Author: b_igi_adm1n

  • Rwanda’s HealthCare Inspires New Program at Harvard

    Rwanda’s universal healthcare has inspired a new program at Harvard University and attracted international attention.

    Rwanda healthcare and insurance covers about 90% of the citizens. This has undoubtedly inspired medical leaders from around the globe to visit Rwanda and study the country’s unique transformation.

    The Harvard Medical School is working with the Rwandan Ministry of Health to teach a course called Global Health Delivery in the village of Rwinkwavu twice a year.

    “Rwanda is honestly starting to change the face of global health,” said Dr. Paul Farmer, one of the founders of Partners in Health , a nongovernmental organization that works in Rwanda and other poor countries.

    He is also the chairman of Harvard’s Department of Global Health and Social Medicine and one of the faculty members for its course in Africa.

    In February, 30 African medical leaders met with Harvard faculty at the training and research center in Rwinkwavu to discuss the challenges of delivering health services in resource-poor settings. Six of these students were trained to become faculty members who will teach future classes, with the next sessions scheduled for July.

    During the weeklong course, students and professors discussed case studies and conducted field visits throughout Rwanda. Because all the students are currently health workers — most are employees of the Rwandan Health Ministry — they are able to immediately apply what they learned in the Harvard course to their daily work.

    Initially, the course was held only on Harvard’s campus, where students would discuss case studies on the difficulties of delivering medical services internationally.

    But the course changed in February. A world away from Cambridge, Massachusetts, health professionals in Rwinkwavu discuss the same case studies.

    They also participate in live cases, in which students and faculty members interview doctors, nurses or other health workers, like the head of an organization working to deliver AIDS medications to the poor in Rwanda, to ask them about the challenges of their work.

    Visits to Rwandan clinics and hospitals allow students to see health care in action, and give them the opportunity to collaborate with other professionals to discuss solutions.

    “To be a good global health provider, it’s good for students to see what others have done,” Dr. Agnes Binagwaho, who is both the Rwandan health minister and a Harvard faculty member, said by telephone.

    Seeing potential for the course outside of Massachusetts, Dr. Binagwaho worked with Partners in Health to bring the Harvard curriculum to her home country.

    “We hope to have students come from around the world and learn from them as well, and also have the students learning from each other, because they are all coming from countries where there are things ongoing,” she said.

    There is now also a new Harvard degree, a Masters in Medical Sciences and Global Health Delivery, which will begin this autumn. Plans to offer a similar degree in Rwanda are under way.

    “Above all, you need people who actually do the delivery to tackle the problems,” Dr. Farmer said. He stressed the importance of working not only in Africa, but also with African health care leaders. “Not everyone has the privilege to make it to Harvard — and we needed to reach out,” he added.

    The Harvard course is one of the first that focuses exclusively on the challenges of delivering health care. It encourages students to think about how politics, economics and other social factors affect health.

    “I don’t know many other groups that are looking at health care delivery as a field of study and bringing that to collaboration with African ministries of health,” said Dr. Joseph Rhatigan, the director of the Global Health Equity residency program at the Brigham and Women’s Hospital, a teaching hospital affiliated with Harvard in Boston.

    Partnerships between medical schools and the developing world are increasingly common, but the majority focus on practicing medicine as opposed to delivering care and understanding the effect of social factors, he said.

    Dr. Corine Karema, director of the programs for malaria and neglected tropical diseases at the Rwanda Biomedical Center and one of the students in the Harvard course who trained to become a faculty member, said the course made her change the way she looked at medical treatment.

    “I’ve been working for a long time in public health, and we used to decide on intervention and strategies if they were cost effective without looking at how the strategy will best affect the patient,” she said.

    She said she now had higher expectations. The course taught her to advocate the best treatment available, regardless of cost.

    “Too many people in public health have been socialized for scarcity, the idea that we just have to make do with less,” said Dr. Farmer. “That socialization for scarcity has prevented innovation. That’s really what the course is about: confronting the socialization to scarcity and combating it.”

    Dr. Farmer and other faculty members drew on their experiences at Partners in Health. For more than 20 years, the organization has worked in Haiti, Lesotho, Mali, Peru and other countries to make once-costly treatments for medical conditions like H.I.V. and tuberculosis available to the poor.

    Although professors bring Harvard expertise to the table, they say they take as much away from the course as the students.

