Citation
GENEVA, April 22 (Reuter) - The United Nations on Friday called off two
    planned flights carrying emergency medical aid to Kigali, citing poor
     security around the airport of the Rwandan capital, U.N. officials
                                    said.
    The decision to postpone the flights until Saturday was taken by the
     U.N. Assistance Mission for Rwanda, known as UNAMIR, according to a
          Geneva spokeswoman of the U.N. Children's Fund (UNICEF).
   One is a C-130 Hercules aircraft, provided by Canada's Royal Airforce,
       carrying five metric tonnes of UNICEF medical supplies and dry
                                  biscuits.
      The other plane, also to depart from Nairobi, would have aboard a
   three-member U.N. mission to assess urgent needs in Kigali and outlying
                areas, as well as eight tonnes of medicines.
   The two flights were not able to take off today beause of the security
      situation at Kigali airport,
 UNICEF spokeswoman Marie Heuze told
               Reuters. They will leave on Saturday morning.
     UNAMIR took the decision, they are the ones directing flights and
                       landings in Kigali,
 she added.
   The Security Council on Friday unanimously voted to cut down its UNAMIR
    peacekeeping force to 270 troops from the roughly 2,000-strong force
      there prior to the shooting down of the presidents of Rwanda and
                             Burundi on April 6.
        Hundreds of thousands may have died in massacres since then.
         The assessment team is being led by the U.N. Department for
     Humanitarian Affairs (DHA), and is composed of one DHA staff member
                   from New York and two UNICEF employees.
      A DHA statement warned on Thursday: The possibility of epidemics
       occuring in Kigali is increasing as disposal of corpses becomes
                               overwhelming.
    The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) has said it would
     be a mistake for the U.N. forces to pull out, adding it had rarely
                     witnessed carnage on such a scale.
   The ICRC has 30 delegates in Rwanda, but due to continued fighting has
                    been able to treat only 600 wounded.
     Meanwhile, the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) said on
     Friday that 16,870 people had been killed in nine villlages around
     Cyangugu, in southwestern Rwanda, during two weeks of inter-ethnic
                                  fighting.
   The massacres were indescribable. Most killed were men and children,
                       a UNHCR spokesman told Reuters.
         UNHCR also said that 90,000 people had fled Rwanda for four
    neighbouring countries, nearly doubling the number in just two days.
      The agency said the new figure included 50,000 Burundis who have
    returned to their homeland since the presidents of the two countries
     were killed when their plane was shot down on April 6. In addition,
               12,000 Rwandans have crossed over into Burundi.
   About 150 Rwandan refugees have been treated for machete and gun shot
   wounds in northern Burundi,
 UNHCR spokesman Ron Redmond told the same
                             briefing in Geneva.
    There are also 18,000 refugees registered in Tanzania, about 5,500 in
             Uganda and 4,600 in Zaire, according to the UNHCR.
      At least 27 refugees were killed trying to cross from Rwanda into
                       Zaire, according to the agency.
     UNHCR also expressed concern for nearly 6,000 people being held by
     police and militia in a stadium in Cyangugu. The situation appears
      desperate, they have no food or water,
 an agency spokesman told
                                  Reuters.
     About 150 of the people being held in the stadium in Cyangugu have
   machete wounds,
 he added. They have been attacked, obviously, in the
                                  stadium.
                          (c) Reuters Limited 1994