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  • Stone Walls to Protect Overflow of River in Kinigi

    People living around the volcano areas have been urged to carefully handle stone walls (Gabillons) that were built to guard Rwebeya River from overflow of water from the volcano mountains especially during heavy rains.

    This was during the official launch of the protective stone walls built to cut down the speed of water flowing down stream.

    The stone walls were built by the collaboration of Ministry of Natural Resources and RDF Reserve Forces (inkeragutabara) in Nyange and Kinigi sectors through which the river flows.

    In the recent past, Rwebeya river has overflown and claimed lives of some residents and destroyed valuable property and crops.

    Lt. Gen. Fred Ibingira the head of the RDF Reserve Forces noted that after winning the war of bullets, the army will always deal with anything that threatens the peace and security of citizens.

    Nkuruziza Emmanuel of thehead of Natural Resources agency said this is second phase of the stone walls project after those launched in 2011, “such projects will continue”.

  • Rwanda Recieves Case of ICTR Prosecutor Vs. Ntaganzwa

    The Referral Chamber of the United Nations International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR) On 8 May 2012, granted Prosecutor Hassan Bubacar Jallow’s application for the referral of the case of The Prosecutor v. Ladislas Ntaganzwa, Case No. 9609-R11bis, to the Republic of Rwanda for trial.

    That decision became final yesterday when the time for appeal expired.
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    Earlier today, in compliance with the Referral Chamber’s order, Prosecutor Jallow officially handed over the material supporting the Indictment against the Accused and other relevant evidence contained in his case file to Alphonse Hitiyaremye, the Deputy Prosecutor General of Rwanda.

    The Indictment charges the Accused, who was the former mayor of Nyakizu commune in Butare, with genocide; direct and public incitement to commit genocide; and extermination, murder, and rape as crimes against humanity.

    The handover ceremony took place at the ICTR in Arusha, Tanzania. It marked the completion of a week-long official mission of senior Rwandan prosecutors to the ICTR that was led by Deputy Prosecutor General Hitiyaremye.

    During the ceremony, Deputy Prosecutor General Hitiyaremye thanked Prosecutor Jallow for his efforts in securing the referral of this case to Rwanda for trial. He noted that this was the fourth case to be successfully referred to Rwanda in recent months.

    “Your Excellency Justice Jallow and your team, this great achievement by the OTP has brought legal changes and will go in the history of this tribunal as precedent for other national jurisdictions to refer to when taking similar decisions to extradite Rwandan genocide fugitives living a round the world.

    Rwanda has already issued 138 indictments and arrest warrants against genocide fugitives living in 23 countries and with the already taken decisions by this tribunal; we expect extradition decisions in our favour in the near future. “

    Prosecutor Jallow expressed his confidence that the responsible Rwandan officials would ensure the fair trial rights of the Accused in this case and the other ICTR cases that have been referred.

    “The successful referral of this and other cases to Rwanda is an important step in the ICTR’s completion strategy and helps ensure that those responsible for the 1994 genocide in Rwanda do not escape with impunity.”

    Prosecutor Jallow further noted that, as part of its order, the Referral Chamber has issued a Warrant of Arrest and Order for Transfer of the Accused to the custody of Rwanda.

    He called upon all States that are members of the United Nations to lend their continued support to Rwanda’s efforts to apprehend the Accused in this case, as well as the fugitives in the two other cases (Charles Sikubwabo and Fulgence Kayishema) that have been referred to Rwanda for trial.

  • Armed Groups in Ituri Form Coalition Demand Blanket Amnesty

    In the latest development in DRCongo, Four armed groups operating in Ituri have formed a coalition of armed groups in Ituri (COGAI). The coalition leader is Col. Banaloki a.k.a Cobra Matata.

    In a press statement released on Thursday 24 May, the new coalition is calling on the Congolese government for an amnesty for all militias operating in Ituri and the recognition of this district as a province of the DRC.

    Outside the Patriotic Resistance Force in Ituri (FRPI) of Cobra Matata, other armed groups that have signed the act of creation of this coalition are: The Popular Front for the sustainable development of the Ituri Eneko Kila. The Armed Force for the revolution of a Kabuli Integration of the Armed Forces of Ituri.

    Most of the militia leaders are deserters from the Armed Forces of DRC (FARDC).

    These militias are also calling for the creation of a military region in Ituri led by a native of this district and the immediate departure of Col. Fal Sikabwé, current head of operations in the area.

    They accuse Col. Sikabwé of murdering Gen. Floribert Kisembo who had deserted from Congolese army, he died a year ago in Djugu after a hunt against him by loyalist forces.