    “I learn a lot more when I teach experienced people,” said Dr. Joia S. Mukherjee, the medical director of Partners in Health and a Harvard professor who helped organize and teach the course.

    “They are all saying, ‘Well, this is what we did here, this is what we did in Haiti.’ The students are learning more from one another than from professors.”

    Dr. Farmer recalls students saying in a group discussion, “‘You mean that happened to you, too? Well, we had the same problem in Burundi.”’

    “Within five minutes you had five people discussing a very specific problem that they had all faced,” he said.

    “That kind of exchange you can’t get out of a classroom, textbook or article. Watching hard-working African health care professionals sharing experiences, just for that hour session alone would have been worth the course.”

    The students from Rwanda stay in contact via an online portal, and the case studies are available online as open source information.

    “We agreed that in six months, we will all have a case study about something we have done in our daily work and use them as new materials for the Harvard lectures,” Dr. Karema said.

    “It’s an outstanding initiative because it relates what is being done in the States to what the needs are overseas,” said Eldryd Parry, founder of THET Partnerships for Global Health, a British organization that works to improve health care in Africa and Asia.

    “There is so much in international aid and health that is decided in Washington, and that’s not the mind behind this program. It’s a catalyst for further interest.”

    Faculty members have said that the main challenge will be maintaining funding, which is currently supported by Partners in Health, Harvard and philanthropies.

    Dr. Pat Lee, who teaches at Harvard but is not affiliated with the course, said, “We have some interesting work to do as educators to adapt to the needs of different learners and tailor the curriculum so that it can be accessible to a variety of audiences.”

    That will be critical if Dr. Binagwaho’s vision comes to light. In the future, she hopes to invite health professionals from around Africa and other developing countries to participate.

    “We can be the example,” she said, “not teaching in theory, but teaching in practice. If you want the developing world to develop, you have to develop teaching. Courses like this have to grow.”

    The Article was first Published in NY-Times

  • New Arrest Warrants Issued for Mudacumura & Gen. Ntaganda

    The International Criminal Court (ICC) prosecutor’s office has filed (Monday) at the Pre-Trial Chamber a request for new international arrest warrant against Gen. Jean Bosco Ntaganda.

    A statement from the prosecutor of the ICC, Fatou Bensuda indicates that the prosecution will request the addition of charges against Gen. Ntaganda for crimes against humanity and war crimes committed between September 2002 and September 2003.

    Gen. Ntaganda is already under an arrest warrant issued by the ICC in 2006 for crimes of recruiting, conscripting and using children under 15 years for them to participate actively in hostilities.

    According to the prosecutor, this application is running to the verdict and evidence presented at trial against Thomas Lubanga, who was convicted by the ICC to have recruited children into its forces and using them to participate in combat.

    The crimes that Gen. Ntaganda is accused were committed in Ituri in Orientale Province during the war inter-ethnic Hema and Lendu militias by the Union of Congolese Patriots (UPC), which he was one of the commanders.

    He resisted arrest for “his contributions to the signing of the peace agreement between the government and armed groups from the East in 2009” and its transfer to the ICC.

    The Congolese government said early May that Gen. Ntaganda should be arrested, accusing him of being responsible for the defections recorded within the Congolese army and destabilization in the Masisi and Walikale in North Kivu.

    But authorities believe that the general should be judged by Congolese courts.
    For the prosecutor of the ICC, “the price of this impunity is very large.”
    “When there is impunity, it is the people on the ground who suffer,” she wrote in a statement, calling for the arrest of Gen. Ntaganda.

    “His recent desertion from the FARDC only demonstrates once again that you can not trust him and that the exercise of power through violence can only lead to more violence,” said the prosecutor in his statement.

    Fatou Bensuda has also initiated a second arrest warrant against Mudacumura Sylvester, supreme commander of the FDLR-FOCA, charged with five counts of crimes against humanity and nine counts war crimes.

    The alleged crimes were committed by the armed group between 20 January 2009 and August 31, 2010, in the provinces of North and South Kivu.

  • Watch Growing SMEs East Africa Live Powered by IGIHE

    After six successful editions, Growing SMEs will be held on 17-18 May 2012 in Kigali, Rwanda. This premium marketplace will highlight successful strategies and businesses to explore and activate small businesses development in East Africa and beyond.

    If you can’t make it to Kigali, catch the best sessions from Growing SMEs live from the comfort of your computer.

