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  • Girls, Get Some Standards

    Iam a girl. I believe that girls are gifted in different departments of life; from natural love to professional potential abilities in the outside world.

    I also believe that we are considered strong and brave according to what we endure in life. Enduring biological changes and dealing with what happens around us in the world ( men can confirm my statement). We are Ladies and strong women… at least we should be!

    We are not Ladies and strong women at birth, we become ones and it requires a lot of effort and work.

    Girls today behave in very strange ways. They are desperate, give in easily, forget what they are worth and misbehave in so many ugly ways. They completely forget their values and identity as women –to- be. They really cheapen themselves.

    Let me tell you something, we are the ones responsible for whatever guys think negatively of us, our actions and behaviors push them into thinking of us the way they do; that we are cheap,easy,dumb and do not pay attention to our own selves and values. As a reminder; men respect women who respect themselves.

    Our mothers have always told us to watch out what we do because what we do determines who we are. Girl, that boy is cute, good to you and has the money you need but what’s the money to you? Will it buy you respect and love? I don’t think so.

    You’re worth uncountable zillions of money you shouldn’t let what he owns first impress you. Many of them run after you, how do you act? Like a sport fishing girl or like one with strong personality? If you act like a girl to whom money means everything, you might get that money but will you be treated the way you deserve to?

    You settle with every guy running after you, does that show them the way you respect yourself? The fact is you’ll be followed by a hundred more men if you want to but only once they’ve seen that you distinguish yourself and they will be following you for very different purposes here I mean decent purposes.

    What I am trying to say here is that you are full of potential, your brain is there for you to be used, your character and personality to show how you really act and your actions to determine what kind of person people are dealing with. Become a Lady, let people who approach you respect you in such a way that they think twice before they let anything out of their mouth to you.

    Set yourself standards, respect them and let them known, recognize and regain your value, respect yourself first if you want to get it in return. Be a Lady so that everyone shall recognize you on that note.

    Let the one who’ll get you be with you because he fell in love with your personality, the person that you truly are and for the many decent things that you are able to offer instead of loving you for what he can easily get from you.

    A Lady deserves true love, real respect from others and appreciation for the wonderful person she naturally is, for her worth, but most especially for how important she considers her special and precious self. So girls, become Ladies and let men treat you like one.

  • Acid Attack Victim Needs Frw7M For Surgery in India

    After being released from the CHUK hospital in Kigali, Nyiransabimana Vestine who was burnt by acid has written to IGIHE seeking for help.

    On 7th May 2012 at 8:00 pm that is when I left CHUK hospital where I had been admitted for more than three months receiving the treatment. I was burnt by the acid. Currently am resident at kimironko with a relative taking care of me.

    Though I haven’t recovered well, I am so pleased and happy because the CHUK hospital were so good to me and gave me all the possible treatment I needed by that time and really helped me so much.

    As per now I am regaining strength, I still feel much pain in some parts especially right eye, nose, mouth, the neck, and the left side of my Jaw and all those parts need surgery but its expensive.

    A group of doctors who came from India assured me that if can go to India they can nurse back all my wounds but it needs about Frw 7million and I don’t have any.

    For the past three months I have been using medication prescribed by the doctor to apply on my skin and the medicine is expensive such as a cream (Iso-bethodine iodine 10% crème au ger). It is not on my insurance that I have (RAMA)

    The person who did this to me left me with a lot of damage. The acid destroyed my skin. I feel traumatised.

    I thank to those who were supportive to me especially people who sacrificed to support financially where by a number of 13 people have offered me (Frw 122,000). Through using my account number and MTN mobile money.

    I am here again pleading to all who still have a loving heart and compassion to help me.

    My account number in BPR is No 403-1076590-11, Tel 0788511830 MTN mobile money, Tel 0728511830TIGO cash or email: [email protected].

  • Woman Steals Baby

    Police in Gicumbi district is holding a woman identified as Uwamariya Christine for allegedly stealing a new born baby from Byumba Hospital. Uwamariya is a resident of Kaniga Sector, Gicumbi District.

    The incidence happened on the evening of Saturday. While the mother of the baby was bathing Uwamariya sneaked and whisked away the baby.

