Author: b_igi_adm1n

  • KIDUMU Leaves Fans Yearning for More

    Over the weekend, Burundian music artist Kidumu presented at Caddillac nightclub to his Rwandan fans.

    The club was filled to capacity where Kidumu sampled most of his new hits including; Number Moja, Kipenda Roho, Mapenzi among others. Most of these songs have hit East African airwaves.

    Kidumu also sampled other Afro hits that left most of his fans yearning for more.

    The Burundian music heavy weight was assisted by Rwanda’s Tom Close, Masamba Intore, Jean Paul Samputu and Christian Rwirangira(of Tusker Project Fame) .

    Promoter Ahmed Pacifique told IGIHE that Kidumu had travelled to Rwanda to entertain his fans.
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  • Fire Destroys University Van

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    Fire destroyed a van belonging to Kigali Independent University (ULK). The incidence took place at Muhima sector offices.

    The driver of the van had parked the car and gone to find a spare parts. Later the van caught fire before he had returned.

    Police arrived on time at the scene but attempts to put out the fire were futile.
    Dushimirimana Jerome an eyewitness told IGIHE that the fire was so strong that it was impossible to extinguish it.

    However, by press time the ULK officials could not be reached by telephone for comment.

  • Refugee Film Festival Launching tonight at Ishyo Hall

    Today the Refugee Film Festival will be launched at 6.30 pm at the Ishyo Theater Hall in Kacyiru.

    The festival will include the screening of “One Life One Story” short films and “Sierra Leone’s Refugee All Stars” as well as a panel discussion on pertinent refugee issues today.

    UNHCR and MIDIMAR will deliver an opening address, to be followed by the screening of the short films “One Life One Story”.

    In this series shot on the borders of conflict zones around the Great Lakes region, refugees and internally displaced people talk about being forced from their homes and how that experience has shaped their lives.

    The short films will be followed by the musical documentary “Sierra Leone’s Refugee All Stars”, which tells the remarkable story of a group of six Sierra Leonean musicians who formed a band while living as refugees in the Republic of Guinea.

    To conclude the first evening, a panel discussion on the issues highlighted in the films will be held.

    The panel will consist of the UNHCR Representative, Ms Neimah WARSAME, the returnee, Hope AZEDA of Mashirika theatre group, the former Mufti of Rwanda, Sheikh Saleh HABIMANA (Rwanda Governance Board), and the journalist and former Rwandan refugee in Zambia, Geraldine MUKAKABEGO.

  • AfDB Injects US$18M to Boost Infrastructure in Africa

    The African Development Bank (AfDB) has approved a USD 18 million private equity investment in infrastructure in sub-Saharan Africa.

    The recipient of the investment is the InfraCo Sub-Saharan Infrastructure Fund (ISSIF), aiming at target capitalization of USD 200 million of equity with a first closing of USD 100 million expected third quarter 2012 to participate in greenfield and brownfield infrastructure projects.

    The ISSIF will catalyze additional funds for infrastructureprojects, which will create employment and bring essential skills and technical knowledge to sub-Saharan Africa.

    Infrastructure requirements in the sub-Saharan market are estimated at USD 94 billion annually over the next decade.

    This considerable deficit severely impedes Africa’s economic development. The power and transport sectors are especially lacking in investment.

    Population growth and increasing urbanization has left many countries with a power shortage.

    The lack of regional transport infrastructure has resulted in vastly greater import/export and transport costs in Africa than in other countries.

    African governments, traditionally the main investors in basic infrastructure, would greatly benefit from private sector investments to fill the gap.

    Hence, the ISSIF represents a key alternative for private-led financing for the infrastructure sector in Africa.

    The ISSIF is sponsored by InfraCo Limited, a donor-financed fund launched by the Private Infrastructure Development Group and EleQtra LP, a group of companies specializing in the development, financing and ownership of greenfield infrastructure projects.

    The ISSIF will provide scarce equity capital for infrastructure projects, create jobs and enhance the transfer of knowledge in Africa.

    These infrastructure investments are crucial to release constraints on long term sustainable growth and private sector development.

    Tas Neside Anvaripour, AfDB’s manager of the infrastructure finance division said: “Buttress by a strong pipeline due to Infraco’s role as a project developer, ISSIF is expected to have immediate access to quality projects and help them to get to bankability stage”.

  • Dirtiest Spots in Hotel Rooms Revealed

    Microbiologists have revealed the dirtiest spots in a hotel room.

    Surpsrisingly it’s the TV remote control gadget and the Bedside switch which were found to be contaminated with higher volumes of germs than any other spot in the hotel rooms.

    So if you want to stay away from germs during your next hotel stay, don’t turn on the TV or lights — new research shows that TV remotes and light switches are among the most contaminated items inhotel rooms.

