Blog

  • Man City Wins FA Cup in 35 Years

    Manchester City has ended a 35-year trophy drought by winning the FA Cup after Yaya Toure’s second-half goal secured a 1-0 win over Stoke.

    Toure struck with an unstoppable shot in the 74th minute after Mario Balotelli’s deflected effort fell into his path.

    The Ivory Coast midfielder was immediately mobbed by his teammates as City celebrated a deserved goal.
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    Stoke was playing in the FA Cup final for the first time in its 148-year history and the team’s supporters were in fine voice as they sang the club’s unofficial anthem, Tom Jones’ Delilah, ahead of kickoff.

    However, while the fans revelled in the Wembley experience, Stoke’s players appeared to be overawed by the occasion as City dominated the first half.

    Carlos Tevez, who recovered from a hamstring injury to lead the team, drew a good save from Sorensen after only five minutes, and the Danish goalkeeper was relieved to see Toure’s thumping 35-metre effort go past his left-hand post in the 11th.

    Sorensen again came to his side’s rescue in the 24th by athletically palming away a shot from Balotelli that was heading for the top corner, but the best chance fell to Silva, who shot into the ground and over the bar with Sorensen out of position.

    Stoke, as expected, relied on its set-piece expertise, but Rory Delap’s first long throw was easily dealt with by City’s defence and Jermaine Pennant struggled to find any accuracy with his free kicks.

    Stoke settled after the break but its first sustained spell of pressure almost ended in the first goal for City, who broke from defending a free kick in the 55th and sent Tevez racing down the right.

  • AFP Journalist Arrested on Narcotics and Firearms Charges

    Stephen Terrill a freelance journalist working for AFP news agency in Rwanda has been arrested at Bradley International Airport in USA on charges of consuming and trafficking cocaine.

    The FBI arrested Terrill and 35 other suspects in an “Operation Vinefield” after a nine-month investigation into cocaine trafficking in Hartford’s north end on a variety of narcotics and firearms charges.

    Terrill 39 is a resident of Glastonbury appeared in U.S. District Court Friday for a detention hearing. He will be released on a $100,000 bond and will be on home confinement.

    During the hearing, Assistant U.S. Attorney Geoff Stone said that investigators monitoring the cell phone conversations of Jaeqwan Sheppard of Hartford on several occasions heard Terrill make arrangements to purchase “eight balls” of crack cocaine.

    Stone said agents followed Sheppard out to Terrill’s South Glastonbury home to complete the purchases. Stone said there is no evidence that Terrill was distributing the narcotics elsewhere after the purchases, but rather purchased it for personal use.

    U.S. Magistrate Donna Martinez agreed to allow Terrill out on a $100,000 bond, of which $50,000 of it will be cash provided by Robert McCarthy, who described himself as Terrill’s mentor in court.

    McCarthy said that Terrill is a freelance journalist reporting on the genocide occurring in African countries such as Rwanda. Terrill has worked for several agencies including Agence France-Presse, the BBC and the Voice of America.

    “Steven has flourished in Rwanda and I am quite proud of him but disappointed that he is back here in jail ” McCarthy told Martinez.

    Terrill was arrested at Bradley International Airport late Wednesday night by federal authorities as he was returning from his latest trip to Rwanda.

    He filed a story on Tuesday from Nkamira, Rwanda detailing the plight of a woman searching for her husband and children who she fears have been victims of the on-going war between soldiers from the Democratic Republic of Congo’s army and mutineers — who were until recently rebel soldiers.

    All but one of the 36 people indicted has been arrested and presented in federal court. The only person still at large is Rakent Bunkley, 23, of Hartford. Four others are already in state custody.

  • Uganda Captures LRA Rebel Commander

    The Uganda Army has reported the captured a top Lord Resistance Army commander Maj. Gen. Caesar Achellam (Below) . He is among the top five LRA commanders.
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    Maj. Gen. Achellam said he felt a “free” man leaving rebellion.“I feel free now after 24 years in the bush,” He told Journalists.

    Ugandan military officials prevented journalists from probing Acellam on grounds that would unravel information likely to undermine the ongoing regional effort to rout Kony.

    State owned media quoted military saying that the capture is a step closer to catching Joseph Kony, the LRA leader accused of war crimes.

    Uganda People’s Defence Forces said Gen. Achellam had been captured in an ambush on Saturday along the banks of the River Mbou in neighbouring Central African Republic.

    They said Achellam had been armed with just an AK-47 rifle and eight rounds of ammunition. He was being held with his wife, a young daughter and a helper.

    Kony has evaded the region’s militaries for nearly three decades, kidnapping tens of thousands of children to fill the ranks of Lord’s Resistance Army and serve as sex slaves as he moves through the bush.

    Thousands have been killed by his brutal army.

    The deployment of U.S. special forces as advisers to help Ugandan soldiers track Kony and his senior commanders in the dense equatorial jungle across a region that spans several countries has raised hopes the sadistic leader’s days are numbered.

