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  • US jury skeptical Kobagaya lied about genocide

    A US jury deadlocked Tuesday on whether an elderly Rwandan immigrant committed genocide 17 years ago, convicting him only on a charge that he lied to US immigration officials.

    The verdict, coming at the end of a lengthy, expensive immigration trial, leaves uncertain the future of 84-year-old Lazare Kobagaya.
    US District Judge Monti Belot allowed Kobagaya to remain free on bail while a pre-sentencing report is prepared and defense attorneys file an expected appeal.

    Prosecution witnesses brought from Rwanda had testified that Kobagaya ordered people killed and beaten and their homes burned during the 1994 genocide against the Tutsi.

    One of two counts against Kobagaya alleged that he lied to US immigration officials when he denied participating in genocide.
    The eight-man, four-woman jury couldn’t reach an agreement on that count.

    Instead, they convicted Kobagaya of lying to immigration officials when he claimed to live in Burundi, not Rwanda, from 1993 to 1995.

    “As I understand it, they didn’t convict him on anything violent at all,” defense attorney Kurt Kerns said as he left the courthouse with Kobagaya and the defendant’s family.

    Kerns said he couldn’t comment further because of instructions from Judge Belot.

    US prosecutors declined comment about whether they intend to re-try Kobagaya on the deadlocked charged or attempt to deport him based on the conviction they obtained.

    According to most sources, 500,000 to 800,000 people were killed in Rwanda during a three-month period, most of them ethnic Tutsis slain by the majority Hutu group.

    Prosecutors claim that Kobagaya, a Hutu, contributed to the deaths of thousands of Tutsi, including personally ordering the murders of at least nine people.

  • Report by Human Rights Watch distorts Gacaca courts

    The government has dubbed a report released by Human Rights as slur to the genocide courts adding that even the title of the report, Justice Compromised: The Legacy of Rwanda’s Community-Based Gacaca Court, “distorts the image of Gacaca” and misrepresented the contents of the report in an attempt to “grab headlines.”

    In a report released by the New York-based advocacy group claims that the system denied some defendants a fair trial and the courts were sometimes corrupt or used for political or personal gain.

    Yet Gacaca reflects a justice sector that is inherently unique even Human Rights Watch itself acknowledges in the report that 1.2 million people have benefited from the Gacaca process, it also recognizes the enormous challenges the government faced after the Genocide in processing the large number of cases, not forgetting that ‘the challenge would have overwhelmed even the world’s most advanced justice system’.

    Without any tangible proof Leslie Haskell a Human Rights Watch’s Africa division researcher and author of the report argued that. “If you have unfair trials whereas a large percentage of the population perceives the trials to have been flawed, or motivated by private interests or even political interests, that doesn’t serve justice in the long term.”

    According to an email statement released by the government, “Rwanda welcomes constructive criticism as it builds a modern, developed justice system but reports which mischaracterize Gacaca are not constructive. We call on Human Rights Watch to find a way in future reports to balance informed criticism with a respect for the enormity of the challenges Rwanda faced in the aftermath of the genocide.

    However the report praises the Gacaca system, saying it provided swift justice, helped families find victims’ remains and encouraged community participation. “Gacaca may have also helped some of victims find a way to live peacefully with neighbors who may have perpetrated crimes against them or their families,” according to the report.

    What is more, Under Gacaca, people have received prison sentences of between five and ten years, life sentences constitute just five to eight percent of verdicts while between 25 and 30 percent of cases have ended in acquittal.

    The community work ruling as an alternative to prison has allowed people to live in their homes and carry out their sentences about twice a week, learning to live together and move on.

    Reacting on the report through an emailed statement justice minister Tharcisse Karugarama insisted that. “Through Gacaca we have been able to judge and resolve more than 1 million dossiers, a great achievement that would have been impossible.”

    “Despite this, Human Rights Watch has chosen to base its verdict of Gacaca by citing a handful of cases which went wrong and then implying that the whole 1.2 million can be assessed in the same light. This is unwarranted and makes a mockery of the efforts of all Rwandans who are working together to promote justice and reconciliation,” the statement said.

  • RSE market highlights as of 31 May

    Today the market registered slightly more volume and turnover compared to yesterday’s session. A total turnover of Rwf 17,434,000 was recorded from 75,800 BRALIRWA shares traded at 230 in 6 transactions as yesterday.

