(CNN) -- The U.N. chief is scheduled to meet with the Rwandan president on Wednesday following a dispute over a leaked U.N. report that accuses troops from the central African nation of violating human rights.
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon arrived in the capital, Kigali, on Tuesday. He was accompanied by top officials, including his special envoy to Congo, Roger Meece, and U.N. peacekeeping chief Alain Le Roy.
Ban said he hopes to discuss the report's concerns with President Paul Kagame and other government officials.
The report alleges that the Rwandan military and an allied rebel group massacred ethnic Hutus in neighboring Democratic Republic of the Congo between 1993 and 2003 .
"Tens of thousands of Hutu civilians were slaughtered with knives, bludgeoned with hammers and burned alive as the Rwandan army and the Allied Democratic Liberation Forces swept across Congo -- then called Zaire -- leading to the toppling of dictator Mobutu Sese Seko," the report says
The draft report leaked late last month was commissioned by the office of the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights.
CNN