Tag: HomeNews

  • Rwf 2.5M Awarded For Intellectual Property Song

    The Ministry of Trade and Industry (MINICOM) has awarded two local musicians whose songs crown the best from 21 competitors in the competition organized by the ministry to produce a song on intellectual property in Rwanda.

    The ministry intends to sensitize the public on the importance of intellectual property in Rwanda`s Development, as well as the content of the law and policy on Intellectual property.

    Generation Music Group, that was the best and awarded Frw 2.5M said during the press interview.

    “We are extremely happy as an upcoming group to see that our song was the best. The award we got today will be used to produce other songs we had in the studio.” Generation Music Group said.

    Mboneko Kizito among other participants won the second position with the award of Rwf 1M

    According to Kaliza Karuretwa in charge of Trade and investment said the biggest challenge is awareness because the regulatory framework is already in place and that the public has to be sensitized upon it.

    Karuretwa said that campaign has been done in seminars and workshops but was not successful as expected and that is why the sensitization is going to be done through music itself.

    “Since we have the song, the message will be delivered to every one without calling for meetings because we are going to promote it via radios and television.” she added.

  • ICTR Convicts Two ex-Ministers

    The Tanzania-based UN tribunal (ICTR) has convicted former public service Minister Prosper Mugiraneza and the then trade minister Justin Mugenzi of complicity to committing genocide and incitement to commit genocide.
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    The tribunal however acquitted two other ministers – Casimir Bizimungu and Jérôme-Clément Bicamumpaka – due to lack of evidence. The judges ordered their immediate release.

    Judge Emile Short issued a dissenting opinion on the sentence, saying Mugiraneza and Mugenzi deserved a reduction of five years for violation of right to trial without undue delay.

    The four men were members of an interim government that ran the country after president Juvenal Habyarimana’s plane was shot down on April 6, 1994. The 1994 Genocide claimed over I million Tutsis.

    Demanding life sentences for the four men in November 2008, prosecutors said the ministers blazed a path to hell for Tutsis.

    “They had no intention to stop the massacres.” On the contrary, prosecutor Paul Ng’arua told the judges.

    “They poured oil on the flames through incendiary speeches, some of which were relayed on the notorious Radio Télévision Libre des Mille Collines (RTLM) radio station. The prosecutors main argument was that wherever the ministers went “they were soon followed by blood-letting and displacement of Tutsi populations,”

    In a telephone interview with igihe.com correspondents Bosco Siboyintore in charge of Genocide Fugitive Tracking Unit said that negotiations for appeal are underway in reference to the case in which the two suspects (Casimir Bizimungu and Jérôme-Clément Bicamumpaka) were acquitted.

    “We are waiting for the court submission so that we can analyze and see what the court base on in acquitting Casimir Bizimungu and Jérôme-Clément Bicamumpaka since they claimed lack of evidence pinning the two individuals,” Siboyintore

    “In case we find clauses contrary to our understandings, we have up to 30days to appeal against the decision of the court” narrated in a telephone interview.

  • Teachers Acquire ICT Skills

    Multicultural Popular Education Centre (MKFC) Stockholm College and Kigali Institute of Education (KIE) have started a three months e-teacher training to equip teacher training colleges with ICT skills based on research and modern learning processes.

    The long-term goal is to equip Rwandan teachers with knowledge and capacity to tutor their online education supported by ICT tools.

    Marja Riitta Ritanoro MKFC Chief Executive Officer noted after the training the teachers will follow extra trainings online.

    She insisted that online participation expands the classroom and learning environment and disseminates innovative ideas for school management, to teachers, parent groups and students.

    James Rutebuka the coordinator of the e-learning based on ICT, highlighted that the program aims to create the use of global and local avenues for social interaction, teamwork and e-learning.

    “This program is essential and would facilitate teachers to conduct their work effectively especially those who teach computer courses,” he added,” the One Laptop per Child for instance is not well implement since we don’t have adequate teachers who are conversant with basic computer skills,” he remarked.

    Ritanoro was quick to highlight that competent teachers would encourage students to use internet for further research. “Google for instance is a good search engine which students can acquire vast knowledge provided by several websites,” she remarked.

    In Rwanda the use of ICT is dominating the service industry, yet it’s impact is not well seen in the education sector partly because not all teachers are competent to utilize the technology, hence training them on similar courses would improve the situation.

  • KCB Rwanda 3rd Rally Unveiled

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    The Kenya Commercial Bank (KCB) Mountain Gorilla Rally 2011 kicked in high gear set off.

    Day1 on Friday September 30, 2011 a ceremonial start took place at the Private sector Federation (Expo Grounds), the cars proceeded to the quarry Grounds of Gahanga, Kicukiro District taking off for approximately 2.5 Km in length.

