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  • President of Congo To Visit Rwanda

    President Denis Sassou N’Guesso of the Republic of Congo is expected in Rwanda on Monday, 21 November for a three-day state visit.

    President Kagame is scheduled to hold talks with President Sassou N’Guesso and host him for a state banquet on Tuesday.

    During his visit to Rwanda, President Sassou N’Guesso is scheduled to tour socio-economic sites in Kigali and the surrounding areas. The two heads of state will hold a joint press conference on Wednesday at Urugwiro Village.

    Rwanda and Congo enjoy good and established relations, which were strengthened by the state visit by President Kagame to Brazzaville last November, during which he affirmed;

    “We in Rwanda want to see our two countries, and indeed the whole of Africa, develop, grow and prosper. I believe that sustained cooperation between Rwanda and Congo is crucial in order to succeed in that noble mission”.

    The growing relationship between Congo and Rwanda has been further facilitated by the recent launch of a twice-weekly flight from Kigali to Brazzaville by the national carrier, Rwandair.

    The upcoming state visit will be preceded by a meeting of the Rwanda-Congo Joint Permanent Commission, to be held on 21-22 November with consultations by senior officials on both sides, followed by a ministerial meeting chaired by the two Ministers of Foreign Affairs.

    The JPC will focus on upgrading the General Cooperation Agreement already re-negotiated last year, and MoUs in multiple sectors with special emphasis on trade, agriculture, natural resources and human settlement.

  • WB Launches Rwanda’s Economic Update Report

    Different economic and financial specialists from World Bank(WB) and government of Rwanda have converged in a meeting to launch the second edition of the Rwanda’s economic update.

    Comments about the findings from a number of stakeholders are emerging as the house hold enterprises report.

    In a press release by WB has indicated that Rwanda has had resilience economic adversity and her growth prospects remains favourable.

    “This resilience is a result of sound macroeconomic management in times when regional and global shocks are having adverse consequences for many neighbouring countries,” Johannes Zutt the world bank country Director for Rwanda.

    The report titled resilience in the face of economic adversity: policies for growth with a favor on household enterprise predicts Rwanda’s 2011 growth at over 8 percent a growth rate that is stronger than forecast for Sub-Saharan Africa as a whole.

    It also indicate that Rwanda’s economic growth in the first half of 2011 was led by strong performance in the industrial and service sectors.

  • German Gives €36.25M for Rwanda-DRC Power Line

    The German Development Bank (KFW) has given Rwanda a grant of Euros 36.25M that will be used for the construction of a power transmission line to the Democratic Republic of Congo.
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    Daniela Beckmann(Left in photo) the KFW country director noted that combined effort in generating power in the region was essential especially in lowering the cost of energy.

    “We are supporting similar project in Burundi which will later be combined in both Congo and Rwanda’s grid,” Daniela said.

    The minister of finance John Rwagombwa who signed the grant on behalf of Rwanda government noted that the aim was to establish a regional power pool. “This is a high voltage transmission line that is connecting six countries in the region,” he remarked.

    Rwagombwa added that Rwanda’s methane power can also be used to boost electricity in the region, “This connection is important and it will open doors for the sale of our methane power,” he commented.

    Charles Kanyamihigo the director of infrastructure development noted that the construction of the 200 Km transmission line is scheduled for completion in 2014.

    “The cables will be placed above the fact that requires an expert to oversee the process, so work commences immediately we get someone competent,” he pointed out.

  • Man Arrested For Evading Taxes

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    The National Police is holding a man suspected to have used falsified documents to evade taxes (VAT).

    The suspect is identified as Iyaremye Fred the director of Festimo Company that deals in the installation of telecommunications masts.

    Iyaremye was arrested early this week while trying to falsify documents worth Frw40Million that was likely to enable him evade government taxes (VAT) equivalent to Frw7Million.