  • British Prime Minister to Build Cricket Stadium in Rwanda

    Rwanda is expected to get a new cricket stadium constructed by funds raised from auctioning British Prime Minister David Cameron’s most valuable possessions.

    Cameron who considered a bat signed by Indian cricket icon Sachin Tendulkar as one of his ‘most valuable possessions’, has donated it to raise money for a cricket stadium in Rwanda.

    The bat fetched 3,400 pounds at an auction at the Lord’s to raise funds for the stadium project.

    During an event of the Conservative Friends of India, Cameron had spoken how he cherished the bat and Tendulkar’s signature during his visit to India in 2010.

    He told the Indian audience that he was horrified when he saw his wife Samantha play French cricket with the same bat at the Chequers, the Prime Minister’s country residence, adding: “I said, ‘No, darling, put it down, this is probably the most valuable possession I have.’

    The auction, held in the Long Room at Lord’s, was to commemorate the life of Christopher Shale, Cameron’s constituency chairman, who was found dead at the Glastonbury festival last summer.

    Shale’s son, Edo, said the event raised almost 130,000 pounds for the project.

    He Press that “We are all delighted and a little exhausted. These funds are the springboard this charity needs to take us into the construction phase of the cricket stadium.”

    The Rwandan cricket team is the team that represents the country of Rwanda in international cricket matches.

    They became an affiliate member of the International Cricket Council in 2003. Their international debut came in the African Affiliates Championship in 2004, where they finished seventh.

    In 2006 they competed in Division Three of the African region of the World Cricket League, improving their performance and finishing in sixth. They will remain in Division Three in 2008.

    Rwanda has a junior U-17 team participating in the East Africa Regional U-17 Tournament. In their first match in the 2008 version of the tournament the team lost to Uganda by 10 wickets.

  • Poor Students Recieve Frw 58.5M to Fund Their Studies

    About 141 poor students have been given Frw 58.5M in donation to fund their education in the universities and secondary schools. Africa Muslim Agency provided the donation.

    Beneficiaries were urged to value knowledge acquired from their learning institutions and work hard because their success will determine their development and that of the nation.

    The event took place at the Islamic recreational centre also known as “kwa Kadafi”.

    The beneficiaries and their parents attended the event to receive the funds.

    Nzanahayo Kassim, the director of the Africa Muslim Agency explained that students are not only selected because they lack the means to fund their education but also according to their academic performance hence only the best performing students are selected.

    The Africa Muslim agency was established in 1981 and has branches in 29 countries across Africa including Rwanda.

    Rwanda’s branch focuses on the development of the Muslim community and Rwandans in general in the fields of social welfare, education, health, issues related to food insecurity and disasters.

  • Muslim Pilgrims Pay Tribute to Genocide Victims

    The Muslim pilgrims Saturday visited Kigali genocide memorial site where they paid tribute to victims of the genocide against Tutsi.

    The pilgrims including men and women laid wreaths on the mass graves. Thousands of victims are buried at the site.

    Pilgrims had just returned from the holy pilgrimage in Mecca Saudi Arabia. They gave messages of peace, prayed for Rwanda and denounced the repeat of genocide in Rwanda.

    They toured of the genocide museum which depicts Rwanda’s tragic history which claimed the lives of over a million people.

    The head of the delegation of pilgrims who had just returned from Mecca in Saudi Arabia Hadj Munyakazi Isiaka said their objective of visiting the genocide memorial was to give messages of peace and love that will help Rwandans fight ethnic divisionism and divisive politics.

    The pilgrims donated 2 cows and 11 goats to genocide survivors living at Mageragere sector in Nyarugenge district and constructed houses for 7 homeless families.

  • UNAMID Police Chief Tours Gishali Police Training School

    The African Union, United Nations Hybrid Operation in Darfur (UNAMID) Police Commissioner James Oppongo Boanuh yesterday visited Gishali Police Training School.

    He was accompanied by the UNAMID Police Chief of Staff Commissioner of Police Cyprian Gatete.

    Commissioner Boanuh is in the country on a four day official visit.

    He was briefed by the Commandant of the School Assistant Commissioner of Police Bruce Munyambo on the school achievements, the ongoing activities and future projects. He was also briefed to progress of the peace support center.

    He also toured the housing scheme, the medical center and Zigama credit and savings scheme branch. He toured Formed Police Unit which is preparing for peace keeping mission.

    Commissioner Boanuh urged female police officers to work towards satisfactory results in solving problems related to Gender Based Violence and maintain exemplary discipline and uphold core values governing the United Nations.

    He lauded the performance of Rwandan contingents on several peacekeeping missions worldwide.

    “You will be faced by challenges in your daily peacekeeping duties in foreign countries but you can overcome them by upholding professional values and discipline,” Boanuh said.

    He noted that Rwandan contingents have never failed the people they are supposed to protect and that they have always been brave.

  • Kagame Says Leadership is Not About One Individual

    Founded by Quakers in 1873, William Penn University celebrated its largest graduating class to date.