    The market had recorded a total turnover of 16,307,000 Rfw from the sale of 70, 900 shares of Bralirwa traded in 3 transactions. The Breweries’s shares closed at Rwf 230.

    At the close of business, there were two outstanding offers of 201,000 and 800 Bralirwa shares at Rwf 230.

    The KCB and NMG counters did not record any activity today and their share prices remained unchanged from the previous day’s closing prices of Rwf 175 and Rwf 1200 respectively.

    Bralirwa shares go ex – dividend on June 13, 2011 and NMG shares will trade cum dividend until today 31st May 2011.

  • RBS moves a notch higher to protect consumers

    The Rwanda Bureau of standards (RBS) has equipped its laboratories with new equipments meant to enhance consumer protection as well as facilitate traders to sell high quality products.

    Antoine Mukunzi, the director of Bio chemical Labs encouraged traders to sell genuine products. “Manufacturers can now bring their products for verification if they want to gain their credibility and make better sales.” He further pointed,” among ways of improving sales ones commodity ought to abide with international standards and our role is to recommend quality products.”

    Demonstrating how the machines work, Mark Cyubahiro Bagabe the RBS director general noted that the equipments will also be used to test goods entering the country.

    In this respect, the petroleum unit for instance has been equipped with a petrol distillation machine which verifies the quality of petroleum products. The machine will restrict the sale of replica oil which is commonly a mix of petrol and paraffin; greedy traders use this scam to increase capacity levels.

    In regard to food stuff, the sophisticated equipments are used to test the quantity of atomic elements such as mercury and lead especially in soft drinks.

  • Business concept reforms to spur SME growth in Rwanda

    Rwanda will implement a new set of business reforms aimed at boosting the contribution of small enterprises to the economy.

    The country also wants to make Kigali one of the world’s top investment destinations, and hopes to achieve a higher ranking this year.
    In the latest Doing Business Report 2011, Rwanda moved up 12 positions to position 58 of the top reformers globally.

    The report benchmarks regulations that enhance business activities and those that hamper business. It focuses on business regulation and protection of property rights.

    While SMEs constitute over 90 per cent of the businesses in Rwanda, with a potential of reducing poverty and delivering millions of dollars in revenue, their potential is crippled by the fact that they mainly operate in the informal sector.

    In addition, SMEs still have limited access to finance due to high risk perception by lenders.

    As a result, the Rwanda Development Board (RDB), the government agency spearheading the reforms, has said it will focus on implementing reforms that make it easy for SMEs to formalise their operations this year.

    “We want to improve the way SMEs and other micro businesses do business — bring them into a formal set up,” said Claire Akamanzi, the chief of operations at RDB.

    Ms Akamanzi said that with the first private credit reference now operational in the country, the process of getting credit will become easier.

    New reforms to facilitate the businesses will include reducing further the process of starting a business, including implementing free online business registration.

    It also includes reducing registration fees from Rwf25000 ($41) to Rwf15000 ($25).

    “We want to encourage more businesses to register online and be able to register a business from anywhere without paying a fee,” she said.
    Ms Akamanzi also said RDB has invested in training SMEs throughout the 30 districts in business and management skills.

    “Even if we have some big businesses that contribute a lot to the economy, if we want to grow, then SMEs have to grow. When they grow, they can contribute more to the economy.”

    Last year, the government said SMEs with a turnover of Rwf200 million (about $423,800) or below should declare taxes every quarter, instead of monthly, to create more time for SMEs to concentrate on their business.

    Strong growth in the SME sector is needed to support not only Rwanda’s economic ambition of becoming a middle income country by 2020 but also to meet its development targets, including poverty reduction.

    According to the International Monetary Fund, Rwanda needs an average growth of 8 per cent to meet its development goals, mainly driven by additional private investment.

  • Burundi internet fees expected to go down

    Internet users in Burundi are expected to pay less if the country’s first fibre optic network fetches high-speed and low-cost internet through Rwanda and Tanzania early next year, an official has said.

    Burundi, with the help of the World Bank (WB), is embarking on about 1,300-kilometres of fibre optic to cover all the 17 provinces, the capital Bujumbura and key borders with Tanzania and Rwanda.