    ‘Growing SMEs seeks to identify a new generation of entrepreneurs and get them growing a business that creates jobs and supports emerging market economies’ says Thierry Sanders, Founder of BiD Network Foundation.

    This year, BiD Network and partners will recognize and reward these leaders in Kigali, Rwanda.

    Day one is a unique combination of presentations, focus sessions, workshops and panel discussions. The Forum will bring together renowned experts, entrepreneurs and financiers to share knowledge, ideas and latest trends in small businesses growth and finance.

    The Forum speakers include, among others: Gert van Veldhuisen, Founder of Investors Club Netherlands, William Davis, President of Gate Impact, and Wanjohi Ndagu, Partner, Pearl Capital.

    On day two, 21 high growth entrepreneurs will showcase their emerging market businesses at the Marketplace and will pitch to 110 prospective financiers. Entrepreneurs from 12 countries undergo rigorous selection, expert guidance and training sessions.

    This year, the finalists include an expert IT company from Burundi that creates and installs medical softwares, a community-oriented lighting solution from Rwanda for rural Africa and an affordable solar lantern through innovative distribution from Kenya.

    Investors will be introduced to viable market opportunities, will network with regional and international peers and will join a closed session on angel investing in East Africa.

    Most of us will not be able to head to Kigali for Growing SMEs. Thanks to the igihe.com team, you can watch the Growing SMEs accelerator event live via igihe.com and bidnetwork.org. See live audience as well as focus sessions discussing finance options of small businesses in emerging markets, the conference keynotes and more. Livestream begins on Thursday, May 17 at 8.30 EAT.

    ******

    Since its creation in 2005, Growing SMEs gave exposure to 190 entrepreneurs, and welcomed 2700 participants in the Netherlands and in Colombia.

    Thanks to our partners JCI Rwanda, Rwanda Development Board, Enterprise Development Network, and Bernard Van Leer Foundation for making Growing SMEs happen.

    For more information about Growing SMEs, click here: http://rwanda-2012.growingsmes.org/

    Follow us on Twitter: @bidnet, #GrowingSMEs

  • Turkish Airlines Launches Direct flights to Kigali

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    Turkish Airlines the national flag carrier of Turkey is set to begin regular flights to Rwanda’s International Airport. Flights will depart from its Istanbul hub, Atatürk Airport, directly to Kigali.

    The Airlne has expanded operations in Africa with the launch of second destination this year on the Continent.

    Joining the airline’s aggressively expanding route map, Kigali is the second destination launched by the carrier and latest so far this year to the African continent after Mogadishu, Somalia.

    Operating Istanbul-Kigali direct, Kigali becomes Turkish Airlines’ 18th route in Africa, joining its ever-growing global network that currently spans 190 destinations. The airline flies to the most destinations nonstop from a single airport, the hub being Istanbul.

    Turkish Airlines already has a successful operation to neighbouring capital cities of Entebbe, and Nairobi.

    The arrival today of Turkish airline, a few minutes past 8 AM to Rwanda’s capital city of Kigali carrying a high profile delegation of Turkish officials met by local dignitaries was welcomed by a dramatic water salute soon after touchdown at Kigali International Airport.

    The exposure of Rwanda to the world through the airline’s global network will enable the country to attract more tourists, with several attractions focusing on wildlife and natural scenic beauty.

    “We know that Rwanda is a very important place. It is on the heart of Africa and we see this place as a hub,” Mr. Kotil , Turkish Airline boss said during his courtesy call to H.E. President Paul Kagame in mid-2011.

    Turkish Airlines currently operates a modern fleet to key business and leisure destinations across Europe, Middle East, Africa, Asia Pacific and the Americas.

    “ We are going to connect Kigali not only to Istanbul but also 72 other cities in Europe, including Russia, the Far East and many other parts of the world.” Kotil said.

    Rwanda is actively working to grow its tourism sector in as sustainable a way as possible and the efforts are succeeding; new flights and airlines are coming

    The Minister of Infrastructure Albert Nsengiyumva said that Turkey is one of the world’s emerging markets and the opening of the route would benefit the country’s business community.

    “The coming of Turkish Airlines to Rwanda will not only benefit the business community but also our young and growing airline, RwandAir which will learn from its much bigger partner in different ways,” Nsengiyumva said.