    However,by press time Iyaremye neither denied nor confirmed he had committed the crime but said, his accounts were better placed to elaborate on book keeping matters and that he has never authorized them to evade taxes.

    The Police Spokesperson, Supt. Theos Badege explained that there was an audit carried out leading to the discovery of forged receipts.

    Badege warned businessmen against tax evasion.

  • BAGOSORA Appeals Judgement For December 14

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    The Appeals Chamber of the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR) will deliver its judgment in the case of two former Rwandan senior military officials, including the alleged mastermind of the 1994 genocide, Colonel Théoneste Bagosora, on December 14, 2011.

    The other official is Lieutenant Colonel Anatole Nsengiyumva. Delivery of the judgment had earlier been set for December 15. A statement issued Wednesday by the press and public affair’s section of the Tribunal did not disclose the reasons behind the changes.

    Bagosora, former Director of Cabinet in the Defence Ministry and Nsengiyumva, who was in charge of military operations in Gisenyi, are appealing against life imprisonment sentences imposed on them on December 18, 2008 after being convicted of genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes.

    Col. Bagosora was convicted of the offences for his role in the killings of Prime Minister Agathe Uwilingiyimana and 10 Belgian peacekeepers in charge of her security.

    He was also found responsible for crimes committed at several roadblocks in the Kigali area and in his hometown of Gisenyi, northwest Rwanda, between April 6 and 9, 1994.

    Nsengiyumva was found responsible for massacres at Mudende University, Nyundo parish, as well as the targeted killings of civilians in the area under his command.

    He was also found guilty of sending militiamen to the Bisesero area of Kibuye prefecture to kill Tutsi refugees in June 1994.

    The duo was tried jointly with two other military officers, Brigadier-General Gratien Kabiligi and Major Aloys Ntabakuze, in the so-called “Military I case”.

    Ntabakuze was also convicted of same offences and sentenced to life imprisonment by the lower court, while Kabiligi was acquitted.

    Ntabakuze, ex-Commander of Para-Commando Battalion, had appealed alongside Bagosora and Nsengiyumva and their appeal hearing was set for March 30, 2011.

    However, Ntabakuze’s appeals case was separated from the others after his lead counsel, American lawyer Peter Erlinder, failed to show up on March 30. Ntabakuze’s appeal was heard on September 27, 2011, and the Appeals Chamber is still drafting the judgment.

  • ICTR: 8 Witnesses To Testify Aganist Former Planning Minister

    The International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR) has cleared the prosecution to call eight extra witnesses to challenge the defence of alibi for former Rwandan Planning Minister Augustin Ngirabatware that he was not in Rwanda as of April 23 to May 23, 1994.

    “The Chamber considers that the accused’s alibi for the period of April 23 to May 23, 1994 was not reasonably foreseeable with the degree of detail necessary to preclude the calling of rebuttal evidence thereon,” reads part of the decision dated November 14, 2011.

    It noted that the alibi evidence for the accused that within the period in question he was in Senegal and Swaziland arose only in the course of his testimony in contravention of defence disclosure obligations under the Rules.

    It ruled, therefore, that the anticipated testimonies of the witnesses “may contradict portions of the accused’s alibi, (hence) have significant probative value.”

    Therefore, the Chamber ordered the prosecution to present its rebuttal witnesses immediately after the close of the defence case expected in the first quarter of 2012.

    According to the rules, the defence is also entitled to call witnesses to produce “evidence in rejoinder” to contradict such rebuttal evidence, if need arises.

    The defence hearing resumes on January 30, 2012. Three witnesses have remained to testify for Ngirabatware. Already 31 witnesses have testified for him since he opened his defence case on November 16, 2010.

    The prosecution closed its case on August 31, 2010, after presenting 20 witnesses, in attempt to support charges of conspiracy to commit genocide, genocide or in the alternative, complicity in genocide, direct and public incitement to commit genocide and extermination and rape as crimes against humanity.

