Tag: HomeNews

  • World Bank Appoints Vice President for Africa

    makhtar-diop.jpg
    The World Bank today announced the appointment of Makhtar Diop, a Senegalese national, as its new Vice President for Africa.
    He succeeds Obiageli “Oby” Ezekwesili who will return to Nigeria in early May after serving as the region’s Vice President since 2007.

    Diop, the World Bank’s Country Director for Brazil since 2009, will take up his new position on May 6th. He is a former Finance Minister in Senegal and Chair of the West African Monetary Union (WAEMU) Board of Finance Ministers.

    Diop joined the World Bank in 2001 and has served in various senior positions, including as the World Bank’s Country Director for Kenya, Eritrea, and Somalia, as well as Director of Strategy and Operations in the Bank’s Latin America and Caribbean region.

    World Bank Group President Robert B. Zoellick praised Ezekwesili for “five years of important and successful service to the Bank and to Africa.”

    “Under Oby’s leadership, our Africa team employed innovation, knowledge, partnership and financial services to strengthen results across Africa and to improve the prospects for Africa’s economic performance.”

    “Her close attention to the needs of our clients, engagement with African leadership and with regional institutions, as well as with the UN and other partners, has helped us to leverage our effectiveness across Africa.

    Oby has done excellent work mobilizing private sector engagement and better connecting Africa’s development to that of other regions, particularly through South-South partnerships,” said Zoellick.

    The Bank President noted that Ezekwesili was a relentless campaigner for transparency and against corruption; had strongly supported the need for greater social accountability and civil society engagement; and had promoted innovative approaches to regional integration.

    “We wish Oby all the best in her future endeavors working with civil society, in which she will help to strengthen public sector capacity, and work especially with young people and women. I am especially appreciative of her committed and devoted service, including the years spent away from her family,” Zoellick said.

  • Lt. Gen. Fred Ibingira Put Under House Arrest

    Lt.Gen. Fred Ibingira
    Information reaching IGIHE.com reveals that the RDF leadership has suspended from duty and placed under house arrest senior military officials including; Lt.Gen Fred Ibingira, Brig. Gen. Richard Munyuza, Brig.Gen. Wilson Gumisiriza, Brig.Gen. Richard Rutatina and Col.Dan Munyuza with effect from January 17, 2012.

    A communique from RDF signed by Col. Joseph Nzabamwita the RDF/MOD spokesperson explains that the arrested senior military officials are under investigation for acts of Indiscipline with respect to getting involved in civilian business dealings in Democratic republic of Congo.

    Keep hooked to IGIHE.com for more details

  • Man Reveals How He Killed Wife

    Gaspard Rudasingwa
    Six Months ago, Gaspard Rudasingwa killed his wife Beltilde Nyiramana after the two disagreed over money. Rudasingwa killed and later dumped the body of his wife in a pit latrine at their home in Mbati cell Kamonyi District.

    Until recently, residents of Mbati cell didn’t know the whereabouts of Nyiramana but were allegedly suspicious that something dubious could have happened.

    However, Chantal Mukama reported the matter to police on 15th January 2011 that her sister Nyiramana was missing.

    At the beginning of this week, Rudasingwa confessed during the police interrogation to killing his wife and keeping silent about the incident six months ago.

    Rudasingwa is currently in detention at Rukoma police station. After thorough Police questioning Rudasingwa admitted that he had a fight with his wife over missing money he had given her to keep.

    “I gave her Frw 100,000 then when I asked her for the money a few days later she gave me half of it. I immediately became furious because I wasn’t satisfied with excuses she gave. We later fought and I killed her, and then dumped her lifeless body in our pit latrine,” he disclosed.
    Pit latrine
    Rudasingwa’s neighbours claim that disputes in the suspect’s house had been regular that’s why they didn’t intervene to rescue the deceased.

    “Days after the fight which occurred on 2nd June last year, we asked Rudasigwa on the whereabouts of his wife, he simply replied that she had abandoned him.”

