Author: b_igi_adm1n

  • CHORA CHORA Film about Drug Trafficking Between Rwanda and DRC

    CHORA CHORA is a film produced by Richard MUGWANEZA (2012) | Original Kinyarwanda version with English subtitles, 70 min.

    Rudoviko is an 18 year-old, an angel, who leaves his country village to study in a city of drugs consumption and trafficking.

    In order to get money to cover some teenagers’ needs, he finds himself involved in this drugs circuit to which the local Police doesn’t hesitate to put an end.

    The film pictures Rudoviko’s step by step confrontation with the world of drugs. And even when he ends up regretting and getting rid of all drugs, he can’t escape the Police’s black list.

  • Three Smugglers Arrested

    Police and the Revenue Protection Department have arrested three men suspected of smuggling liquors.

    Celestin Mutsindashyaka from Muhanga district, Jean Marie Burere from Goma (DRC) and Onesphore Hategekimana from Musanze district were arrested while transporting smuggled liquors.

    Mutsindashyaka was arrested on Wednesday in Gicumbi district with 71 boxes of African Gin from Uganda.

    Jean Marie Burere and Hategekimana Onesphore were arrested on Monday at Giticyinyoni, Nyarugenge district with 45 bottles Martel, black label and J&B whiskies they had smuggled from DRC.

    Superintendent Emmanuel Karasi, the commanding officer of Revenue Protection Department said most smuggled goods seized come from neighbouring countries especially Uganda and the Democratic Republic of Congo.

    He added that different non declared goods, foreign vehicles with expired entry cards, have been seized by the department.

    Other goods regularly seized by Revenue Protection department include coffee, minerals soaps, cloths, energy drinks and motorcycle spare parts among others.
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  • The First Lady of DRC

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    Marie- Olive Lembe di Sita is the wife of president Joseph Kabila of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) little is known about this woman.

    She was born in July, 29th 1976 in Kailo, Maniema, (former Zaire). She is the current first lady of the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

    She was very secretive and discreet, almost elusive long term fiancée of Congolese president Joseph Kabila since 2000. They got married on 17th June 2006.

    She is a mother of two, Sifa Kabila and Laurent-Desire Kabila. The couple got their daughter, Sifa Kabila named after Kabila’s own mother and former first lady of the DRCongo, Sifa Mananya in 2001 before they got married.

    On their wedding day, 17th June 2006, the Catholic Archbishop of Kinshasa, Cardinal Frederic Etsou Bamungwabi and the Presiding Bishop of the Church of Christ in Congo Pierre Marini Bodho were both present to sermon their wedding because Joseph Kabila is Anglican and Mrs. Lembe di Sita is Catholic.

    The pope Benedict XVI sent them a message through the Cardinal Etsou and Bishop Marini on behalf of all DRC communities gave the couple two kitenges (fabric used as African traditional wear) and two ropes representing the traditional ritual.

    In 2008, the first couple was living a serious marital crisis and attempted to divorce. Joseph Kabila wouldn’t allow it and he prohibited his wife to leave the country and charged the security service to make sure she was within the country.

    In 2010, presidential sources confirmed that Marie- Olive Lembe was violently beaten by her husband.

    She was first admitted in Ngaliema, a clinic in Kinshasa but she was in such bad shape that she resumed her medical treatment in Brussels, Belgium at the Brugman hospital.

    According to her people, Olive Lembe Kabila is a woman who has always been generous and outgoing with people. She is defined and seen as a very simple and positive lady.

    She created an association,Maman Olive Lembe Kabila Sisters Organization that consists on supporting women farmers into getting involved in development and attaining their independence, supplying ploughing equipment and improved seeds, raise awareness about HIV/AIDS and STI’s as well as awareness about deforestation.

    Compiled by Nice Kanangire

  • China-Rwanda Sign US$ 350 million Agreement

    Rwanda and China have today signed Loan Framework Agreement at a meeting held at MINECOFIN main boardroom.

    The aforesaid signing concerns the contribution of China to a very important infrastructure project, the Rusizi-Karongi-Rubavu Road, the Kivu Belt (Road of 185 Km, Project total cost around USD 350 million).