    The airline’s expansion to Kigali is part of the bilateral pact between Turkey and Rwanda that would see the two countries cooperate in different areas.

    Turkish Airlines targets to become the world’s leading airline, with an ambitious investment plan of over US$7.5bn this year alone.

    Turkish Airlines is a member of the Star Alliance, which includes Lufthansa and United Airlines.

  • MONUSCO Troops Seriously Injured in Attack

    Eleven UN troops have been seriously injured in an attack launched by mutomboki Raya militia in South Kivu province. The attack happened at about 5PM Monday.

    The attack followed protests from demonstrators at the MONUSCO base at Kamananga located 8 km from Bunyakiri. The protesters demonstrated against an attack by FDLR rebels.

    These protesters showed their anger against the peacekeepers with mobile base of operations located 3 kilometers from where the FDLR committed the crimes.

    A MONUSCO source at the scene said some protesters fired shots towards peacekeepers. UN forces fired into the air to disperse protesters.

    The Raya Mutomboki militiamen infiltrated the group of demonstrators. Other demonstrators barricaded the road Bunyakiri Ombo also to show their anger after the attack.

  • RNP Briefs Intermediate Command & Staff Course Students

    Fourty police officers from Burundi, South Sudan, Somalia and Rwanda currently undergoing a Police intermediate command and staff course at National Police Academy in Musanze district have visited Kacyiru Police
    headquarters.

    The Commissioner for Human Resources Management and Support services Assistant Commissioner of Police (ACP) John Bosco Kabera explained to the visitors Rwanda National Police structure which include Office of the Inspector General of Police, Office of the Deputy Inspector General of Police, Commissions, territorial units, specialized units, directorates among others.

    ACP Kabera informed course participants that apart from ensuring security and safety of Rwandans, Rwanda National Police was an active participant in United Nations peace keeping operations in different countries.

    The Human resource Commissioner also explained the recruitment procedure for prospective candidates willing to join Rwanda National Police.

    He explained the welfare initiatives including; medical insurance, the Police housing project, access to loans as well as the prospective armed forces shops. These initiatives are aimed at improving the welfare of Police officers.

    They later visited Kigali memorial center where they witnessed the effects of the 1994 genocide against the Tutsi.

    The police officers returned to Musanze where they are persuing a three months Intermediate Command and Staff Course.

  • Burkina Faso, Benin Learn from Rwanda’s Peacekeeping Operations

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    A team of five officials representing security organs from Benin and Burkina Faso are visiting Rwanda to learn about Rwanda’s Success story on Gender Promotion and Peace Keeping operations.

    Rwanda has gained respect from other nations following the successful Peace Keeping operations in Sudan and Haiti.

    Delegates received an orientation about preparations police officers undergo before they are ready to be deployed to peacekeeping tours including selections, tests undergone as well as other preparations.

    Francis A Behanzin, the controller General of Benin Police noted, “It’s going to be the first time that Benin deploys a Formed Police Unit to a peace keeping mission so we hope to learn a lot from Rwanda Police as they have already have Formed Police Units in peacekeeping duties before”.

    Burkina Faso Colonel Yssoufou Sawadogo, the logistics director in the Burkina Faso Army noted that on top of learning from Rwanda’s peace keeping initiatives, they would also gain experience from gender mainstreaming in the Police force and other security organs.

    The visit was organized and facilitated by the Pearson Peace Keeping center, a Canadian organization that has supported Rwanda on peace keeping initiatives.

    IGP Emmanuel K. Gasana noted that it was beneficial for Africans to share experiences and forge a future that is fit for Africans.

    Gasana noted that force capability was essential in deploying forces in Peace keeping missions. “You need to have a credible, professional and reliable police force and that is what we have tried to achieve here”.

  • Confessions of a Western Journalist

    Stepping onto the tarmac the warm Kigali air greets me. I breathe in deeply, as if it is the first breath I ever took. I push away the thought of enduring the stale air once again for my 22-hour return flight in just six weeks time.

    Australia seems another world away as I adjust my physicality to another time and place that is at once familiar to me, and yet, still so foreign.

    As I leave the airport, the natural movement of Kigali brings a smile to my tired face. The frustration of having my small framed body squeezed between two large men in the middle isle seats of the aircraft for fourteen and a half hours from Melbourne to Doha begins to fade. I stare out the car window and feel the wind blowing away my fatigue. I am alive again.