    Residents in the area have demanded local and national authorities to engage with such militia “to find a way out.”

    However, FARDC in Ituri, say they do not believe in the existence of this coalition.

    In February of this year, Cobra Matata had expressed willingness to join the army with his men saying, “it is time to make peace.”

    Civil society in Ituri had invited the head of the Congolese State, Joseph Kabila to respond to its request by granting its militia and himself an amnesty.

  • Health Providers Trained on Family Planning

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    The Ministry of Health in collaboration with UNFPA and Family Health International (FHI360) is conducting a ten-day Family Planing training, which started on 21 May 2012, for health providers from health centres and hospitals in Rusizi District, Western Province.

    According to a press release from the Ministry of Health, the training is taking place at St. Andre Centre, Kabgayi Catholic Cathedral, Muhanga District.

    The first five days (21-25 May 2012) have been devoted to theory while the other five days (28 May to 01 June 2012) will be devoted to practical work at Byimana, Kinazi, Gitarama, Mbuye and Musambira health centres. The training is being facilitated by trainers from Ministry of Health, UNFPA and FHI360.

    While opening the training, the Director of Gitwe Hospital, Dr. Valens Habimana said: “I urge you to participate in the training with keen interest. We expect you to improve the contraceptive rate which is very low in Rusizi District.”

    Although the government of Rwanda quadrupled contraceptive uptake in five years (from 10% according to 2005 DHS to 45% according to 2010 DHS), the contraceptive uptake is 35.5% in the Western Province and only 23,4% in Rusizi District during the same period.

    “Access to family planning services empowers women and can save lives. Ensuring access to voluntary family planning can reduce maternal deaths by a third and child deaths by 20 per cent,” said Ms Daphrose Nyirasafari, UNFPA Rwanda Programme Officer for Sexual and Reproductive Health.

    The training is participatory. Trainees are engaged in brainstorming, presentations, group discussions, case studies, role plays and demonstration using anatomic models.

    It is aimed at providing to health providers knowledge and competences so that they are able to provide quality family planning services and to increase long-term contraceptive uptake. The training is in line with MoH’s decision to train at least two officers per health centre or hospital to ensure continued quality family planning services.

    At the end of the training participants are expected to have acquired enough family planning knowledge and competence to create demand for and provide family planning services especially the long-term methods (implants and Intra-Uterine Device). They are also expected to help increase the number of users of the long-term family planning methods.

  • EAC States To Speed Up Removal of Non-Tariff Barriers

    The East African Legislative Assembly (EALA) has asked partner states to speed up removal of Non-Tariff Barriers (NTBs) to create a conducive business environment in the region.

    Rwanda has always been pushing for the removal of such non tariff Barriers to enable quick flow of goods into the country. Rwanda nearly imports its goods from EAC member states.

    Chairperson of the Committee on Communications, Trade and Investments, Dr James Ndahiro, noted that NTBs had by and large created a negative impact on trade expansion efforts in the region.

    “The NTB issue has necessitated the need for inculcating a common, comprehensive and holistic approach for the elimination of NTBs,” noted Ndahiro when presenting latest findings of a recent workshop report on NTBs held in Kigali, Rwanda, at the East African Legislative Assembly (Eala) opening session in Arusha on Tuesday.

    This is the fifth and final two-week Assembly sitting before a new (third) Parliament is sworn in on June 5. The report points to a number of NTBs facing the business community in the region including congestion in issuing bonds, weighbridges especially in the northern and central corridors, lack of implementation of cargo tracking systems limiting movement of goods and corruption affecting major players at the border points.

    Kenya is the current chair of the EAC Summit of Heads of State. Tanzania, he said, is yet to decide how many bridges to have, but Kenya has decided to have two.

  • EALA: Another Resolution on EPA Passed

    A newly passed Resolution urges the EAC Council of Ministers to engage the European Union (EU) to address pertinent concerns and contentious issues raised by the Assembly, prior to the conclusion of the talks.

    According to the Resolution, EAC suffers from chronic supply-side constraints and challenges and if implemented, the economic bloc stands to lose tariff revenue amounting to approximately USD 301 million yearly. Kenya alone, shall lose tariff revenue amounting to USD 193.8 Million a year.

    The resoliution was passed Wednesday by The East African Legislative Assembly (EALA).

    The Assembly is calling for a status report by the Secretary General every four months until the deliberations of the EPA talks are concluded and signed.

