Fiche du document numéro 13156

Num
13156
Date
Tuesday April 12, 1994
Amj
Auteur
Fichier
Taille
87034
Urlorg
Titre
Cabinet and Westerners flee Kigali as rebels advance
Nom cité
Nom cité
Mot-clé
Cote
lba0000020011120dq4c013s9
Source
Fonds d'archives
Type
Dépêche d'agence
Langue
EN
Citation
KIGALI, April 12 (Reuter) - The entire Rwandan cabinet and their army
escorts piled into cars on Tuesday and fled Kigali while the radio
urged civilians to support the armed forces in repelling rebels
advancing on the blood-soaked capital.

Shortly after dawn, mortars and heavy artillery boomed around the
steep, misty hills of the lush city in the remote heart of Africa.

Fighting was concentrated in the eastern suburbs of Gikondo and
Nyamiranbo, a former wealthy diplomatic suburb.

Army helicopters hovered low over the city and fired a salvo of at
least five missiles at suspected rebel positions.

Witnesses said Rwanda's entire cabinet, appointed last week after the
death of President Juvenal Habyarimana and rejected by the rebels, fled
the embattled capital to Gitarama, 40 km (25 miles) southwest of
Kigali.

Habyarimana's death last Wednesday in a rocket attack on his plane
sparked the current bout of centuries-old bloodletting between Hutus
and the minority Tutsi.

A receptionist at the city-centre Hotel des Diplomates, where the
government was based, said all its members piled into a convoy, with a
heavy escort of soldiers, and drove out of the city.

The Rwandan defence ministry issued a statement carried by Radio Rwanda
urging Rwandans to cooperate with the armed forces against the rebels.

The statement, monitored by the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC),
asked civilians to act together, carry out patrols and fight the
enemy
. It said they should report rebel positions to the armed forces.

One lone soldier stood outside the Hotel des Diplomates, previously
guarded by hundreds.

I don't think the hotel will be functioning later today, said one
diplomat.

Western military sources said Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF) fighters,
racing to reinforce a 600-strong contingent stranded in Kigali under a
shattered peace agreement, were now only a few km (miles) away.

Captain Ronny Verneers, in charge of 80 Belgian paratroopers protecting
the French school evacuation centre, told Reuters fighting was taking
place nearby.

We just had a lot of firing with mortars and light weapons from this
hill,
he said pointing at a hill some 2,000 metres (yards) away.

The army hasn't a hope in hell, replied a French military commander
when asked if the army could hold back the rebels.

Representatives of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC)
laid sandbags around its headquarters in the city centre and taped up
windows to try and prevent flying glass.

The last few Westerners in the city scrambled to safety, many weeping
for Rwandan friends and even relatives left behind.

How would you feel if you were leaving your wife and you didn't know
where she was?
sobbed a middle-aged Italian man, cradling his
Rwandese-Italian child.

The last French convoy left the French school with about 100 French
paratroopers and 80 refugees of various nationalities, including 20
Rwandese nuns.

One U.N. truck was smeared in mud for camouflage, other aid agency
vehicles had their doors torn off to give French troops inside a
clearer field of vision.

The convoy included the last French diplomats who formally closed their
country's embassy. As the convoy snaked its way across the town to the
international airport, Rwandese children scavenged through belongings
left behind by the evacuees.

Residents said ill-disciplined gangs of soldiers and police, backed by
armed members of the majority Hutu tribe, threw up more roadblocks on
Tuesday and questioned all passers-by.

A Reuter vehicle forced to stop at one saw a fresh body lying mutilated
at the side of the road. Nearby, a carload of presidential guards
looked sullenly on.

The black-bereted presidential guard, fiercely-loyal to the murdered
president, have been blamed for the deaths of thousands of people in
six days of tribal slaughter.

(c) Reuters Limited 1994
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