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  • Burundi to Drag Switzerland To Court

    The Burundian government has said it will hire lawyers in its bid to obtain the repatriation from Switzerland of the remains of the country’s last monarch, King Mwambutsa IV.

    Burundi wants the remains of the former king buried in the country, with all the dignity the attendant dignity of an ex-head of state, the country’s Youth and Culture Minister Jean Jacques Nyenimigabo said Tuesday.

    Mr Nyenimigabo said it was unacceptable that the Burundian king, who ruled the country from 1915 to 1966, could be cremated in a foreign land in 2017, the year when the Swiss cemetery is likely to be closed. The king was buried there in 1977.

    The minister said the Burundian king must be buried honorably at his former Muramvya palace in central Burundi, which has been renovated as a museum.

    The remains of Mwambutsa IV were meant to be repatriated to Burundi on May 26 during the celebrations of the country’s Golden Jubilee of independence.

    However, the exercise was suspended and postponed to a later date following a ruling by a Swiss court over a case filed by Princess Esther Kamatari, a niece to the king.

    The princess had filed a case in which she spoke of Mwambutsa IV’s “will” in which he had expressed the desire to be buried in Switzerland, a country that had been his land of exile for over three decades.

    The Burundi government is challenging Princess Kamatari’s claim.

    XINHUA

  • Mbeki To Present New Proposal on Sudan Boarders

    Former South African President Thabo Mbeki is expected Friday in Khartoum, Sudan to consult with government officials ahead of the final round of negotiations between presidents of South Sudan and Sudan on post-secession issues in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia on 4 September.

    Mbeki is the head of the Africa Union (AU) panel mediating talks between Sudan and South Sudan.

    During his visit, Mbeki will put forward new conciliatory proposals on the remaining issues which include the establishment of a demilitarized zone along the borders and disputed territories.

    The UN Security Council extended until 22 September the three-month deadline it stipulated for the conclusion of the talks.

    This follows previous talks that culminated in a much-welcomed deal to resume South Sudan oil exports via Sudan at an average rate of US$10 per barrel plus US$3.028 billion in transitional financial assistance to Khartoum over the three-year period of the agreement.

  • Nyanza Local Leaders Get Mobile Phones

    In an effort to create awareness towards fighting illicit trafficking and proliferation of small arms and light weapons (SALW) in the country, the Prime Minister Dr. Pierre Damien Habumuremyi today urged Nyanza residents to actively participate in the fight against possession and illegal use and possession of arms among residents.

    The premier was addressing residents during the campaign to fight against possession of illegal arms in Gisagara District, Nyanza Sector.

    During the occasion, those incharge of security in cells and villages were given mobile phones for better community policing and improving communication when there occurred insecurity among residents.

    Internal security Minister Moussa Fazil added that “3512 is a toll free line to call when one meets insecurity, and you get help within 30 min” .

    The Premier calls for reinforcement of community policing for a better exchange of information when it comes to where security can be threatened.

    “Security is necessary and everyone is concerned” said PM adding that people should avoid family conflicts that results to deaths of citizens in some parts of the country.

    He noted that Rwanda is among the best countries with total security in the region and the whole Africa.

    “Security is one of the Government Priorities, when there is no security there is no development” said PM.

    PM thanks the South Province for its achievements that came above 90% in the last year contacts of Performances.

  • Motor-Taxi Operator Wins MTN Laptop

    Vedast Ndeze a motorcycle taxi operator has won a laptop in a weekly contest -Sharama na MTN prize on August 29th.

    In the next five days, MTN will issue the second Sharama car to the winner.

    Vedast said, “I have won the laptop today. But I will compete for car”.
    Among other prizes given include; “2 motorcycles, 21phones, 5 bicycles, and 5 matresses.

    Other 10 winners received 50.000frw each for making transactions through mobile money transfer.

    Egide Ntunguranyi who won a phone said,“ it makes me hopeful I may get the car”.

  • Catholic Church Bans Women Handbags

    In Nigeria, ST. Theresa Catholic Cathedral, Nsukka, Enugu State has announced that from September 9th 2012, the church will no longer allow women with big head gears and handbags into the church premises.

    Only head scarfs and very small purses are allowed.

    “Please, in view of the present security challenges, the church has urged women to stop coming to Sunday service with big headgears and bags to enable security men know when bomb will be smuggled into the church.

    The church has directed security men at the church gate to seize big head gears and bags from Sept. 9. This measure is aimed towards enhancing the security of the faithful during Sunday mass.”

  • Rwanda’s 9YBE Education Model Wins Award

    Rwanda’s Education model- ‘Nine Year Basic Education (9YBE)’ has won the 2012 Commonwealth Education Good Practice Award.

    Rwanda was presented with the award in Mauritius at the opening ceremony of the 18th Conference of Commonwealth Education Ministers.