    The Resolution was read by Hon Gervase Akhaabi on behalf of its mover, Hon Dr James Ndahiro. The Assembly once again raised a number of areas of concern in the on-going EPA.

    The Assembly cited among other areas, the high level of liberalisation the EU is asking of the EAC and noted that the Most Favoured Nations (MFN) Clause would have an impact on the ability to have south-south co-operation and other trade agreements.

    Other concerns that the Assembly mentioned include: Europe’s refusal to integrate additional and binding agreements and the refusal of the EU to address their yearly 80+billion Euro domestic support even as they want EAC to develop commercial agriculture markets in the region.

    During debate, Hon Mugisha Muntu reiterated the need for the Council to pay particular attention to the EAC-EPA talks. He said the House had intervened on a number of times on the EPA talks in an attempt to right the concerns in the agreement.

    Hon Muntu cited the example of the over 2900 tariff lines for which the EAC lacks local production capacity saying it was time for the region to implement the EAC Industrialisation Plan. Such plans and policies the legislator added, would guide the region in its negotiations with bilateral and multilateral partners.

    Hon Kimura on her part noted that the Republic of Kenya as a non- Least Developing Country (LDC) would lack access to certain quotas that other Partner States in the EAC would access. She urged the Council of Ministers to engage their counterparts in Europe so that information sharing and experiences are shared.

    ‘There is need for mutual relationship between the region and Europe and not merely a one-sided arrangement’, Hon Kimura noted. The legislator urged the House to pass the Resolution and to forward the same to the European Parliament.

    On her part, Hon Safina Kwekwe stated that the EAC and other African countries have supply challenges and that market entry was hampered despite the access on paper. ‘We have access due to the Cotonou agreement and the AGOA but I am not sure this has translated to market entry. I am not sure the European market shall change this mode once we sign the EPAs’, Hon Kwekwe remarked.

    The EAC Secretary General, Amb. Richard Sezibera noted that the EAC negotiators had already taken into consideration the concerns that Members expressed on the floor and that the desire of the EAC to address the same had partly led to the delay in completion of the talks.

    Amb Sezibera noted the region had requested for amendment on Market Access Regulation (EC 1528/2007). The Secretary General affirmed that there was no stalemate in the technical negotiations but added in certain areas the negotiators were yet to arrive at consensus, one of which is the MFN clause.

    The Secretary General stated that during the briefing session of Permanent Secretaries on the EAC-EU- EPA negotiations held in Mombasa, Kenya on 14th May 2012, the Permanent Secretaries noted that Economic and Development Co-operation (EDC) is the cornerstone of the EPA negotiations.

    They ascertained that areas of divergence should be taken up to the political levels where the policy makers could engage with their counterparts in the key EU Member States.

    On the impact of EPAs on regional trade and production, the Secretary General informed the House that the EAC would liberalise 82% o its market access offer to the EU through a gradual reduction over a 25 year period and noted that such reductions would be based on the Common External Tariff (CET).

    The Secretary General noted that 17.4% of EAC imports from EU were excluded from liberalisation to shore up promotion of food security, contribution to government revenue and trade competitiveness. Products include live meat, dairy produce, honey, eggs, live trees, cut flowers and ornamental foliage among others.

    Amb Sezibera said the implication of market offer on agricultural development was not affected by the EPAs since they are excluded from liberalisation. In the long run, he said only seven products sourced from the EU shall be liberalised.

    The Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for EAC in Uganda, Rt. Hon Eriya Kategaya reminded the House that it was important for the region to continue to negotiate as a bloc. He stated that the EPAs should give the region an opportunity to collectively negotiate on what it wants since the objective of integration was to enable the EAC to transform its economies.

    This is the fourth Resolution passed by EALA on EPAs. In February 2009, a Resolution urging the Council to review the process of EPAs was tabled by Hon Valerie Nyirahabineza. In December 2010, Hon Dr Ndahiro moved a Resolution adopting a Position paper of the Committee of Communications, Trade and Investment urging the EAC to pursue a position on the EAC-EU papers.

    Last year in May, Dr Ndahiro again moved a Resolution on EPAs. This time, the Resolution to the Council of Ministers sought to correct the record on EALA’s position on the EPA funding as used to seek a Summit directive to the 9th EAC Summit of Heads of State.

  • Driving Tests for Illiterates Launched

    Over 1856 illiterate citizens from Gatsibo and Nyagatare districts participated in an oral- provisional driving test on Tuesday at the first ever special motor cycle driving test in Eastern Province.

    All the participants passed the oral test and later undertook practical riding tests.