    “Then later we suspected something mysterious on her disappearance since whenever we tried to call her phone it was off, yet some of his relatives who made frequent visits to their home asked us about Nyiramana’s location, meaning she was nowhere to be found. This prompted her sister Mukama to report the matter to police,” said Concensa a close friend to the deceased.

    Neighbours became suspicious when Rudasingwa relocated to another cell barely after the disappearance of his wife. It is believed the suspect relocated to avoid frequent questions from friends on the whereabouts of his late wife.

    Jean Marie Vianney Rwiririza the executive secretary of Mugina sector blamed the deceased neighbours for being silent over periodical assaults on Nyirimana.

    “I encourage women in this sector to report matters of violence boldly in order to avoid simillar killings,” he advised.
    The Rudasingwa and his late wife had three children.

  • Kagame Reaffirms No Intension For Third Term

    In a recent speech while addressing Rwanda leaders Fellowship Forum on a thanks giving day, President Paul Kagame reaffirmed that he has no intention to run for third term.

    Rwandan Constitution provides that any Presidential candidate will run for presidency for two terms of seven years.

    Of recent, lots of doubts had emerged if President Kagame will not change the constitution to run for third term.

    It was also announced by the current Minister of internal security Sheikh Musa Fazil Harerimana who publicly suggested that Rwandan constitution so as to allow Kagame run for the third term.

    “If you think it is right to not over stay in power, why do you think I don’t think it is right,” Kagame said.

    “I cannot rise and fall I am not going to fall and it is not because anybody is reminding me about it, it is not because every other day these journalists ask me when you are leaving the office,” Kagame added.

    Kagame said that excuses given by leaders that have overstayed in power are the ones he will use to surrender the power.

    “In excellent leadership, some of the things to be considered is evaluating what you have done in your term of leadership of let say ten or twenty years, your leadership should have groomed people into good leaders of whom a successor can be identified, therefore if there is no one to succeed me then it simply means that I am bad leader,” Kagame said.

    “Therefore if I failed to groom leaders, that is a reason to make me not to stay in power. I cannot continue leadership after completing my term yet I have failed to groom other leaders,”

    Kagame also referred to proper leadership which must move from theories to practical leadership which brings results towards development.

    He said that however much many will take time to listen to presentations and speeches and one does not put into practice what he/she has learnt then it all turns into poor leadership.

    ENDS

  • South African Airways’ Spreads to Rwanda,Burundi

    South African Airways’ (SAA’s) January 17 departed from Johannesburg’s OR Tambo International Airport to mark the first flight to Rwanda. The same flight was opened in Bujumbura the capital city of Burundi.

    According to the company the Rwanda and Burundi flights would commence from Johannesburg to Kigali and onwards to Bujumbura, while the return flights would operate from Bujumbura back to Kigali and then to Johannesburg.

    The company also said the two cites had been chosen, owing to their economic prominence. In addition to being the capital city of Rwanda, Kigali is also its economic, cultural and tourist transit hub. Meanwhile, Bujumbura capital is close to the country’s main shipping port.

    SAA flights to East African countries are part of its Africa expansion program that includes the addition of four new services before its financial year-end in March, the company had added Burundi’s city of Bujumbura and Rwanda’s Kigali to its African route network.

    “It is still early days, however, we have a reasonable load factor for our first flights,” SAA commercial GMTheunis Potgieter said.

    He added that although it would take time to gain users’ confidence in the new services, the airline expected it to achieve the same success as that of its service to the mining town of Ndola, in the Copperbelt, which opened in October.

    Attributing the success of the Ndola operation to Zambia’s blossoming copper mining sector, Potgieter stated: “We are happy with how our services have been doing in Ndola. We have been flying with between 80% and 90% load factors on all the flights.”

    Potgieter added that SAA had traffic rights between the Bujumbura and Kigali operations, which would also allow it to pick up passengers between the two destinations.

    He further remarked that SAA also planned to add routes to Pointe Noire, in the Republic of Congo, which was set to start operation on January 26, as well as the city of Cotonou, in Benin.