    Dr. Ahmed Rashid Beebeejaun, the Mauritian Deputy Prime Minister presented the award to Emmanuel Muvunyi the Deputy Director-General of the Rwanda Education Board who received the award on behalf of Rwanda government.

    Rwanda was chosen winner out of 123 applications from 27 countries submitted for the third round of the awards.

    The 9YBE was launched in 2009 after government successfully implementing the Universal Education, initiated six years earlier.

    Dr. Vincent Biruta, noted, “Rwanda has many best practices to offer, from which other countries can draw inspiration. This is a vote of confidence for Rwanda’s development and progress in the field of education.

    With Rwanda being a new member of the Commonwealth, it’s a vote of confidence in our nation’s development and progress in the field of education.”

  • Miss Rwanda 2012 to Get Luxury SUV

    The Miss Rwanda 2012 Crown Beauty queen will walk away with a ‘Havar M2’ car valued at Frw12million.
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  • Eastern Province to Double Honey Production

    Rwanda Agriculture Board (RAB)has donated equipment worth Frw2.750Million to Honey Producers in Karangazi, Nyagatare district and urged them to increase honey production in the area.

    Kayihura Agaba Fred in charge of development of honey production in the area revealed that the province intends to harvest over 84 tones of honey in 2012 alone.

    Currently only 40 tons are produced annually in the province but Kayihura urges all those engaged in honey production to increase their yields to double the output.

    Sirikare Diyonizi a bee farmer commended the support provided by RAB saying the equipment will aid bee farmers improve their practices.

    He however, urged RAB to provide capacity building to the bee farmers in the area.

  • KAGAME: Rwanda’s Priorities Focus on Development, Not Illicit Foreign Ventures

    President Paul Kagame said in an Interview with a Newyork based Metro media outlet that Rwanda plays no part in the current crisis in the DRC —he said Rwanda has no interest in ‘costly, pointless foreign adventures’ that divert Rwanda’s progress from the world’s poorest country 20 years ago to one of Africa’s most dynamic countries today.

    Below are details of the conversation as told to TONY METCALF of New York Metro. The Interview was first published August 29, 2012 4:00 a.m.
    The original intro of the conversation has been edited to suit our readers.

    Metro: On the cusp of your nation’s Security Council membership, an addendum to a United Nations report by the Group of Experts accused Rwanda of unacceptable interference in the mineral-rich eastern part of the DRC, where lawless militia and illicit business interests rule, for failure of control of a weak central Congolese government. How do you respond to these accusations?

    Paul Kagame: These accusations are not true. Our national priorities have to be directed toward our country’s development, not toward foreign ventures, in particular illicit ones.

    The history and national interest of Rwanda and the Rwandan people dictate our national orientation. Our country experienced the horrors of genocide only 18 years ago.

    Since then, on the basis of a policy of national reconciliation, more than 1 million of our people have been lifted out of poverty, over 90% of Rwandans are covered by health insurance and we are ranked by World Bank Doing Business as the third easiest place to do business in Africa, under conditions of low corruption according to Transparency International.

    We have established wonderful partnerships with development partners. We’re attempting to rebuild the structures of our society in a way whereby every Rwandan has a stake in our future.

    Metro: Many commentators, including the U.N. Group of Experts on the DRC, seem to believe historical and cultural ties to the rebel groups make it inevitable that Rwanda will get involved. You worked with these groups before, and you share ethnic and language heritage with them. Don’t you see how this causes suspicion?

    Kagame: There’s a habit in the West to view Africa and our region in particular through the outdated and erroneous prism of tribalism and ethnicity.

    Because there are Congolese of Rwandan origin, such as those you referred to in your questions, who rebel against the Congolese government, people jump to the conclusions that Rwanda must be complicit in supporting them.

    Modern Rwanda rejects this primitive outlook. We embrace our Rwandan national identity and we will pursue our national interest irrespective of events in neighboring countries, regardless of so-called tribal affiliations.

    The new Rwanda is about building an economy that delivers prosperity and opportunity for our citizens based on a robust private sector. Foreign adventures would be costly and counterproductive distractions from these challenging objectives.

    We simply cannot support a rebellion outside our border.

    The Rwandan people, put to the sword perhaps like no other in the last 50 years, know the value of peace. So do I.

    Metro: Rwanda has come in for a lot of criticism from human rights groups for alleged support for rebel groups like M23 as well as broader criticisms over your record on media and political freedoms. What is your response to these criticisms?

    Kagame: I understand that human rights groups are locked in a fierce competition for big checks from wealthy donors and they need to generate big headlines. We do not like to be lectured to by unaccountable advocacy groups acting for their financiers about how to protect the rights of our citizens.

    Human rights are not the preserve of Western activists: The definition must extend to encompass the right to the dignified life; the right to send your kids to school, for that child to get health care, for access for greater prosperity for generations to come and to have a say in the destiny of your community and country.