    This loan will cover the construction of Lot 4 of the Road, Mwityazo (Nyamasheke)-to Ruvumbu (Karongi) and Lot 5, Ruvumbu to Kibuye of the Belt Road.

    The Government of Rwanda was represented by Hon. Minister John Rwangombwa, Minister of Finance and Economic Planning and the Government of the People’s Republic of China represented by HE Chu Zhan, Ambassador of China in Rwanda.

    The cooperation between Rwanda and China is currently 51 years old, the Chinese government has supported more than 40 projects with totally over RMB 1.3 billion since the establishment of diplomatic relationship in 1971, including the National Stadium, 36 Km of Kigali City Roads, MINAFFET Building, Kibungo Hospital and Kibungo Nurse School, Masaka Polyclinic and one Agriculture Demonstration Center.

  • PSquare Mother Dies

    The brothers Peter and Paul Okoye and their other siblings lost their mother Josephine Okoye who was in her 60’s on Wednesday, 11th July 2012 due to some prolonged heart illness.

    Close friends to the Okoye family say that Josephine Okoye was first admitted in St. Nicholas Hospital in Lagos but her health state wasn’t improving.

    She was then taken to India where she released her last breath five hours after her heart surgery in Apollo hospital (India).

    Josephine’s death was a shock to many; friends and fans to the P Square and family sent condolences and sympathy messages to the Okoyes.

    Their mother was a good parent and their biggest fan. She almost never missed their shows until late 2011 where she started feeling weak due to her illness.

    “You know that she was a prayer warrior, so I don’t need to tell you how she stood by us spiritually. Besides she was the only one that believed in us when we decided to make a career out of music. I can remember that she used to sneak out at night then to attend shows without the consent of our father who insisted that we must quit music to face our education” peter recounts.

  • Nigeria Appoints First Female Chief Justice

    Aloma Mukhtar, 68 has been confirmed as the first woman chief Justice in Nigeria.

    She becomes Nigeria’s 13th Chief Justice.

    She was confirmed by the Nigerian Senate on Wednesday. Her nomination was made by President Goodluck Jonathan on July 4.

    She is replacing Dahiru Musdapher, who is expected to vacate office on July 15 at the mandatory retirement age of 70.

    Mukhtar was born in north-western Nigerian town of Kano in November 1944.

    She attended schools in Nigeria and England before becoming the first woman from the north to be admitted to the Nigerian Bar.

    Mukhtar was appointed the country’s first woman judge in September 1987, and in 2005 she became the first woman to ascend to the bench of Nigeria’s Supreme Court.

  • Uganda Sends back 718 Congolese Soldiers

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    Uganda government has handed over 718 FARDC troops who had fled rebel fire last week in Kivu Province of DRCongo.

    Uganda has also pleaded to the DRC government not to punish the soldiers saying that their escape from the battle was the only way to save many lives.

    “The commanders’ decision to withdraw was the right one because they saved many lives that the government was about to lose, so welcome them and treat them well,” said The Resident District Commissioner, Lt. Milton Odongo.

    The soldiers, who entered through Kisoro District of Uganda, were handed over on Wednesday at the 23rd Battalion of Rusese Barracks in Kasese.

    They were received by the Congolese deputy Ambassador to Uganda, Jean Pierre Massala and the 708 FARDC Commander, Col. Eric Ruhorimbere and his deputy Regt. Commander, Bisamaza Risseiur and Regt. Commander 801 Col. Karonda Famba.

  • Monusco, FARDC Choppers Bomb M23 Bases

    The Congolese troops (FARDC) and the peacekeepers of the UN Mission in DRC (Monusco) reportedly today (July 12) bombed bases of the M23 rebels who had in the past days crashed country’s troops forcing hundreds of them fleeing over to Uganda.

    According to Agence France Press, three helicopters of the UN Mission in the DRC and two Congolese soldiers were seen over the area of Nkokwe Bukima, between 5 and 10 km east the road from Goma to Rutshuru.