    Ngirabatware was arrested in Germany on September 17, 2007 and transferred to ICTR custody in Arusha, Tanzania on October 8, 2008. His trial took off on September 22, 2009.

    Meanwhile Earlier, Ngirabatware 53years pleaded not guilty to ten counts of genocide and crimes against humanity during his initial (2008) appearance before the UN-backed International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR).

    The accused was transferred to Arusha, Tanzania, after a prolonged one-year legal battle in Germany over his trial before the UN Court, trying key architects of the 1994 genocide.

    Ngirabatware was suspected of encouraging the mass murder of members of Rwanda’s Tutsi minority by arming the Hutu majority.

    Prosecution claimed, among others, that Ngirabatware channeled funds from his ministry to purchase arms “not for national defence, but to arm the civilian population to carry out massacres.”

    “Ngirabatware is also on record to have publicly made speech to exterminate Tutsis,” claimed the prosecution, adding that the speech was even re-broadcast over the hate radio RTLM.

    He served as Rwanda’s planning minister for the four years leading up to the genocide and had since then lived in Gabon and in France for long periods.

    Ngirabatware faces charges of genocide, complicity in genocide, direct and public incitement to commit genocide, crimes against humanity (murder, extermination, rape, inhumane acts) and serious violations of the Geneva Conventions and of Additional Protocol II.

    He is the son-in-law of most wanted fugitive Felicien Kabuga, who has also named by the ICTR as a genocide suspect. Kabuga, a wealthy businessman, alleged to have financed the genocide and suspected to be hiding in Kenya.

  • Media Practitioners Disagree On Press Freedom In Rwanda

    International and Rwandan media practitioners sank into recurring disagreements about media freedom in Rwanda.

    Much as International media practitioners pointed an accusing finger to Rwanda blocking media freedom, their counterparts retaliated saying there is a sense of responsive journalism needed though they believe a lot has to be done to develop Rwandan media.

    A very hot discussion emerged from Rwanda’s practicing journalist Shyaka Kanuma who presented his paper on media freedom versus social responsibility where he mentioned that Rwanda had to adopt responsive journalism and has to draw a line of how far media freedom should be practiced.

    Kanuma’s presentation lifted a hot debate that International media practitioners attacked their counterparts in Rwanda saying that they are censuring themselves.

    The attacked Rwandan media practitioners retaliated by saying that international media has not been responsible while dealing and reporting about media freedom in Rwandan case where the most world atrocities of 1994 Genocide occurred.

    Shyaka Kanuma, Editor-in-chief of Rwanda Focus news paper, Albert Rudasimburwa the CEO of Contact FM and others insisted there was a high need of responsive journalism in today’s Rwandan society other than hunger for freedom.

    Patrice Murama the executive secretary of Media High Council said that Rwanda has developed largely considering to where it was since 1994.

    “We have advocated for decriminalising defamation. Recently parliament amended the penal code reducing the length of sentence.It is hoped that parliament will someday consider decriminalizing defamation and actually it is not for only journalists but for the whole Rwandan population,” Mulama said.

    Mulama also criticized international media giving an example of reporters with boarders which published an article with a heading ‘Three journalists arrested in the space of a week’ which he found irresponsibly written.

    Mulama emphasised that the two journalists were arrested like any other citizen in the country noting that one was arrested due to driving under influence of alcohol and another over suspicion to have stolen a computer from his work place.

    Reporters without borders wrote that the latest journalist to be arrested was Joseph Bideri, the editor-in-chief of the New Times, who was released without charges.

    Others include Jean Gualbert Burasa, of Rushyashya news paper allegedly arrested for driving under the influence of alcohol and René Anthère Rwanyange, also allegedly held for theft of a laptop computer at his work place.

    Henery Maina from Kenya says that Rwandan media practitioners are justifying what he termed as nakedness reminding the participants that many countries in Africa was facing the same challenge.

    He advised that the important view should be understanding one’s status as far as media freedom and social responsibility.