    Under that definition, Rwanda has nothing to learn from advocacy groups who think they own the copyright on what constitutes human rights under all conditions in every corner of the world.

    Metro: Your government is reported to view Steve Hege, coordinator of the U.N. Group of Experts — which in an addendum to its own report has accused Rwanda of fomenting unrest in eastern Congo — as having an impermissibly “benign view” of people who carried out the 1994 genocide. Is this still your view?

    Kagame: We understand that experts come to the table with a variety of preconceived ideas and opinions. We accept that, in some cases, this will work against Rwanda’s interests. But there is a point at which this translates into outright bias.

    In the case of the coordinator of the Group of Experts, he has crossed the line from expert to partisan political activist. His anti-Rwandan views are well on the record and both the methodology and falsehoods that have found their way into the offensive addendum to the report conform to his unacceptable views.

    In his prior writings this coordinator appeared as an apologist for a group of Congo-based extremist militants who have repeatedly been sanctioned by the U.N. Security Council and whose leaders are the same leaders which factually led the genocide and were labeled terrorist by the U.S.?State Department.

    It is completely unacceptable for a person with this history to sit in judgment on Rwanda or any other country for that matter. It’s really all quite extraordinary. Rwanda will not let this matter stand.

    Metro: Western governments, including the U.S., have withheld aid to Rwanda over M23 claims. What do you see as the consequences?

    Kagame: Some countries have reacted to this very flawed U.N. report by temporarily suspending aid funding to Rwanda.

    This is regrettable, because we place a high value on good relations with development partners. But we are confident that these funds will be unfrozen once we tell our side of the story.

    It is a timely reminder to Rwandans that we still have some way to travel as a nation before we are truly independent. Strong economic growth, and especially a significant increase in private sector investment, is the only sustainable path forward for Rwanda.

    The donors as recipients can undermine aid effectiveness just as easily, and this is exactly what happens when countries use the development dollar as a weapon to impose political will on smaller and less powerful countries.

    Metro: Rwanda is said to have economic interests in Eastern Congo: You are accused of looting mineral resources in the DRC.

    Kagame: This is a persistent myth. Rwanda leads the region in stamping out illegal trade in minerals. We have a functioning mineral certification process. We play by the rules. Recently we handed back to the DRC 80 tons of minerals that had been smuggled into Rwanda.

    Our geographic position dictates that our economic interests are best served by a stable and prosperous DRC, because under such conditions, Rwanda would benefit greatly from increased trade and legitimate transit of Congolese minerals.

    To this end, Rwanda supports the establishment of a so-called “Neutral Force” which has been agreed between the 11 member states of the International Conference of the Great Lakes region in Africa. This is a homegrown solution to a regional border problem.

    Metro: The New York Times quoted a report by a human rights group accusing you of running a repressive regime. How do you answer those claims?

    Kagame:They are mainly talking about laws related to genocide ideology, which I am more than happy to defend. Rwandans will not tolerate voices that promote a return to the ethnic divisionism that precipitated the genocide 18 years ago.

    To that extent, we place limits on freedom of expression in a similar way to how much of Europe has made it a crime to deny the Holocaust.

    Aside from that, Rwanda is a very open and free country. Key to our recovery as a nation has a range of grassroots, citizen-centered polices we call “homegrown solutions.” The idea that Rwanda is highly controlled from the center belies the reality, which is that citizens in every village have a powerful say in how things get done.

    We prize accountability and Rwandans are quickly adapting themselves to the possibilities of a digital economy. A lot of this talk of repression results from outdated stereotypes about Africa.

    Metro: Rwanda has been described as the “Israel of Africa.” What similarities do you see between the two? And what lessons can you learn from Israel, especially in dealings with the U.N.?

    Kagame: Like Israel, we live in a difficult neighborhood. We understand that national security is vital for economic and social progress. Our sense of national purpose has been forged in unfathomable tragedy. We also have in common critics who attack our fundamental legitimacy, or even our very right to exist.

    Israel and Rwanda both play an active part in international organizations, including the U.N., but I think it’s true that our unique experiences as nations have shaped a fierce independence that we will not relinquish.

  • Court Remands Uwinkindi to 30 Days in Prison

    Nyarugenge Court has Wednesday,ordered the provisional detention for 30 days of Genocide suspect Uwinkindi Jean saying that if he is granted bail, he would escape from the country.

    Uwinkindi is suspected to have a hand in the 1994 Genocide against Tutsi which claimed a million lives.

    However, Uwinkindi appealed this court order and was granted five days to present his appeal before court.

    Uwinkindi was formerly a pastor at a Pentecostal church in Kanzenze in Kigali Ngali Prefecture.

    He is accused of complicity in the genocide and crimes against Humanity in the area.