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Zaire confirms new rebel win in east

But government rejects talks

February 4, 1997
Web posted at: 12:30 p.m. EST (1730 GMT)

In this story:

EASTERN ZAIRE (CNN) -- Zaire acknowledged on Tuesday that rebels had taken the lake port of Kalemie in the key mining province of Shaba. Kalemie, on Lake Tanganyika in eastern Zaire, has a military base and hydroelectric power supply. It also controls a key railway line.

The victory extends the holdings of Tutsi-led rebels who've battled Zaire's army since October. The fall of Kalemie puts the rebels in control of a border strip of land in eastern Zaire stretching for more than 600 miles (1,000 km).

Military sources in the region said rebels were pouring in reinforcements to push further south toward the town of Moba. A rebel victory there could thwart Zaire's plans to ship troops across Lake Tanganyika in an effort to retake parts of Kivu province.

Outside help for rebels alleged

The armed rebellion began when ethnic Tutsis who have been living in eastern Zaire for decades were threatened with expulsion.

zaire kalemie map

They were joined by other rebels led by Laurent Kabila, who says their main objective is to overthrow his longtime foe, President Mobutu Sese Seko, who has ruled Zaire since 1965.

Zaire accuses neighboring Rwanda, Burundi and Uganda of backing the rebels and has asked the United Nations Security Council to condemn what it calls an attack by outside troops on its territory, a French Foreign Ministry spokesman said on Tuesday.

Rwanda, Burundi and Uganda all deny sending in troops.

Rebel ultimatum reported

Kabila, whose hometown is Kalemie, reportedly issued an ultimatum to the Mobutu's government threatening a renewed offensive unless negotiations were held within three weeks.

Zaire has said it would not negotiate until rebels turn over captured territory.

On Monday, Zairian Defense Ministry officials said troops from Togo, Chad and Morocco were standing by to fly to Zaire in support of the Mobutu government. However, Togo on Tuesday denied it planned to send troops to Zaire.

U.N. to world: Don't forget refugees

Also Tuesday, U.N. refugee chief Sadako Ogata criticized the international community for losing interest in the plight of hundreds of thousands of Rwandan Hutu refugees still trapped in the eastern Zaire war zone.

Speaking ahead of a tour of Africa's troubled Great Lakes region starting on Thursday, Ogata said the world had breathed a collective sigh of relief when 600,000 Hutus went home after rebels overran their camps, but she added that up to 400,000 were still in eastern Zaire.

"We have to help these people. We can't let them just wither away," she said.

Correspondent Catherine Bond and Reuters contributed to this report.

 
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