    Traffic Police Commander, Chief Superintendent (CSP) Celestin Twahirwa said, “the new system of conducting driving tests was part of Traffic Police efforts to ensure road safety is maintained in all parts of the country.”

    The test was organized to facilitate people in Eastern province who initially operate motor cycles in their daily activities but, do not have driving licenses simply because they cannot read and write in order to undergo the normal driving exam.

    CSP Twahirwa noted that acquiring driving license by the illiterate will help them get registered by life insurance companies.

  • Felicien Kabuga: Special Evidence Hearing Concluded

    The International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR) Tuesday concluded defence special evidence hearing for the most wanted genocide fugitive, Felicien Kabuga.

    “Special deposition for Kabuga was completed Tuesday and a total of six witnesses have testified for the defence,’’ Tribunal’s Spokesman, Roland Amossouga said Wednesday.

    Kabuga’s Duty Counsel, Bahame Nyanduga commenced fielding his witnesses on April 23, 2012.The prosecution’s special deposition hearing began on May 23, 2011 and was concluded on October 28, 2011.

    The alleged sponsor of the 1994 genocide is accused of 11 counts, including conspiracy to commit genocide, genocide, complicity in genocide and direct and public incitement to commit genocide.

    The special deposition hearings are being conducted to preserve evidence for future use if the fugitives in question were to be arrested.

  • Africa To Produce More Oil Than Middle East

    Very soon Africa will produce more oil than the Middle East as the continent becomes a focal point in global business.

    The remarks were made by Rwanda’s Commercial Attaché in DC, USA, Bonny Musefano while addressing students at the University of California Los Angeles (UCLA).

    “Africa offers the highest return on foreign direct investment in the world, far exceeding all other regions,’’Musefano remarked.

    Musefano represented the Ambassador of Rwanda HE. Eng. James Kimonyo as the keynote speaker at the 7th Annual Symposium “Business of Africa” May 18-19, 2012 hosted by the African studies Center.

    Citing various business success stories in Africa, he said, this is the decade for Africa to shine.

    He passionately told of how Rwanda, a small, over populated country in the heart of Africa is the third easiest country in Africa to conduct business after South Africa and Mauritius and that Rwanda seeks to become a business hub for the wider great lakes region.

    Bonny further argued that Africa offers the highest return on foreign direct investment in the world, far exceeding all other regions. While petroleum products are the driving force behind those returns, other sectors offer impressive growth.

    “There is no reason why we should be the world’s suppliers of cheap commodities and yet remain a vast market dependent on the outside world for most of our consumable goods”.

    He was confident that when African countries address the problem of insufficient energy, improve transport network, easy access to good quality internet, enhance the business environment by reducing beaurcracy and good governance, Africa will out compete many continents in business endeavors.

    During the Question and answer session, Musefano attributed the success of Rwanda to the resiliency of the Rwandan people and the outstanding leadership of President Paul Kagame.

    He noted that Rwandese chose to look forward and restore the pride of their country. Rwanda has zero tolerance to corruption, consistent accountability mechanisms have been put in place, and investors feel secure to do business at home.

    He also attributed the success of Rwanda to vibrant domestic and foreign private sector which has steadily boosted Rwanda’s economy.

    Dr.Francoise Lionnet, the Director of the African Studies UCLA was optimistic that time had come for Africans to spearhead development strategies of their own continent.

    She acknowledged that part of Africa’s challenge was capacity development which has steadily improved and that Africa was now ready to compete on the global market.

    The two day conference was opened by entertainment from the World Arts and Culture department UCLA as well as Rwandan Students dancing group of California Baptist University.

    The African Studies Center at UCLA is one of the oldest and the biggest departments in USA with various academic disciplines that focus on Africa.

  • Rwanda Hosts 10th Annual Meeting of EAC Judges

    Rwanda is hosting the 10th Annual meeting of Judges and court clerks from the five member states of the East African Community. Rwanda is hosting this meeting for the first time after joining the regional bloc in 2011.

    The Three-day meeting is being held under the theme, ‘Universal Competence and Africa’

    Representing the President, Dr. Pierre Damien Habumuremyi the Prime Minister officially opened the meeting saying that Univesal competence is the best way to deal with culture of impunity.

    Dr. Habumuremyi noted that many fugitives are hiding in different countries. He urged countries hosting such suspects to try them in their justice system or repatriate them to countries where they committed crimes.

    Angeline Rutazana a High court judge and president of the association of judges and court clerks in rwanda noted that Rwanda being new to the EAC bloc,the meeting will enhance Rwanda’s understanding of issues relating to Univesal competence.