    With over 300 students, William Penn University celebrated its largest graduating class to date on this sunny Saturday afternoon in Oskaloosa, Iowa.

    In her opening remarks, the first female President of the College Dr. Ann Fields reminded the graduating class of Rwanda’s remarkable achievement in the past decades pointing out its high number of women parliamentarians.

    “Under President Kagame who is known as a public advocate for socio-economic development and self reliance, Rwanda has been cited as an African success story.”

    Dr. Ann Fields cited gender equity, women’s right to own property and girl’s education among many of the successes of President Kagame’s leadership.

    It was in recognition of these accomplishment and the partnership between William Penn University and Rwanda that Dr. Ann Fields presented President Kagame with the Honorary Doctorate of Humane Letters.

    “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,” President Kagame said upon receiving the Honorary Doctorate.

    Addressing the over 300 students gathered, he reminded them 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.”

    “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,” President Kagame added.

    As one of William Penn University first Rwandan graduate, Jean Chrysostome Bikomeye demonstrated in his address to the William Penn University graduating class, Rwanda’s youth is well on its way to meaningful leadership.

    “We all have different backgrounds but today we have one thing in common, we are graduating,”he told fellow students.

    Jean Chrysostome Bikomeye thanked President Kagame and the Rwandan leadership for their support of the Presidential scholarship program and reminded all present to“never lose the opportunity to make a difference.”

  • Poor Countries issue Plan to energize UN Climate Change Talks

    The world’s poorest countries have issued a bold plan to make the UN climate change talks more likely to reach their goal of having an effective and legally binding agreement ready for governments to adopt by 2015, the latest press release says.

    The Least Developed Countries (LDCs) group’s formal submission to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, under which the talks take place, includes; The new legally binding agreement should take the form of a new protocol under the convention that builds on and enhances the commitments under the Kyoto Protocol.

    They further suggest that parties should agree new rules to allow the adoption of the Protocol by a 75% majority, not by consensus as under current rules.

    They go on to argue that a final negotiating text should be ready a full year ahead of the 2015 deadline rather than the usual six months deadline that the UNFCCC imposes.

    “Raising the ambition of commitments to mitigate climate change before 2020 must be the top priority, ” the press release says. They add that the new Protocol should have as a key objective, the full implementation of mitigation, adaptation and finance and capacity building among others.

    Systems for monitoring, reporting and verifying finance and mitigation actions must not be weaker than but should build upon those that already exist in the Kyoto Protocol.

    “At last year’s conference of parties to the convention in Durban, parties agreed to complete negotiations by 2015, but such deadlines have been broken before,” says Pa Ousman Jarju, the chair of the LDC group.

    “Our countries cannot wait. We are already feeling the effects of climate change, but the time has come for us to be leaders in the international effort to address this global challenge.”

    “The creation of a new body to negotiate a second protocol under the Convention represents an overdue acknowledgement by all Parties that the Convention and the Kyoto Protocol alone are insufficient to drive action consistent with the ultimate objective of the Convention,” says Jarju.

    “Urgent action is needed by all Parties to prevent dangerous interference with the climate system, and in particular to stay below 2°C and keep open the possibility of limiting warming to 1.5°C above preindustrial in the long-term as called for by the most vulnerable countries.”
    As negotiators gather in Bonn for the latest round of talks this week, the LDC group also proposes changes to the way the negotiations work to make them faster and fairer.

    To ensure that all issues can be dealt with, the group says the number and duration of future negotiation sessions must be agreed in Bonn, along with a timetable to discuss particular issues.

    The group also says parties should consider electing officers to the bureau that will run the talks for more than the usual two year period, to ensure continuity – and that the size of the bureau should perhaps be expanded given the urgency of its task and that wide range of topics it must work on.

    “The LDC group comes to the Bonn climate change talks with a strong set of recommendations,” says Pa Ousman Jarju. “In the spirit of international cooperation and with our desire to see the UN climate change convention meet its objective, we urge other parties to join our call for these improvements to the negotiating process and its final goals.”

  • POLICE Impounds Large Quantities of Cannabis, Kanyanga

    Police in Rutsiro District are holding a suspect identified as Emile Niyonshuti found in possession with 9 rolls of Cannabis.

    Meanwhile, in Rubavu district, police arrested Jean Damascene Karemera at the Goma –Gisenyi border with 2000 rolls of cannabis and Dieudone Uwimana a resident of Nyarugenge district was arrested with 300 rolls of cannabis.

    Also in a stingy Police operation 860 litres of crude liquor were confiscated from a house belonging to Jean Marie Vianney Safari during a search operation Police in Kimironko sector,Gasabo District.

    Similarly 420 litres of illegal brew were impounded in a Joint Force operation at Gisagara district and in Kivuye sector, Burera district; police recovered 46 litres of Kanyanga.

    Police spokesperson Supt.Theos Badege commended good collaboration between community policing committees and security organs.

    “Such collaborations are not good news for criminals because they know that they can be arrested anytime”.