    The same source said that a colonel of mutineers claimed that the FARDC are shelling their positions, but that the Congolese soldiers did not know where the rebels were.

    The FARDC has blocked the passage of all civilians at Rumangabo, a town about fifteen miles west of the bombed positions, the agency said French.

    Early in the morning, the FARDC spokesperson, Col. Olivier Hamuli, accused the M23 rebels of intentionally bombing civilian populations in the outskirts of the town of Rugari, in Rutshuru.

    Col. Hamuli said the bombing left one person dead and three wounded. He called this a barbaric criminal act.

    Monusco said July 11 that specific areas had been established in Rutshuru territory in North Kivu to protect the civilian population against attacks from armed groups.

    Monusco tanks and FARDC have been deployed in major cities of the province to prevent attacks of armed groups.

  • World Bank Pressed to Stop Money for Kenya-Ethiopia Electricity Line

    If the World Bank withholds cash meant to build a transmission line to Link Kenya to electricity generated from Ethiopia’s mega Gibe III Dam, the idea would leave East Africa without US$ 1 Billion lost inform of energy costs every year.

    The transmission line valued at US$ 1.3Billion is part of a broader plan to link the electricity grids of Ethiopia, Kenya, Rwanda, Tanzania and Uganda, spurring growth and saving East African nations around $1 billion a year in energy costs.

    The World Bank has been urged to withhold support for a power line that would take electricity from Ethiopia to Kenya, citing environmental and human rights concerns.

    An advocacy group urged the new WB president Jim Yong Kim to hold fire. “The World Bank needs to rigorously apply its social and environmental safeguards,” a letter to Kim stated.

    “Human Rights Watch has very serious concerns that the World Bank has failed to do so as the project currently stands.”

    The roughly 1,000-kilometre (620-mile) transmission line is part of a nearly $1.3 billion project to link energy-producing Ethiopia with Kenya — where as many as 80% of the population is without power.

    However, Gibe III dam that will be the source of Electricity from Ethiopia is not funded by the World Bank.

    There are concerns that Gibe III dam construction could cause serious environmental damage to Lake Turkana, a Unesco world heritage site.

    Gibe III dam is the largest hydropower plant in Africa. When completed, the dam’s 243-metre high wall will be the tallest of its kind in the world.
    The plan is for electricity to become Ethiopia’s biggest export.

  • From Hopeless to UPenn

    In March 2011, I felt worn out and hopeless, believing that life had turned against me. I had just finished secondary school with good results, but still I had been turned down by four American universities. What had I done wrong? Was I stupid?

    A year later, though, a miracle of success occurred, the result of endurance, hard work, and belief in both others and myself. This is the story of my journey, from rejection to a scholarship at the University of Pennsylvania, an Ivy League college in the United States and truly the destination for a dream come true.

    The story starts on the grounds of Sonrise School in the northern part of Rwanda. In early June 2010, as I thought about continuing my education after high school, an idea came to mind: pursuing higher education in the U.S.

    I shared the idea with my mother, who at the age of 52 was herself a student at ULK, and she embraced the thought. But was going to school in the U.S. really achievable? I thought I could give it a try.

    Anna Reed, our American English instructor at Sonrise, said one word to me: “SAT.” I responded with excitement, “What kind of animal is this SAT?”

    The SAT, I soon learned, is an American college entrance exam I would need to take and do well on, to show I was well-prepared for school. The test is composed of three sections: math, reading and writing – each worth up to 800 points, for a total possible score of 2400. I decided to take the risk and began studying for the SAT.

    Throughout my senior-6 year, I studied for the national exams during the day, and at night I concentrated on my college applications. It was so tiresome to peruse that big SAT study book. My head throbbed and sometimes my nose would bleed.

    Other students started to discourage me. “Izo ni inzozi…” (Those are dreams!), they shouted at me, while I was taking my first SAT practice test.
    Even after 20 practice tests, I could not hit the mark. My first score was 1050 and my 20th was 1140 – very far below 2400. Would 1140 be good enough to get me a scholarship to a college such as Boston University? I doubted it.