    Mukantibenda Diane the mother of the stolen baby was quoted by the public broadcaster saying, “Uwamariya had been loitering around the place for some time. She came where I was sitting and asked me to help with the baby so that I could bathe. I gave her the baby and went to bathe. After only 20minutes, I came back and found the baby and the woman missing, it was there that I suspected that my baby had been stolen”.

    Mukantibenda and her mother, immediately rushed to the Police and reported the matter, to which to the Police responded with urgent action, launching a hunting operation to recover the baby.

    After only one day, Uwamariya Christine was found in possession with the baby and consequently arrested.

    Uwamariya admitted to National Radio that she is barren and admitted to stealing the baby, but defended her action, saying she did it out of desperation for a baby.

    Uwamariya said that she had lied to her husband that she was pregnant. The Husband was very excited and was anxious to the forthcoming baby.

    Uwamariya said that at the elapse of nine months, she went to the hospital and started looking for where she could steal a baby to present to her husband.

  • Sarkozy Could be Questioned

    Former French President Nicolas Sarkozy is expected to face questioning as soon as mid-June when he loses his immunity a month after his successor Francois Hollande officially assumes office today.

    Hollande is swon in today as new President of Republic of France.

    The most immediately dangerous case for Sarkozy involves a series of overlapping inquiries surrounding illegal campaign financing by L’Oreal heiress Liliane Bettencourt, France’s richest woman.

    Magistrates are investigating claims that Bettencourt’s staff handed over envelopes stuffed with cash to Sarkozy aides to finance his 2007 campaign, with her former book-keeper testifying to one 50,000 euro ($65,000) donation.

    However, Sarkozy denies any wrongdoing. But the conviction last year of his predecessor Jacques Chirac on graft charges has shown that French courts are now willing to go after former leaders.

    “In the past the kind of behaviour that Nicolas Sarkozy is accused of was very common, but the courts did not launch prosecutions,” said Philippe Braud, a political analyst at the Paris-based Centre for Political Studies.

    Under France’s electoral code, individual election campaign contributions may not exceed 4,600 euros.

    Claims were also made during the campaign that former Libyan strongman Moamer Kadhafi’s regime financed Sarkozy’s 2007 campaign to the tune of 50 million euros, but no investigation is known to have been opened.

    However, Sarkozy has denounced that claim as “grotesque” and said he will sue French media website Mediapart over the reports.

    Also in more serious but harder to prove allegations, magistrates are probing whether a 2002 Karachi bombing that killed 11 French engineers was revenge for the cancellation of bribes secretly promised to Pakistani officials.

  • AFDB Annual Meeting: Africa & Emerging Global Landscape

    The African Development Bank Group (AfDB) will hold its Annual Meetings this year (28May-1June) in Arusha, Tanzania.

    The theme of the 2012 meetings will be ‘Africa and the emerging global landscape: challenges and opportunities’.The meetings will be a gathering of numerous high-level participants from the AfDB’s member countries.

    Participants will come from both the AfDB’s African regional member countries and its non-regional member countries outside Africa, representing the worlds of finance, banking, government, economics, donors, the media, civil society, development and academia.

    This year’s theme gives the opportunity for delegates to debate Africa’s changing role in the world as its economies continue to grow at faster rates than the rest of the world, and the AfDB’s role in promoting this growth and development through its projects, operations and investments around the continent.

    Delegates will take part in a wide-ranging series of discussions, high-level seminars and workshops on the future of Africa.

    Also, the AfDB will be welcoming contributions towards the formulation of its new ten-year Long Term Strategy for 2013 to 2022.

    The AfDB has already begun consultations both internally and externally on the creation of this Long Term Strategy, which will replace the current five-year Medium Term Strategy for 2008 to 2012.

    The AfDB is Africa’s premier development finance institution, established in 1964 to mobilise resources to the economic and social development of its regional countries by promoting sustainable and inclusive growth as well as poverty reduction.

    The AfDB pursues its goals of growth and cutting poverty through a strategy of concentrating its operational investments in the areas of infrastructure, the private sector, governance and education.

    The 2012 meetings will mark the 47th meeting of the African Development Bank, and the 38th meeting of the African Development Fund, the Group’s concessional or ‘soft loan’ arm.

  • 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.