    As we drive across town from the airport to Nyamirambo I am reminded of my homeland Tasmania, Australia’s southern island state. The green and hilly landscape that defines Rwanda is also a touristic feature of my home.

    We share similar size capital cities and indeed my island home could even fit snug within this country’s European defined-borders. Just as Rwanda prides herself at being situated in the heart of Africa, some say the shape of Tasmania is that of a heart.

    And so, at the same time I am far from home, I am not far at all.

    It is the rich and storied landscape of the African continent that led me here, first in 2009, then four consecutive times until today. Like others before me of my kind – European writers, journalists and media producers – I come with the intent to tell Africa’s stories to the world.

    Certainly, African life has provided a constant source of fascination for the ‘European gaze’, resulting in a vast array of documentaries, books, films, articles, photographs and commentary, mostly from the perspective of the outsider.

    While the outsider too is gazed at (as the foreigner so often is, e.g. the recitation of ‘muzungu-muzungu’), it is the ‘gaze’ of the European that has been the most ‘productive’, or one could say, exploitative, for it is this gaze that has led to the dominant modes of representation of Africa and its people. According to Adinoyi-Ojo, this has led to an “unevenness of cross-cultural exchange”.

    It is true that the World Wide Web has linked different parts of the world creating more diversity in who speaks but within this ‘global village’ there are limited and specific speakers who dominate the dialogue.

    As Morley and Robins point out, the conversation is one-way, in which “the West speaks and the Rest listen”. Various African scholars argue that the domination of Western perspectives has led to the African continent and its people being “systematically misrepresented”.

    Of course today, these misrepresentations are being challenged by local media producers, especially film-makers, who are reconquering and revising images of Western representation about Africa, reclaiming their rights to represent themselves and co-construct a world about themselves.

    My mission in 2009 was perhaps no different to many other Western journalists who seek to journey to Africa and tell its stories. I had come to Eastern Congo to tell the story of the plight of refugees in Goma.

    Many would say it is a cliché story for the Western media. Of course it is a story that needs to be told but it is not a simple story as most people know, and if such a story is over-simplified, as Western journalism is so often accused of when reporting Africa, such a story fails to adequately inform its audience, and instead the reportage distorts, misrepresents and even perpetuates existing stereotypes of Africa.

    I had spent just five days gathering people’s stories from several refugee camps. In that time I came to realize I had not the knowledge or the expertise to be telling this complex refugee story. The story required someone with a deep insight into the issues in the region.

    Furthermore, for the first time in my life as a journalist I began to feel uncomfortable taking people’s stories. It became clear to me that the dialogical engagement between myself and the people I was seeking stories from was critically uneven.

    A post-colonial critique may pose the questions, how is telling the story of the Other, in this case the refugee, not “simply a form of surveillance and neocolonization”? And is the desire to have access to and to know the Other yet another “colonizing gesture”? For Homi Bhaba, asking questions and demanding answers is a significant strategy of “surveillance and exploitation” which re-ensures the authority of the colonizer.

    Thus the question arises, is it possible for Western journalists and media producers to escape their cultural Eurocentrism in order to articulate a critical narrative of Africa?

    I came across a similar experience when I was telling what could be labeled as another ‘cliché’ story, that of the life of the Pygmy, the Indigenous People of Central Africa. For this story, I reached a community who were renowned for their pottery work.

    I was taken back when one woman accused me of being yet another Muzungu coming to conduct research on ‘them’, who would then return to her comfortable life, most likely profiting from her story, and yet their life would not improve, just as it hadn’t done so in the past when other researchers or journalists had come seeking their stories.

    The woman’s words made me think critically about my role as a Western media practitioner drawing stories from Africa and why I felt I needed to tell these stories. On the other hand, I did not wish to be a ‘parachute’ or ‘fly-in/fly-out’ journalist who after getting a story was never to be seen or heard of again.

    I yearned to strengthen my knowledge of the region, and as the friendships I made grew and deepened, I felt almost an obligation to visit and revisit. Upon each visit I found it difficult to return home.

    I had grown very fond of Rwanda in particular. I was fortunate that I was able to come and go and fund the travel through telling stories. After visiting Kibuye for the first time I was compelled to share the mysterious and untouched beauty of this tranquil place so I wrote a travel article, something I so rarely do.