    Today the cars will head to the North which seems to be competitive part situated on the slopes of two famous volcanoes Kalisimbi and Sabyinyo.

    Tomorrow Sunday Motorsports will again ride along Kigali Suburbs. The 2011 edition of the KCB Mountain Gorilla Rally will be completed over three days.

    The rally will cover the picturesque scenery of Rwanda and will take competitors and fans to the east parts of the country.

    The total distance of the rally will be 600 kms. There is a total of 16 Competitive Sections which will be re-run over the course of the rally, the longest of which will be 29 Kms and the shortest 5 Kms.

    The competitive sections will be run in groups of 2 or 3. Competitors came from the EAC bloc and beyond, and 20 Motorsport Cars are on the list to compete.

  • Local Leaders Acquire Leadership Skills

    The Rwandan government together with the experts from Singapore has trained local leaders in leadership development training that have taken three weeks.

    During the training, expert from Singapore Mr. Shahrill Aj emphasized that it is important leaders to be equipped with leadership.

    “Leadership is a key to development so leaders should be equipped with leadership before leading others,” Mr. Shahrill Aj said.

    During the closing ceremony the Minister of Local Government James Musoni reminded that trainees of unity in order to work towards one team a great nation.

    “What you learnt from here should be put into practice because the country needs to develop as quickly as possible,” Musoni added.

    ”We are all here for one purpose and we are glad that now we will work out very well and we will fish the best fish to feed our people,” said Dr Aissa Kirabo Kacyira the Eastern Province Governor who spoke on behalf of the trainees.

    “We are one team playing one game and aiming at winning,” Aime Bosenibamwe the Northern Province Governor told IGIHE.com.
    During the training, the Singapore experts delivered examples from their small country that has acquired a big economy.

    Local leaders were trained in leadership and management styles, stages of team development, key concepts of strategic and systems thinking, basic elements in resource management, budgetary reforms, learning and action planning.

    The training was funded by the government through the National Decentralisation Implementation Secretariat (NDIS) in collaboration with development partners, namely the German International Cooperation and Swiss Cooperation.

  • IFAD Donates US $ 39.8M To Rwanda

    A whooping US $ 39.8 m loan and grant from the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) to Rwanda to help improvement in Agriculture.

    The loan and grant agreements for the Project for Rural Income through Exports (PRICE) and the Support Project for the Strategic Plan for the Transformation of Agriculture (PAPSTA) have been signed by John Rwangombwa the Minister of Finance and Economic Planning and Yukiko Omura Vice-President of IFAD.

    Agriculture accounts for 32 per cent of the GDP and employs more than 70 per cent of the country’s population.

    Through PRICE and a supplementary grant for the ongoing PAPSTA project, the Government of Rwanda and IFAD will work with the project beneficiaries and the private sector to boost the potential of the agriculture sector to move from subsistence agriculture to market-based farming.

    “With its focus on enabling smallholder farmers and vulnerable groups to participate in export value chains for coffee, tea, silk and horticulture, PRICE is a flagship project in terms of public-private partnership,” said Yukiko Omura.

    PRICE aims to promote sustainable increased returns to smallholder farmers from the coffee, tea, silk and horticulture value chains by helping farmers to increase the volume and improve the quality of production.

    The project will support 170 farmers’ cooperatives nationwide, and will push for a high share of the export price to reach the smallholder producers. More than 125,000 vulnerable households, particularly households headed by women and young people, will benefit from PRICE.

    Newly available funding for PAPSTA, which works in the six districts of Bugesera, Kirehe, Gakenke, Ngororero, Nyamagabe and Nyanza, will help to continue rehabilitating an additional 150 hectares of marshland for rice production.

    The project will also increase its activities in the areas of agricultural strategy formulation, soil and water conservation and marketing support structures.

    With this new Project for Rural Income through Exports, IFAD will have financed 14 programmes and projects in Rwanda for a total investment of US$189.8 million benefiting 500,000 households.

  • Fuel Prices Fall

    From 1st October 2011, the price of petroleum products will cost lower. This follows an announcement by the Ministry of Trade and Commerce.

    According to the ministry announcement, Kigali fuel price for super and diesel must not exceed Frw1000 per liter. MINICOM had always attributed the trend to the international oil prices, which are governed by the forces of supply and demand.

    The current status of petroleum products has been frw1025per litre in Kigali but some taxi drivers say that in suburbs it costs more .

    Pump prices for both petrol and diesel went up by 5%, recording the highest hike in pump prices the country has ever experienced early this year where petrol rose by 5% (Rwf965 to Rwf1,015 per litre) and diesel, 6%(from Rwf958 to Rwf1,015).