    Although SAA had yet to announce a launch date for the Cotonou route, Potgieter said it was hoping to get it started before the end of the current financial year.

    “West Africa holds significant potential with regard to identifying new service destinations. Analysis work is currently under way to determine possibilities of additional services in the Congo, and has identified the Ivory Coast as a possible new destination,” he added.

    The objective behind the new services to the additional African destinations was not only to connect the respective countries with the South African market and visa versa, but also to other African and overseas markets.

    “We believe that our African expansion program has come at the right time, especially when taking into account the significant growth in mining in Africa. In identifying potential service destinations it is therefore important for us to understand where mining operations in Africa are located and to be able to provide them with a quality service that is on time and operationally effective,” Potgieter said.

  • Rwandans, Change Way You Solve Problems

    Grenede Explosion scene in Capital Kigali
    Violence…We need to talk about it….The role of violence as a means of ‘problem-solving’ in Rwandan society…. Whether it is violence in the home…violence in the schools…violence in Rwandan neighbourhoods…violence in Rwanda society…I am talking about hitting each other; intimidating each other; killing each other….physical and emotional violence.

    Not a particularly happy topic…and I wish I wasn’t talking about it; but after a series of recent of events, I felt compelled.

    With the recent deaths of two people and the injury of 18 others by the explosion of a grenade at Marembo Village, Nyabisindu Cell in Remera, Gasabo District, Rwandan society is again starkly reminded of the prevalence of violence. In this instance media reports indicated that it appears to have been politically-motivated terrorist violence.

    These deaths show that the Rwandan political system needs to continue to be reformed. There has been some interesting and relevant research from Central America from Sergio Adorno in his 2002 article ‘Youth Crime in Sao Paulo: Myths, Images and Facts’, who ‘identifies major consequences of the ‘militarisation of public security’.

    In such situations, common crime morphs into ‘an internal security problem’, which confuses ‘control of the general public and the control of national security’.

    There is a delicate balance in allowing freedom of political expression through the media; conduct of diverse political parties and simple demonstrations of political difference through peaceful public demonstrations.

    Government policy needs to be thoroughly debated to ensure it is in the best interests of all Rwandans; and a robust political process with various political parties and Independents and which effectively, peacefully engages diverse opinions will ensure rigor in policy debate.

    In a country that experienced the Genocide, there is no question that it is a complicated balancing act to allow new political parties to emerge, strengthen and divergent political voices to be heard. But they do need to be politically heard, peacefully…for peace to reign.

    Rwandan election results in which the leader of one Party attracts more than 90% of the vote (regardless of the performance of that Party and its leader) reflect a weakness in the political system, which is then in part more likely to be expressed through violent extremism.
    Terror Suspects during Trial at a Court in Kigali
    There is no question that one of the ways of curbing social violence is for timely and effective government responses to acts of extreme violence. In this instance, the Rwandan police and judicial system were swift to act and ten of the 30 grenade attack suspects have already been sentenced to life in prison.

    This swift justice is likely to act as a deterrent to ‘would be’ perpetrators. These innocent citizen’s deaths however, are a signal that more needs to be done to ensure Rwandan borders are strong and prevent weapons entering Rwanda.

    Additionally, in Australia, we underwent a massive overhaul of our gun ownership laws in response to a massacre at Port Arthur, Tasmania. Martin Bryant, a person with a history of mental health problems used a semi-automatic weapon to kill 35 people.

    Our Prime Minister at the time, John Howard without the support of his own political party led a campaign to eradicate weapons from our society. His government funded a ‘gun buy-back’ scheme that saw thousands of guns removed from our homes.

    In my opinion, this remains his best legacy that Australian’s will benefit from for generations to come. Do we have too many machetes in Rwandan homes? Will having less make a difference to the level of family and social violence?

    Will the rates of violent murder drop if there are less machete’s in Rwandan homes? This is a test of real political leadership…putting the wellbeing of citizens above popular political policies.

    When I read reports of beheadings in Rwanda; for example, recently Sylvester Nsanzabaganwa a resident of Kibumbwe sector Nyamagabe District in Southern Province was killed and his tongue removed in early January 2012.