    As for my role as a radio documentary producer, I began to critique and reflect on how I told African stories, why I felt compelled to tell them, and ask myself whether it was my place to do so.

    This reflection led me to critique Western journalism’s liberal individualistic paradigm which perhaps can be problematic when Western journalists are reporting in places where community takes precedence over the individual, thus another question is posed: Can the West’s “individualistic ethos” understand the nature of community that is intrinsic to African societies?

    Some scholars have argued instead for a communitarian journalism that “deepens connections between members of community both near and far”, and attempts to “locate connections from group to group, culture to culture” and to emphasise the profound “commonalities” between human beings.

    Creating shared connections between peoples of different cultures certainly instills a sense of communality amidst humanity’s diversity. But such an aspiration is distinctly different to the West’s “Us vs Them” style of storytelling which at its worst can create divisionism.

    It is the ethics of representation, or more specifically, the representation of Africa in the Western mainstream media, which I have come to explore more deeply, not only as a media practitioner and as part of my PhD research but as someone who has become deeply connected to people in Rwanda both in country and within the Diaspora.

    Based on my own personal experiences telling stories from this region, my research question is this: does the Western libertarian journalism model serve well the stories that are told from Africa? Or is another form of journalism required – a hybrid form of journalism – one that is informed by local knowledge systems and African ethical roots, as well as the virtues of Western journalism?

    Working self-reflexively as a media practitioner in Africa, I have begun to question the set of frameworks I use to interpret and to understand the life of people here. I can use the following metaphor to emphasize this point: When on a moto to Kigali city centre I was given a helmet with a cracked and damaged wind-screen and so my view of things around me became distorted and unclear.

    I could see that the helmet wind-screen is like the Western lens in which I view Africa and tell its stories. However, it is the poignant statement by Michel Foucault that I may rest my morals, and may help me determine whether I am in a position to continue telling Africa’s stories at all: “There are times in life when the question of knowing if one can think differently than one thinks, and perceive differently than one sees, is absolutely necessary if one is to go on looking and reflecting at all.”

    The Author is an Australian Journalist (PHD Student)

  • Man Arrested Over Fake Money

    Police in Gasabo is holding a man found in posession with fake currency notes.

    Janvier Mbarushimana 24, was seized after he attempted to pay for cigarettes to a local shop keeper at Kabuga center using a counterfeight note of Frw 2000.

    The suspect is detained at Rusororo Police station while investigations into the matter are underway.

    If found guilty, Mbarushimana is likely to be sentenced between 5 and 10 years and pay a fine up to Frw 100,000.
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  • Kagame’s Speech at William Penn University

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    Dr. Ann Fields, President of William Penn University;

    Mr Jerry Ellis, Chairman of the Board of William Penn University;

    Dr Noel Stahle, Vice President for Academic Affairs;

    Faculty and staff;

    Distinguished Guests;

    Class of 2012;

    Parents, ladies and gentlemen:

    Thank you Dr Fields for your kind introduction and for the honour of this degree you have just conferred on me.

    I accept it with deep humility, knowing that in actual fact, it is a recognition of the collective effort of Rwandans to work for a better and brighter future.

    It is a distinct pleasure for me to be associated with William Penn University personally – through this honorary doctorate – but also as a country through the special partnership we have in the common search for what can better the lives of our people. This partnership is evidently beginning to produce results.

    Today we mark another milestone in this relationship with Rwandan students being part of this graduating class. We are proud of them and this university, and hope to have many more coming here. They did not only find an education here but also a home away from home.

    I would like to thank Mr Steve Noah and Joe Crookham for providing the Rwandan students the comfort and warmth of home and family.

    We value the partnership with this university and with other learning institutions, and with nations because we recognise that the future of humankind is best guaranteed by collaboration in learning, research and joint approaches to issues of our time.

    I am also happy to say that Rwanda shares the principles and values on which this university was founded and that continue to shape it – equal access to quality education without discrimination.

    Wherever people decide to live the best life they can, and better the lives of others as well, one will find some common characteristics – vision, determination and resilience.

    I believe this ethos is what inspires the William Penn University community – and it is what should keep the ties between this institution and my country Rwanda even stronger for years to come.

    Many of you know that Rwanda’s history has been a challenging one – and in describing our nation’s recovery, reconciliation and socio-economic progress, the word “miracle” is sometimes used.