    Salvator Niyibizi, the Executive Secretary of the Executive Secretariat for Information and Communication Technologies (SETIC) in the Burundian Ministry of Transport, Posts and Telecommunications says completion of the first phase of the cable is expected in the first quarter of 2012.

    This will see the so-called national backbone linked with similar infrastructure in Rwanda and Tanzania at the main border posts. Another phase will cover the provinces.

    Rwanda has completed laying its national backbone covering 2,300 kilometres in the capital Kigali and main border posts while Tanzania continues to work on its national backbone infrastructure of more than 10,000 kilometres.

    The Burundi backbone cable will be linked to that of Rwanda on two main entry points between the two countries.

    One link will be in Bugesera, East of Rwanda while another one will be in South East of Rwanda at Akanyaru border post. On the Tanzanian side, the link will be at Kobero, South of Burundi.

    Tanzania has direct access to the submarine cables with international bandwidth while Rwanda gets connection through Uganda all the way from Mombasa, Kenya where one submarine cable has a landing point.

    Burundi hopes to fetch connection from both sides but the most urgent and reliable one is that from Rwanda, according to sources.
    Currently some traffic from Burundi goes via Rwanda through microwave while the rest is sent via satellite.

    Once Burundi backbone is connected, it is expected to lower the cost of internet in the East African country, which depends heavily on expensive and slow age-old satellite connectivity.

    Like in other East African countries, telecom operators in Burundi pay US$2,500-3,000 per Mbps (megabyte per second) per months for international bandwidth and this is expected to fall significantly with the fibre optic connectivity.

    “We expect the cost of Internet to go down. Maybe it will not go down in the beginning but we expect it to go down up to 70% and above in the long-run,” Mr. Niyibizi said in an interview in Kigali last Tuesday.

    Mr. Niyibizi was speaking to the East African Business Week during the 18th Congress of the East African Communications Organisation (EACO) that concluded Friday last week in Kigali, Rwanda.

    This is expected to ease doing business in Burundi as many companies, government and individuals continue to depend on the Iinternet a necessary communication and business tool.

    EACO is an initiative of Communications Regulators, Broadcasters and National Posts Corporations in Burundi, Rwanda, Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda.

    Since end-2008, Burundi has embarked on the national backbone project with the support of US$10.5 million from the World Bank (WB).
    Niyibizi said that the backbone project is a public-private partnership. It brings together the government and five telecom operators.

    The consortium created a company known as Burundi Backbone Systems (BBS) to coordinate and follow up the implementation of the backbone project.

    The consortium used the WB money as an incentive.
    ZTE, a Chinese company has been given the tender to lay the backbone cable.

    The cable will be pure commercial and the shareholding operators will sell the Internet capacity to the final user. The government is also planning to do another fibre project for e-governance.

    Burundi joins Rwanda, Tanzania, Uganda and Kenya in the quest to make a major shift from costly and slow satellite connectivity to cheap and faster fibre optic connectivity. This story was first published at the East African Business Week.

  • Guma Guma star search on despite Kingston’s accident

    Up to now Bralirwa insists that the Guma Guma super star search is still on progress despite Sean Kingston’s sudden accident. The American-Jamaican Hip Hop artist is expected to perform at the concert’s closing ceremony on July 30.

    Bralirwa’s communication manager Alice Akineza noted that they were optimistic on concert’s success. “We are waiting for the artist’s manager to advise us further,” she remarked.

    Sean Kingston was badly injured in a jet ski accident over Memorial Day weekend. His final Tweets pre-accident show that he was enjoying himself and getting a little rest and relaxation over the holiday

    Reacting on the tragedy a representative of Epic the artist’s recording label explained that Kingston was recovering.

  • Waiters’ race key option to improve service delivery in tourism sector

    Both the government and stakeholders are rather optimistic that the waiters’ race is a key option to improve service delivery and customer care in the tourism and hotel sector.

    The race which engages the waiters and waitresses from hotels and restaurants in the country in a five kilometer fast walking race carrying a serving tray with a bottle and two glassful of beer is aimed at helping the participants to be fast and effective while delivering services to customers.