    It seems clear that Rwandans need to work harder to rid their society of weapons; but weapons eradication is not the only answer to cultural violence…it is to change the culture, the way Rwandans think about solving problems…as we all know violence is an ‘answer’ but it has terrible intergenerational social repercussions.

    What’s Rwanda’s score on the Global Peace Index?

    The Global Peace Index comprises 23 indicators that cover both the internal and external measures of peacefulness for 153 countries. The definition used for peace is “absence of violence” or “absence of the fear of violence”.
    The scores reflect three main areas – Ongoing domestic and international conflict; Safety and security in society; and Militarisation.

    Rwanda scored 99 out of 153 countries in 2011; with Iceland ranked 1 – being the most peaceful country. The other most peaceful countries in the world are New Zealand, Denmark, Japan and the Czech Republic.

    In 2008 Rwanda ranked 76 from 144 countries; in 2010 Rwanda ranked 75….so relatively-speaking Rwanda has become more violent than approximately 20 countries in one year. This trend is disturbing!

    Rwanda also has a long way to go to surpass neighbour Tanzania who ranked 56 in 2011 and 57 in 2007; scores which demonstrates they are relatively peaceful and stable. Rwanda has lessons to learn from friends in Tanzania.

    Traditional rivals Uganda – now rank 96. In 2007, they ranked 104 and in 2008 they ranked 114, so they have demonstrated definite improvements in their peacefulness…and are likely to overtake Rwanda at this rate of improvement. Congratulations to Uganda for their continuous improvement!

    As for Burundi, well they ranked 132 in 2011. They are relatively unpeaceful and have seen a minor deterioration in global rankings in the last three years. Data started in 2008 and it was ranked 127 then.

    Contrast all these results though with the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) who ranked 148 in 2011 from 153 countries across the world. DRC data commenced in 2008, when they were ranked 128 – so that tragically shows a marked deterioration in their level of peacefulness in the last four years, such that they score lower than twenty other countries than previously in the same way that Rwanda has.

    Countries less peaceful than DRC are: North Korea, Afghanistan, Sudan and Iraq. Also this year Somalia, ranked 153 is the most violent country in the world.

    Speaking of friendly rivals, my country Australia is ranked 18 and our rival New Zealand was ranked 1 last year…and 2 this year….so we have a way to go to top the Kiwis record!

    My question to the Rwandan people is when will Rwandans care as much about their ranking on the Global Peace Index…as they do about football scores and the winners of beauty pageants?

    …for it is that day, that they will be ranked 1 in the world!

    ….and for generations, Rwandan children will be grateful!

    In my opinion, this achievement is the ultimate legacy!

    Paige Garland

    Director: Plan-it Life Pty Ltd

    Australia

  • Rwanda Gets US$12M loan For Agriculture

    Rwanda has received a US $ 12m loan (est. Rwf 8bn) to help in the improvement of Agricultural activities aimed at increasing agricultural products.

    The loan given by World Bank will be used to support various projects like land husbandry, water harvesting and hillside irrigation.

    The minister of finance and economic planning John Rwangombwa signed on behalf of the Rwandan government, while Omowunmi Mimi Ladipo on behalf of the World Bank.

    Rwanda’s minister of agriculture, Dr. Agnes Kalibata said that the projects aimed at increasing the productivity and commercialisation of hillside agriculture, enhancing food security and the livelihoods of the population.

    “These are broad projects. They have been introduced in three districts of Karongi, Nyanza, and Gatsibo, but we have other projects to even help other districts that are facing low productivity due to hilly topography”. Kalibata said.

    Omowunmi Ladipo said that Rwanda has had several partnership with World bank in promoting agriculture productivity, adding that this is the 17th financing agreement.

    ENDS

  • Gov’t Confirms Mugesera Will Be Deported

    Despite all the legal battle staged by Leon Mugesera and his lawyers aimed at halting his deportation,Rwanda’s government is confident he will be deported.

