Refugees vanish; Zaire rebels accused of 'slow extermination'
April 25, 1997
Web posted at: 4:15 p.m. EDT (2015 GMT)
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KISANGANI, Zaire (CNN) -- An aerial search confirmed Friday
that some 85,000 Rwandan Hutu refugees fled into the Zairian
jungle, victims of a rebel "policy of slow
extermination," the United Nations said. It hinted that
those responsible could face international prosecution.
"We didn't see any refugees," said Carlos Haddad, Kisangani
representative of the U.N. World Food Program (WFP), after
flying 58 miles south of Zaire's northeastern capital.
"The forest is so dense that either they are hiding
somewhere or they went west to Opala," Haddad said of the
55,000 refugees who fled a camp at Kasese and 30,000 who left
a camp at Biaro, 25 miles south of Kisangani.
Even with access to medics at the camps, the refugees had
been dying at a rate of about 60 a day, and U.N. officials
said the death toll was bound to climb as refugees fled
deeper into the Zairian jungle.
In Kisangani, Paul Stromberg, a spokesman for the U.N. High
Commissioner for Refugees, said the search appeared to show
that people passed further south of Biaro and Kasese toward
Ubundu.
The refugee agency said earlier it had received reports
suggesting Biaro had been emptied.
A U.N. mission allowed to reach Kasese on Thursday found no
refugees, alive or dead, after the camp was sealed off for
four days from aid workers and journalists.
While many of the Rwandan Hutu refugees are former militiamen
suspected of the 1994 genocide in Rwanda, many others,
including women and children, are innocent victims.
"Thousands of vulnerable refugees may die in Zaire's
rainforests without food, medicine or drinking water,"
Stromberg said in Kisangani.
The Zairian rebels, who have captured half of Zaire and
appear poised to end the 31-year rule of President Mobutu
Sese Seko, are accused of slaughtering Rwandan refugees in a
camp south of the eastern city of Kisangani. There is no
outright evidence, however.
The rebels, led by Laurent Kabila, blame the refugee crisis
on poor planning by U.N. aid agencies.
Kabila has pledged to support an independent probe of
what's happening in the remote jungles and punish any of his
troops if they are proved to have committed atrocities.
Correspondent Jim Clancyand Reuters contributed to this report.
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