    Media practitioners both international and local are in a 3rd national dialogue with a Theme; Building capacities for sustainable media development in Rwanda”

    Promoting media Freedom, responsibility and professionalism of the media has been on top of the two days dialogue.

  • RDF Reserve Forces Plant Trees in Rukara

    The Government of Rwanda through the Ministry of Forests and Natural Resources (MINIRENA), targets to plant 67 million trees in the country.

    Its Against this this background that Rwanda Defence Forces- Reserve Forces have contributed to this campaign in Rukara in the Eastern Province.

    (L)Minister Stanislas Kamanzi with RDF Senior Officers
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  • Tapping into Electricity Investiment

    Electricity generation business can be a highly capital-intensive enterprise, very risky, and the returns may not be felt for a long while. African entrepreneurs tend to avoid this venture.
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    However,Rwanda’s 60 year old Gregory Tayi (above) saw this as a great opportunity. Tayi holding a master’s degree in chemistry set up the first private mini hydro-electric power station at Mirunda in Rwanda with a generation capacity of 96 kW which is supplied to the national grid.

    It is estimated that his company, Repro generates around $10,000 per month.
    Having supplied medical equipment, vegetable products and chemicals for many years, he decided it was about time to start providing electricity.

    In his Interview with the BBC-African Dream series Tayi says due to the countrys energy demands like in most African nations,he realised that he could make a difference – and a profit – by putting up mini hydro-electric stations in some of its numerous rivers.

    “We went to the government. The government had a fund that would subsidise the people who do go into this business. So all these factors helped us to enter into energy”.

    “There was this subsidy but the bank also gave me the credit. They looked back at my history of business, at what I was doing before,” added Mr Tayi, now the proud general director of Renewable Energy Promotion (Repro).

    Starting from zero

    According to him, for even the smallest hydro-electric station in Rwanda, one would need an initial investment of around $500,000 (£312,000).

    But he says that having the capital is not the main point. He believes that it is much more important to be clear about where one wants to go.

    “When you start from zero, you learn what you wouldn’t have learned in school. And I think that’s the most important capital that one can get.”

    He said he did not have an easy start. When he was a student, his family could not even afford to help him with his school fees.

    He remembers that when he finished university, with a master’s degree in chemistry, he was “as broke as anybody”.

    “I couldn’t count on anybody. As I didn’t get a job, I couldn’t even sustain myself,” he said.

    Forced into business

    Mr Tayi pointed out that for him becoming a businessman was not a choice.
    “I was forced into it but, luckily, I was forced into business because I struggled for the first years but other years, you know, things came much much easier.”

    Repro opened in 2007 and its main power site, at Murunda, in Rwanda’s Western Province, started three years later. It currently generates around $10,000 per month.

    And how would he describe a good business person?

    “When people look at businessmen, they look at money, but I think money is not what makes the person,” he said.

    “A business, it’s working with the people. It’s making life easier for others. A good businessman is the one who looks at his neighbours, at his countrymen, at the world,” he explained.

    “It would be meaningless if I were rich and I’m surrounded by poor people. A good businessman is one who looks first on others before he looks after himself.”

  • UNEP REPORT Urges Rwanda on Transition to Green Economy

    A major report released today on Rwanda’s post-conflict sustainable development urges the country to build on its rehabilitation efforts and seed more opportunities for a transition to a green economy.

    The 380-page UNEP report, Rwanda: From Post-Conflict to Environmentally Sustainable Development, was unveiled in Kigali by the Minister of Natural Resources, Stanislas Kamanzi, at the start of a regional meeting with East African senior policy makers exploring how to leverage support for a shift towards an environmentally sustainable, climate resilient, low-carbon, resource-efficient future.

    The report provides a critical analysis of the most pressing environmental issues facing the country and proposes an integrated package of almost 90 projects and interventions, totaling US$147 million, that would help the country accelerate its sustainable development agenda.