    Researchers from the University of Houston took bacteria samples from several items in hotel rooms in three regions of the United States.

    While the toilet and the sink were expected to have high levels of bacteria, researchers also found more surprising items with high contamination levels, such as the remote and the switch on the bedside lamp.

    Hotel rooms “don’t have to have it ready for surgery,” said study researcher Jay Neal, a microbiologist at the University of Houston, but there certainly is room for improvement in their cleanliness.

    The amount of bacteria on the remote may not mean that it’s “any dirtier than at home, but there’s a stranger factor” in a hotel room, said Neal, who oversaw the research performed primarily by student Katie Kirsh.

    Housekeepers clean spend about 30 minutes cleaning each room, Kirsh said. If the researchers could pinpoint the most contaminated parts of the room, the cleaning process could be made more effective.

    The highest levels of contamination were found in the maid’s cleaning cart, specifically, on the mop and sponge. That’s a problem because it means that bacteria are being carried from room to room, according to the researchers.

    Such cross-contamination could be reduced, though, by replacing cleaning liquids during housekeeping shifts, they said.

    The lowest levels of bacteria were found on the headboard, curtain rods and bathroom door handle.

    The researchers tested for bacteria in general, and did a separate test for cloriform bacteria, which are found in feces and are more likely to cause illness.
    Both tests showed that bacteria levels in hotel rooms were between 2 to 10 times higher than the levels accepted in hospitals.

    The presence of bacteria’s doesn’t guarantee that people will get sick, but it makes it more likely.

    The study was limited in that it was small — nine hotel rooms were tested in each of three states: Texas, Indiana and North Carolina.

    The research was presented today (June 17) at microbiology researchers’ conference in San Francisco.

  • Kivu Provincial Minister Resigns, Joins M23 Rebels

    Reports from Kivu indicate that Julien Paluku(pictured) the Governor of North Kivu appointed, Saturday, June 15, Christopher Ndibeshe as new Provincial Minister of Justice, Rights and Community Rehabilitation.

    Ndibeshe replaces Francois Ruchogoza who resigned two weeks ago to join the March 23 rebel Movement (M23), according to sources close to the governorate.

    Prior to his appointment, Ndibeshe was the executive secretary of the provincial government.

    Ruchogoza resigned following the defection of his political party of the Presidential Majority (MP).

    He said on June 3, that his party had left the presidential majority to pressure the provincial government to restore peace in the provinces.

    “This is in accordance with the decision of the political leadership of the CNDP including myself, who decided that we were leaving the province.

    Last time there was the beginning of hostilities in North Kivu, we pressured the Congolese government to cease hostilities and virtually the Government replied in the negative.

    That is why the political leadership of our party decided that I leave the government, “he said.

    But he denied any desire to join the M23, indicating that his party, the Congolese government’s CNDP requires compliance with the agreements of 23 March 2009 which provided in particular the integration of former rebels of the CNDP in the police and the army and that of his senior civilian in the country’s political institutions.

    These agreements also provided for the return of Congolese refugees living in Rwanda and Uganda.

    These same claims are made by the M23, a politico-military movement created by mutineers from the Congolese army in May and who faces the Congolese soldiers in North Kivu.

  • Rwanda,DRC to Share Half Of Revenues Generated from Gorillas

    In 2005, a Family of Congolese Mountain gorillas migrated to Rwanda and settled in the Volcanoes National Park.

    There has since been an agreement between the two countries to share revenues generated from visits made to families of mountain gorillas that switch residence.

    Over the weekend the international conservation community marked the ceremony of naming nineteen baby gorillas at Kinigi in Rwanda.

    Rwanda thus gave half of the revenues generated from visits made to the family of Congolese mountain gorillas that migrated to Rwanda.

    According to Dr. Augustine Kanyunyi, acting director of the International Gorilla Conservation, a family of twenty-three gorillas had migrated to Rwanda in the Volcanoes National Park since 2005.

    “We had an arrangement so that the income generated from tourism this family be shared equally between the DRC and Rwanda,” he said adding that each tourist pays U.S. $ 500 for a family visit gorillas.

    The same source says that these gorillas are visited every day. But the total amount of the sum has not been reassigned revealed.

    A census conducted in 2010 jointly by the DRC, Uganda and Rwanda in the Virunga Massif, the gorilla population there would be 480 individuals (against 380 in the previous census in 2003). This group will add about 300 mountain gorillas of Bwindi Forest.

    But since the early clashes between the Armed Forces of DRC (FARDC) and the M23 rebel group in the area of Jomba, in Rutshuru (North Kivu), the mountain gorillas of Virunga National Park have been exposed to crossfire of the warring parties.