    I thought of giving up and focusing only on my A-level exams, but I persevered.
    I took my first official SAT test, one of more than 2 million students worldwide, and scored 1140, which put me at the bottom 8th percentile of all performers – not very good for a top U.S. school, but hopefully it would be good enough for a Rwandan student.

    My TOEFL English exam score was also not very strong – only 517; most U.S. schools prefer a 550 or higher, and above 600 for the schools that could give out full scholarships. Yet after all the hard work I had invested, I had to keep my dream alive.

    In 2010, I applied to Baylor University, Emory University, Boston University, and the University of Rochester, but none accepted me. I felt as if my “Inzozi” – my dreams – were impossible to achieve. I saw my mother weep, which was torture for me and my family.

    As horrified as I was by the rejection, I remembered the words from the actor, Denzel Washington, who in a graduation speech at the University of Pennsylvania told students to “fall forward.” Sometimes adversity, challenges and rejections teach us to begin again, but this time, more intelligently, if we can learn from our mistakes.

    I fell forward, into improving my preparation and trying again. I relaunched my college journey. In the spring of 2011, Bridge2Rwanda, an American organization based in Kigali at Telecom House, started the Bridge2Rwanda Scholars program.

    This is an intensive, ten-month college preparation program in advanced English reading and writing, in community service, spirituality and leadership.

    I was fortunate to become part of the inaugural class. Great! I thought to myself. Here was a new vision of college opportunity. It was a place to reconnect, and a time to assess the journey and learn the importance of endurance.

    As a B2R Scholar, I moved forward and faced my fear of being rejected again. We studied a great deal and improved our reading and writing, which made us more proficient in English and increased our ability to take American college-level courses.

    We learned that we could not only study by reading the test. We needed to read more of everything, and only gradually would our comprehension improve.

    As Bridge2Rwanda Scholars, we also learned the benefits of past adversity and failure. We saw that whatever the outcome, it was always possible for us to learn on our own and succeed in our studies, no matter where we attended. At the same time, the program inspired us. I took more risks and applied to my dream schools, including the University of Pennsylvania.

    Through the Scholars program training, I raised my SAT score to 1420, much improved over what I had done before. I had to ask myself, though, was it good enough to get me to the University of Pennsylvania? I would soon find out.

    In late March 2012, I checked my e-mail. One word broadcast victory for me: “Congratulations!” As part of its policies, now that I was accepted, UPenn agreed to give me enough scholarship as I needed to attend. Overcome with emotion, I fell on the ground and cried tears of happiness.

    For two years, I had awaited this good news. My endurance, hard work and faith had sustained me. The reading and writing skills I acquired through Bridge2Rwanda’s Scholars program had made all the difference.

    Imagine, out of 31,217 applicants, only 3,200 students would be accepted – including one hopeless Rwandan.

    Now, the next phase of my journey begins – in Philadelphia, home of the university. As I prepare to leave, I look back with gratitude for all I have learned. The lessons are many. I learned about taking the SAT examination, and also about the importance of reading and studying for their own sake.

    The objective is not only to improve one’s English, but to try to understand and give back to the world. And, of course, I learned the true meaning of never giving up, the importance of faith that sustains us, and always falling forward.

    These are the moments that remain so vivid in my mind. As Rwandan children, should we give up, every time we lose? Should we let our past circumstances define our future? Should we continue to remain in misery when we have lost?

    We have to become something more than what the old limitations and hopelessness prescribe us to be. Determination and faith count more than anything.

    Today, Rwandan students are no different than anyone else. Our education system is competitive and has improved a great deal in recent years, so that with hard work, we can now attain acceptance to U.S. schools.

    The university system in the U.S. is open to us, if we are well-qualified academically and fully prepared to succeed at school.

    Best of all, many of my classmates in the Scholars program had shared similar experiences to mine, but by the end these friends had also won scholarships to other great schools in the U.S.

    U.S. universities even want to make an impression in Africa, and Rwanda is a country on the move. We have to put aside our fears and not let them get in our way. We have to step out of our comfort zones.

    We have to read and write. We need to use our talents and opportunities more effectively. And in the end, we can rise above our country’s tragic past and chart a course for her future.