    The confidence has been expressed by Tharcisse Karugarama the Minister of Justice and attorney General of the government saying that Mugesera has explored all avenues of his resistance to be deported.

    According to the Minister, Mugesera lost legal battle and what remains is his deportation without fail.

    Karugarama was speaking at a press conference Tuesday where he was flanked by the Assistant Attorneys General, Pierre Kayitare and Isabelle Kalihangabo.

    “Rwanda’s judicial system has developed a lot since 2000, Mugesera will not face torture in Rwanda as he alleges,” Karugarama said.

    “Mugesera will by all means face deportation, he has exploited every available avenue to fight deportation but lost it,” He added.

    Karugarama also reacted on the recent ICTR’s decision to reverse and reduce Theoneste Bagosora’s sentence from Life imprisonment to 35 years.

    He said the verdict was like negating and denying the 1994 genocide against the Tutsis.

    “The decision of the Appeals Chamber on Bagosora will live to haunt that tribunal, forever, and the individual who made that decision. It was the most disastrous decision any international tribunal could ever make,” Karugarama said.

    Karugarama however, noted that the transfer of Jean Uwinkindi’s case to be tried in Rwanda, was a positive development.

    Commenting on the report of who shot down the plane in 1994 that was carrying former Rwandan President Juvenale Habyarimana, Minister Karugarama welcomed the report by French judges, Marc Trévidic and Nathalie Poux.

    The minister said it marked the end of an era of 17 years of lies.

    He said that the four-year investigation had exposed the country’s detractors who have been distorting and misrepresenting facts.

    ENDS

  • Mayors Urged on Proportionate Use of Budget

    In a meeting held by the Ministry of Local government and partners convened at Sports View Hotel on 15-16th January 2012, Minister James Musoni tasked district officials to use their budgets proportionally in line with performance contracts.

    Musoni said that some mayors seek big amounts of money beyond their budgets.

    “The budget in districts should be prepared before performance contracts because some districts request for money that is well above their activities.”

    He advised mayors to start their activities once they have 20% of the budget instead of waiting for the whole amount of money.

    The minister also asked the mayors to ask to sign the equal performance contracts to avoid the delay in some districts caused by a big number of activities.

    During the meeting, mayors highlighted their achievements attained in the past 6 months but also showed some of the problems faced including activities of sponsors and the late market offering.

    The minister explained that sponsors should sign their own performance contracts and launch them at the right time.

    In the meeting, 9 billion were found on districts accounts unused in last year’s budget yet there are many unaccomplished activities.

  • Burundians Contest for Miss NUR 2012

    For the first time, Burundian students at the National University of Rwanda will participate in NUR-Miss Campus scheduled for Friday, 20th January 2012.

    In a ceremony known as ‘Rector’s Excellency Awards’, students with excellent performance are awarded and also the beauty queen selected by both face and character.

    The most wonderful of this, it is not the first time to vote for Miss Campus but it is the first time for foreign students to take part in the competition.

    Medard Runyange told IGIHE.com said that the university does not forbid any student from participating in the competition but lack of self confidence might be their challenge.

    He said, “In this ceremony, we do not select Miss Rwanda but Miss Campus; the reason why we do not prevent anyone from attending once they feel confident.”

    He explained that they did not choose Miss Campus 2011 because during that period, students were writing their examinations.

    It is expected that 7 Rwandan girls and 2 Burundians will be attending the competition including; Isimbi Deborah Abiellah, Kaneza Arcella, Nduwimana Axelle-Aimee, Rangira Isimbi Samantha, Umubyeyi Jeanne Elyse, Umulisa Larissa, Umurerwa Ariane, Mutamba Allen and Tega-Yombi Mutimura.
    Below are the contestants
    kaneza_arcella.png
    umulisa_larissa.png
    nduwimana_axelle-aimee.png
    umubyeyi_jeanne_elyse.png
    umurerwa_ariane.png
    isimbi_deborah_abiellah.png
    rangira_isimbi_samantha.png
    mutimura_tega-yombi_.png
    mutamba_allen_.jpg