    Well, certainly, there has been rapid change – but not in the mystical sense that most may think; there has been no magic formula to fix the daunting challenges we face.

    While appropriate policies and good governance structures have all played their rightful role, the key to our transformation lies with the individual Rwandan citizen and in their interactions with each other.

    In their capacity to find common ground and a common cause and purpose, to come together in pursuit of peace and national prosperity – there has not been a Rwandan miracle as such, but millions of them.

    In every language, there are words that are not easily translated. One such word in Kinyarwanda – the native language of Rwanda – is agaciro.

    In English, you might say self-respect, self-worth or dignity — but none conveys its meaning precisely. The word tries to capture the very essence of humanness.

    Agaciro has been – and continues to be – the indispensible ingredient of Rwanda’s transformation.

    To truly grasp the meaning of agaciro, it helps to contemplate the consequence of its absence. After all, this is what made our history so tragic.

    The genocide in Rwanda eighteen years ago had its origins in decades of bad governance (combining internal and external factors), hateful ideologies and impunity.

    For that to have happened – to the unbelievable degree that it did – people had to have surrendered the last shred of their dignity because to truly value one’s own life means valuing the lives of others.

    As a people, Rwandans have since sought to rebuild a sense of individual as well as collective worth.

    As a government, we have pursued policies of economic growth – not for its own sake, but because expanding the horizons of opportunity for our citizens will lay the groundwork on an equitable basis for prosperity and peace.

    Our work in tackling corruption has earned respect from around the world, but that is not why we took such steps.

    We did so because there is no dignity in paying a corrupt official to get your goods to market, your children to school or hospital, or for the guarantee of temporary safety.

    Our national mission is towards self-reliance, but it does not come from some kind of reflexive nationalism.

    It is simply the recognition that there is no self-respect in depending on the permanent generosity of others.

    Rwandans of your generation are more optimistic about their country than any before them. They are full of hope, full of pride. This is because they have grown up in a society that has restored the enduring spirit of agaciro.

    Madam President;

    Class of 2012;

    Ladies and Gentlemen:

    These lessons we have learned along the way in Rwanda may have some relevance for you, Class of 2012:

    Today marks the culmination of much preparation and hard work – and you stand here to celebrate your achievements, realised dreams and the promise of a better tomorrow. Congratulations!

    Indeed, this is the end of one phase of your education – but also, the beginning of a whole new different one. You will now get the opportunity to apply what you have learned to real life situations, moving beyond theories and debates to action that can make a difference in your own life, and for those around you.

    You are graduating as leaders of this century – possessing the idealism that has driven leaders over the centuries, but also tempered by the realities of the world we live in, and above all, equipped with the knowledge and skills to deal with its problems and challenges.

    And how you deal with them and transform the environments in which you will be working shall be the test of true leadership.

    Your formal education has given you a valuable skill set to succeed in the world – but it will be the values you uphold, and the high standards that you set, that will distinguish you as the leaders our communities need today.

    It is these values that will help you deal with the inequalities that exist in the world, to know that what is taken for granted in one place is not the same in another. And so the goal will be to reduce disparities and increase opportunities, and create societies where everyone can realize their potential.

    Every generation has its unique challenges and opportunities, but also its specific mission. In your generation, technology and globalization have created a borderless, fast-paced and interdependent world.

    In this environment no single individual, however talented, no one nation, however powerful, can live in isolation or think that they do not need the other.

    It means we must collaborate in dealing with humanity’s challenges – whether they are about international security, economic difficulties, climate change, energy, education and healthcare or food for the world’s increasing population.

    I am confident that the networks for such collaboration are being formed here at William Penn University and others will be made in the workplace in the different continents.

    You are entering a competitive world where knowledge, skills and innovation matter a great deal. Competition has over time produced the best in humankind – in academics, sports, science and technology, and many other areas – and propelled us to the present level of development of the human race.

    Leaders who will make a difference are those who are able to harness our competitive energies, creative and innovative potential and channel them into work for the common good.

    You should always remember that leadership is not about a single individual, no matter how gifted; it centers on the ability to inspire others to move together in the right direction, towards a common good. Aspire to be that person.

    I have no doubt that among the 2012 Class of William Penn University there are outstanding leaders ready to step into the future and make the world a better home for all its citizens.

    Once again congratulations to you all, and I wish you success in all your endeavours. Thank you for your kind attention.