    Rica Rwigamba the head of Tourism and Conservation at Rwandan Development board (RDB) says that such competitions if fully promoted will help improve the service delivery which has rendered difficulty in the fast tracking of the sector especially the hospitality section.

    “Customer service is essential for tourism to grow and prosper; such races improve the service delivery in the industry,” she further added, “in the long run this should be an initiative of all stakeholders to put up such competitions and should not be once a year but regularly and the government is committed to supporting them”, she said while handing over cash and trophies of the winning participants at Top tower hotel on Sunday.

    The tourism boss also noted that waiters and waitresses play a crucial role in the sector and thus a need to be recognized and commended for their efforts.

    “For a person to decide the hotel to go to depends on the service delivery but the hotels are just structures and waiters are the image and the force for their hotels they work in. It shows how important their job is,” she said adding that the race is important to the sector and that’s why RDB is supporting the initiative.

    This race is meant to encourage service providers in hotels for instance to be fast. What is more the competition is also used to recognize the best waiter/waitress in the city,’ said the managing director of Rwanda High Development- RHD, Diana Ramarohetra who is also the organizer of the race.

    Ramarohetra further pointed out that since the competition’s inception last year, progress has been seem among hotel severs especially those who have participated in the race.

    Vicent Nzigira the assistant food and beverage manager at Serana Hotel which won this year’s race trophy said that the competition helps them to rate their staff on efficiency and fastness in serving customers.
    This year, Lemigo hotel’s Sandrine emerged the winner while Mupenzi Ferician from Serena emerged the best waiter with Serena taking it for the second consecutive time.

  • Trade highlights, Rwanda Stock Exchange (RSE)

    Market Report Monday 30th May, 2011 The week opened with a slight
    increase in trade volumes and transactions and the market recorded a
    total turnover of 16’307’000 Rfw from the sale of 709’000 shares of
    Bralirwa traded in 6 transactions. BRALIRWA shares are trading cum
    dividend up to June 13th 2011. Those who buy the shares up to June 13,
    2011 will qualify for the final dividend announced by BRALIRWA. The
    price of Bralirwa shares closed at 230 Rfw depicting a no change in
    price of the Friday’s closing. At the close of trading session, there
    was an outstanding bid of 139’100 Bralirwa shares at 230 Rfw. There
    were also offers of 1400 and 38100 Bralirwa shares at 234 and an offer
    of 15000 shares at 232 Rfw. The KCB and NMG counters did not record
    any activity. The KCB and NMG share prices remained unchanged from the
    Friday’s closing prices of Rwf 175 and Rwf 1200 respectively. NMG
    shares will trade cum dividend until tomorrow Tuesday 2011.

  • Rwanda leads Africa in eliminating illicit small and light arms

    Rwanda has been commended for its assiduous efforts to eradicate illegally owned small and light firearms which are believed to be a major threat on the continent especially the war ravaged countries, those recovering from conflicts or are facing political strife.

     Francis K. Sang the executive secretary of the Regional Center on Small Arms (RECSA) exclaimed on the need for collaboration especially within borders where illegal trafficking of fire arms takes place.
    “We chose to have this meeting here because we believe that Rwanda has tremendous programs to wipe out illegally owned firearms”, he said while speaking in a two day conference involving Eastern, West and Central African police Associations in Kigali last week.

    The meeting that brought together police Associations that fight illicit arms on the continent aims at finding mechanisms of eliminating illicit firearms in Africa.

     The inspector General of Rwanda National Police (IGP) Emmanuel Gasana said that almost 32,000 small and light arms have been destroyed since 2003.

    He also noted that registration of arms is still on progress. Meanwhile RECSA which was formed 11 years ago in Nairobi and has so far destroyed 110,000 firearms in member countries.

    Reacting on the same, Justice Minister Tharcisse Karugarama stressed that it was important for the organizations to harmonize their efforts by setting up focal points which would coordinate activities that fight illicit accumulation and trafficking of firearms as well as explosive materials in the continent.

    Karugarama further pointed out that among ways of reducing cross border trafficking of firearms was by destroying large numbers of surplus, obsolete, unserviceable and unexploded ordnances (UXOs),marking legally owned firearms, enacting laws related to arms as well
    as establishment of a database record on all national focal points in charge small arms and light weapons.