    According to the director of the park on the DRCongo side, Emmanuel de Merode, it is two hundred gorillas are threatened. This would have suspended tourism which had already begun to grow in the park.

  • Joint Statement on US-EAC Trade & Investment Partnership

    United States Trade Representative Ron Kirk; the Honorable Richard Sezibera, the Secretary General of the East African Community; Victoire Ndikumana, the Burundian Minister of Commerce, Industry, Posts, and Tourism; Moses Wetang’ula, the Kenyan Minister for Trade; François Kanimba, the Rwandan Minister of Trade and Industry;

    Abdallah Kigoda, the Tanzanian Minister for Industry, Trade, and Marketing; and Amelia Kyambadde, the Ugandan Minister of Trade and Industry are pleased to release the following joint statement, following a meeting on June 14, 2012 on the sidelines of the AGOA Forum between the United States and the East African Community (EAC) Partner States, in Washington, D.C.:

    Recognizing the importance of strengthening the economic links between the United States and East Africa, our governments jointly resolve to pursue a new trade and investment partnership between the United States and the East African Community.

    This new partnership will build on the foundations of our existing trade and investment relationship, including the African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA), and the U.S.-EAC Trade and Investment Framework Agreement (TIFA).

    Under this new partnership we will work together to provide new business opportunities to U.S. and EAC firms by reducing trade barriers, improving the business environment, encouraging open investment regimes, and enhancing our two-way trade.

    The initial items we have agreed to explore under this new umbrella partnership include a regional investment treaty, a trade facilitation agreement, continued trade capacity building assistance, and a commercial dialogue.

    These agreements and other activities that we will pursue will help to promote EAC regional integration, economic growth, and expand and diversify U.S.-EAC trade and investment. They could also serve as building blocks towards a more comprehensive trade agreement over the long term.

    We, the Ministers, have therefore directed our respective technical teams led by the EAC to engage as soon as possible to begin consultations on each of the areas we have agreed upon.

    We have full confidence that together, we can build a stronger U.S.-EAC trade and investment partnership for the benefit of the American and East African people.

  • Korean Air Says Kenyans are ‘Primitive’

    Diplomatic relations between Kenya and South Korea are currently unpleasant following Korean Air online Advertisement that refers to Kenyans are ‘Primitive’.

    Kenyans have demanded an immediate apology.

    Korean Air advertisement was aimed at launching direct flights to Nairobi.
    Part of the advert which has generated heated debate on the social media reads in part: “Fly to Nairobi with Korean Air and enjoy the grand African savanna, the safari tour, and the indigenous people full of primitive energy.”

    The term ‘primitive energy’ has apparently annoyed many Kenyans on the social media who have demanded an apology.

    Primitive means ‘belonging to a very simple society with no industry or belonging to an early stage in the development of humans or very simple and old fashioned.’

    However, Korean Air via its twitter handle @KoreanAir_KE on Today (Monday) has issued an apology promising to investigate how the offending advert came to be.

    “Regarding our recent promotional notice of Nairobi, we are checking on this issue accordingly. We sincerely apologize for this situation,” the airline posted on twitter on Thursday at 11:22 am.

    “After ‘checking’, it will be appropriate to issue an apology to ‪Kenyans on your website and mass media,” Kimunya Mugo tells the airline on twitter.

    “You’d better be thoroughly apologetic. We are not very pleased with our primitive energy,” says Nick Walubengo on twitter.

    “Seems like they have realised that the people they thought were primitive aren’t afterall,” Nomkhoni Warui adds.

  • Burundi Police Handsover Murder Suspect to Rwanda

    Burundi Police has handed over a Rwandan national suspected of murdering Colette Munyana 19.
    Jacques Shumbusho 23 allegedly murdered Munyana on March 12, 2012 and fled to neighbouring Burundi.

    The Prime suspect was handedover to Rwanda National Police on Saturday at Akanyaru boarder post. The Bourgmestre of Kabarore in Burundi and his Rwanda mayor of Nyaruguru district, Francis Habitegeko were present.

    Shumbusho was arrested in Burundi after the Burundian Police was notified about the Rwandan criminal who was on the run.

    He has been held at Kayanza prison for nearly three month as Burundian Interpol office liaised with their Rwandan counterparts.

    He was deported after completing Interpol transfer procedures. Shumbusho had sought refuge in Burundi to evade justice.

    However, due to the bilateral cooperation of the Police forces of the sister countries he was apprehended and is set to face justice.

    He is currently held at Nyaruguru Police Station while investigation continues.
    “Shumbusho has been handed over to the Police who will have to observe the normal procedure of handling a criminal case by holding him for not more than 72 hours before handing him to the prosecution,” Police Spokesperson Superintendent Theos Badege said.