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- <text id=94TT0452>
- <title>
- Apr. 25, 1994: Streets Of Slaughter
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Apr. 25, 1994 Hope in the War against Cancer
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- RWANDA, Page 44
- Streets Of Slaughter
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Tribal bloodlust and political rivalry turn the country into
- an unimaginable hell of killing, looting and anarchy
- </p>
- <p>By Marguerite Michaels--Reported by Clive Mutiso/Nairobi
- </p>
- <p> Thirty minutes before dawn last Wednesday, Hutu members of the
- presidential guard kicked in the door of a church just east
- of Rwanda's capital city of Kigali. Instantly, they opened fire
- with semiautomatic weapons and tossed in grenades. Then, according
- to Belgian news reports, they set upon the Tutsi parishioners
- who were still alive with knives, bats and spears. Almost 1,200
- civilians were massacred, more than half of them children.
- </p>
- <p> As the tribal carnage entered a second week in the tiny central
- African country, the streets of Kigali were the domain of marauding
- bands of men hacking down women and children on sight. Severed
- heads and limbs piled up on street corners, the smell of decay
- fouling the air. No matter how many bodies Red Cross workers
- collected, more appeared. Boys carrying hand grenades threatened
- passing cars, while drunken soldiers at makeshift barricades
- terrorized civilians scurrying by. In a city without electricity
- or water, the foolish few who ventured out into the streets
- to forage for food were too traumatized to eat after passing
- rows of mutilated bodies lying in pools of blood. "Hundreds
- of thousands are cut off from anything decent or human," said
- U.N. spokesman Moctar Gueye. "People are starving to death in
- their own houses. Hospitals are not functioning."
- </p>
- <p> Rwandans packed into Kigali's hotels, huddling in the dark hallways
- without food or beds, hoping the few foreigners there would
- protect them. Their terror only increased as the foreigners
- slipped away. At a hilltop compound for the insane, a group
- of Belgian nuns and lay brothers abandoned 200 of their patients
- in a desperate rush to escape. For days the clinic had been
- surrounded by bands of machete-armed Hutu men. The foreigners
- had little doubt about the future of their patients or the 500
- Tutsis who had come for refuge from the fighting outside. "They're
- finished," said hospital administrator Gerard Van Selst as he
- boarded an armored Belgian convoy. "A huge number will be killed."
- One American sheltered a fugitive opposition politician and
- helped him to safety. But there were too many others he could
- not help. "I saw scenes that will haunt me for the rest of my
- life," he said. "Bodies. Piles of bodies, women and children.
- Just piles of them."
- </p>
- <p> The numbing stacks of corpses were the grisly hallmark of a
- horrifyingly intimate style of slaughter, literal hand-to-hand
- combat. The predominantly Tutsi forces of the Rwandan Patriotic
- Front and the Hutu-dominated army and presidential guard battled
- each other with mortars, machine guns and hand grenades. But
- what kept people shuddering in the darkest corners of their
- homes were the machete-armed gangs of Hutu men on a wild killing
- spree, often drunk and dressed in startling fashions looted
- from abandoned stores and houses of the dead. Swaggering Hutu
- men and boys paraded through the city, loaded with weapons and
- cheap liquor. Many of the 20,000 victims died simply because
- they were Tutsis. "More and more of the civilian population
- armed with machetes are ruling the streets," said Philippe Gaillard,
- head of the International Committee of the Red Cross in Kigali.
- "The army can't control them."
- </p>
- <p> The bloodshed began after Presidents Juvenal Habyarimana of
- Rwanda and Cyprien Ntaryamira of Burundi, both Hutus, died when
- their plane crashed at Kigali airport almost two weeks ago.
- A military team from Belgium, the former colonial power in Rwanda,
- has concluded that the jet was shot down with rockets belonging
- to the Rwandan army--most likely by the presidential guard
- angered at plans to include Tutsis in the government. The 600-strong
- guard began murdering all the Tutsis they could find. The army
- soon joined in, as much to loot as to kill.
- </p>
- <p> After France, Belgium, Italy and the U.S. flew in military rescue
- units, most of the 2,850 terrified foreign diplomats, aid workers
- and missionaries were evacuated. Some wept with guilt over the
- fate of Rwandan friends left behind. Theresa Scimeni, an American
- teacher at the International School in Kigali, recalled the
- horror before she and her husband and two young daughters were
- rescued. "We heard each of the houses near us attacked in turn.
- There would be firing, screams, then silence," she said, safe
- in Nairobi. "Then a few minutes later the men would move to
- the next house, and it would start all over again--and again."
- </p>
- <p> The Western troops could barely manage to protect their own
- countrymen. A 2,400-member U.N. peacekeeping force, in Kigali
- to monitor a peace accord signed last year, lost 10 of its Belgian
- members when they tried to save the life of the Tutsi Prime
- Minister. Some 12,000 people were under U.N. protection at the
- national stadium and at the city's main hospital. But U.N. officials
- were worried that the lightly armed peacekeepers would not have
- the resources to cope. Chastened by the experience of Somalia,
- the U.N. Security Council is unwilling to intervene with force,
- and, for the most part, the troops in Kigali are confined to
- their barracks. Belgium is withdrawing its 400 soldiers; U.N.
- Secretary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali told the Security Council
- last week that unless there is a cease-fire soon, he will recommend
- the withdrawal of all but a skeletal staff of 250 peacekeepers.
- "If we are just cooped up watching them pound each other, then
- we have to seriously assess the risk of keeping these soldiers
- here," said the U.N. commander, General Romeo Dallaire of Canada.
- </p>
- <p> The best hope for Rwanda now seems to be the successful takeover
- of the country by the rebels, who have promised to end the chaos.
- Hundreds of rebel reinforcements were fighting their way into
- the capital. While guerrillas inside Kigali carried out hit-and-run
- attacks on government positions, thousands more bombarded the
- city from positions in the hills to the north. Rwandan army
- officers scoffed at the idea of a rebel victory in Kigali. But
- the Front, which claims as many men as the army--about 20,000--is thought to be a better disciplined and more heavily armed
- fighting force. It has flatly refused a cease-fire until the
- presidential guard has surrendered or been liquidated. On Saturday,
- however, both sides allowed food and medicine to be flown into
- the capital.
- </p>
- <p> With no place to hide, tens of thousands of refugees lined the
- roads in all directions, seeking a way out of the blood-soaked
- city; the streams of misery stretched for miles. Most were on
- foot, carrying meager bundles of possessions. Scores of people
- crowded into buses and clung to the sides of any vehicle that
- would attempt the twisting, mountainous roads. The wealthy raced
- away in luxury cars with private bodyguards, the barrels of
- automatic weapons jutting from every window. Danger still waited
- at checkpoints every mile or so, manned by demoralized and frightened
- Rwandan soldiers looking for loot.
- </p>
- <p> The Tutsi rebels have promised not to retaliate against the
- Hutus and have pledged to end the slaughter. But the refugees
- know just how many times that promise has been made over the
- years by both tribes--and then broken.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-