    It recommends the Rwandan government reinforces its policies and investments in key areas, including large-scale ecosystem rehabilitation; renewable energies, sustainable agriculture and agroforestry, environmental management capacity building and regional environmental cooperation, including participation in natural resource trade initiatives.

    With over 10 million people in an area of 26,000 square kilometers, Rwanda is one of the most densely populated countries striving to unlock a downward-cycle of natural resource over-exploitation.

    However, it has made remarkable progress following the aftermath of the 1994 genocide and is now considered an inspiration for African development.

    UN Under-Secretary General and UNEP Executive Director, Achim Steiner, said the shared lessons from implementing the report’s recommendations would help reverse declining environmental trends and showcase a real-life pathway to a green economy.

    “Rwanda provides an exceptional case of a country’s willpower to overcome a traumatic conflict legacy, restore degraded ecosystems and lift people out of poverty and there is growing interest from development partners and other countries in Rwanda’s pioneering model,”Steiner said.

    “The ongoing metamorphosis of Rwanda’s economy offers a unique opportunity to catalyse green investments, to enhance sustainability, create green jobs and promote environmentally efficient technologies,” the UNEP Executive Director said.

    Speaking at the launch event, Minister Kamanzi welcomed the scientific assessment which he said underlines the intrinsic relationship between ecosystem services and the achievement of national development goals as outlined in Rwanda’s Vision 2020.

    “We see the environment as the heart of our economy and need to ensure that it can sustain the economic growth achieved in recent years,”Kamanzi said.

    “The damage to the Congo-Nile and Byumba highland ecosystems is highlighted not only as a threat to biodiversity but to livelihoods and Rwanda’s economic future because it must sustain hydropower, agriculture and drinking water supplies, as well as providing climate regulation and carbon sequestration services.

    “For Rwanda and other countries in the region, the time has come to capitalize on green economy thinking and translate our policy targets into on-the-ground action to create jobs, combat poverty and accelerate sustainable development across the region,” the Minister said.

    More than 40 legal and technical experts from Burundi, Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda, as well as Rwanda, are attending the workshop which is aiming to enhance capacity in East African countries to use the green economy as a driver for sustainable development and poverty reduction, and to identify actions, opportunities and challenges for integrating green economy in policies and legislations at national and regional levels.

    One of the enabling frameworks needed for the green economy is having effective laws and related governance structures to support it.

    Strengthening the regulatory and governance frameworks will complement measures already being taken by governments and the private sector.

    To further support Rwanda in its efforts to accelerate a sustainable growth path, UNEP used the workshop to release another new report, Mainstreaming Resource Efficient and Cleaner Production in Policies and Strategies of Rwanda.

    This report was prepared by UNEP in collaboration with Rwanda’s Ministry of Trade and Industry and the Ministry of Natural Resources and REMA.

    The report reviews existing policy and strategy frameworks of resource efficient and cleaner production (RECP) and identifies areas for mainstreaming RECP into the country’s national policies and strategies.

    In particular, the report identifies strategic entry points for mainstreaming under the following four components of intervention: institutional and policy integration; economic and fiscal incentives; capacity building and support to small and medium-sized enterprises; and, information and public education.

    The two-day workshop, organized by UNEP and REMA, is expected to take these findings on board as they examine how regulatory instruments can contribute to reducing poverty and promoting the transition to a green economy in East Africa.

    Earlier this year at the UN Forest Forum, Rwanda launched a landmark Forest Landscape Restoration Initiative aimed to reverse by 2035 the degradation of the entire country’s soil, water, land and forest resources.

    Next week, an intensification of Rwanda’s tree planting programme is due to begin with the target of planting 68 million trees over the next 12 months to reach the government’s goal of raising forest cover to at least 30 percent of its land area by 2020.

    As part of the One UN presence, UNEP stands ready to assist the Government of Rwanda in mobilizing resources to implement the post-conflict assessment’s recommendations and with broader ongoing environmental initiatives.