing aid to refugees fleeing bloodshed in Rwanda
would leave London on Wednesday and appealed for more U.N. soldiers to
protect civilians.

Tens of thousands of Rwandans are believed to have died and up to two
million have fled amid two weeks' fighting between the Hutu-dominated
army and the rebel Rwanda Patriotic Front (RPF).

The U.N. Security Council was expected to order the withdrawal of
peacekeeping troops from the country on Tuesday following the failure
last week of U.N.-brokered face-to-face talks between the government
and RPF representatives in Kigali.

Oxfam said a plane-load of vehicles, communications equipment, blankets
and two emergency staff would leave for Goma in nearby Zaire at a cost
of 478,000 pounds ($706,000). A second flight is due to leave London's
Gatwick airport on Saturday.

Thousands (of refugees) are moving south from the capital Kigali. It
is unclear at the moment where people will end up,
Oxfam said in a
statement, adding that Rwandan border guards were preventing refugees
from crossing the frontiers.

The Tanzanian border in particular is difficult to cross except by
guarded bridges, as it is marked by the fast-flowing crocodile-infested
Kagera river,
it added.

It said United Nations forces in Rwanda were not strong enough to
protect civilians and had no clear mandate to do so.

Oxfam and other voluntary organisations across Europe are appealing to
the U.N. Security Council...to increase the size of the U.N. force and
to bring political pressure to bear for a ceasefire and for protection
of civilians.


It said it had asked the Organisation of African Unity and neighbouring
Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda to call an emergency summit meeting to
discuss the situation in the tiny central African state.

Last week Oxfam launched an emergency appeal to the British public to
raise more than one million pounds ($1.5 million) to get urgent aid to
the former Belgian colony. On Tuesday the British government pledged to
give 820,000 pounds ($1.2 million) in humanitarian aid for victims of
the conflict.

(c) Reuters Limited 1994

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