    This has come again after the pump price for gasoline in Rwanda was last reported at 1.63 in 2010, according to a World Bank report released in 2011. The Pump price for gasoline in Rwanda was reported at 1.37 in 2008, according to the World Bank. Fuel prices refer to the pump prices of the most widely sold grade of gasoline

    The Minister of the trade and commerce informs the general public, that the reduction of the pump prices reflects the current dynamics in the international oil prices as observed during the month of September.

    Rwanda being the fastest country growing economies in central Africa has recorded sustained and widespread economic growth on the African Continent, a senior official at the World Bank in a report.

    90% of Rwandan population is engaged in subsistence agriculture, new industries such as tourism, cut flowers and fish farming have been gaining importance. The major source of foreign trade is coffee, tea, tin cassiterite, wolframite and pyrethrum.

    It said in a statement released in May that growth would slow to 7% this year due to the adverse impact of higher food and fuel prices, which would also push the inflation rate to 7.5% by the end of 2011.

  • Furniture Fabricator Says ‘Minds Matter More Than Money’

    Andrew Dukuzumuremyi 32, a Rwandan furniture and interior designer urges youth to save a little they earn for the better future, “Starting out with a solid design isn’t necessary, but neither is tying your shoes after you put them on.”
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    Andrew Dukuzumuremyi (pictured above) is the proprietor of Malina Interior Sarl. His company deals in home and office furniture’s, carpets, curtains, vertical blinds, cleaning services, construction and general supplies. He says every project has a starting point and desire to see its success.

    Dukuzumuremyi started with frw 500,000 however, has accumulated between Frw 20-25 million. He says the most important thing is not money, it’s the mind, even it does not require much time, what matters it how you manage the little time you have got.

    Dukuzumuremyi developed interest in decoration at the age of 17 while in Uganda. He lived with his uncle. When he returned Rwanda, he started with hanging and selling curtains and pillows, doing interior designs in rooms and painting homes and the hardest part of the project was to know how to save and invest, he says.

    I like modern and beautiful furniture that’s why I got the idea of making L shape sofa affordable compared to other places, the 7 seat of Malina sofa costs almost Frw 700,000, he told Igihe.com

    Dukuzumuremyi says his success depends on the trainings he acquired from USA and China for an 8 month period that gave him knowledge of how to find nice fabrics and supply better qualities to Rwandan, he says.

    “No matter how you approach the development of your business, there will always be issues to deal with”, Andrew noted.

    Malina interior Sarl trust in what they produce and place importance on design which has given the company a strong foundation with a unified goal.

    Dukuzumuremyi urges youth to desist from old fashion mindsets and embrace the vision the government wants to put the citizens while creating and innovating.
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  • Rwanda, South Sudan Police to Professionalise

    Thirty senior police officers including five from the newly formed state of South Sudan have gathered in a two-week training aimed at proffessionalising the force.
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    The training has been organised by Rwanda National Police in conjunction with the British High Commission to Rwanda.

    The training is in line with the implementation of the resolutions adopted the recent Eastern Africa Police Chiefs Cooperation Organisation (EAPCCO) meeting to join in combating trans-border crimes.

    In the meeting, EAPCCO member states agreed to help in training the police of the newly formed South Sudan state.

    The Inspector General of police Emmanuel Gasana who also chairs EAPCCO says 21 other officers are undergoing various courses with 14 of them doing online degree courses at Cambridge University and two attending the international strategic and leadership course and international commanders’ course at Bramshill College.

    Two other officers are scheduled to enrol at Teesside University for Masters’ degrees in forensic science while three others are slated for Leicester University on the online Masters’ degree.

    Ten officers have so far graduated with Masters’ degrees from Teesside University.

    “This is a clear manifestation of our effort towards professionalising the police force. I am sure the knowledge that will be acquired here will increase their capacity in leadership, management of crucial incidents, command and control, strategic planning and management and community policing,” Gasana said.

    Ben Llewellyn Jones, the British High Commissioner to Rwanda says that it is very important his government to support the Rwandan police and South Sudan too plus supporting links that exist between the two countries.

    “It’s important that police becomes professional, which is central to good governance,” Jones said.

    They will be trained in leadership, management and community policing, the latter, which aims at enhancing the cooperation between police and the local communities.

    It will also cover topics such as intelligence-led policing to further improve the exchange of information between the police and the general public.

  • Safety Of Clients Is Vital-–Montel Manager

    The marketing manager of Hello’s Corner has observed that safety of their clients is vital for the growth of their business and other business across the country.
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    Augustine Munyangabo told igihe.com in an interview that progress of doing business in Rwanda was a contribution of peace, security and stability in the country.

    “Our success in business can be attributed to the security in the country in addition to customer care we give to our clientele,” Munyangabo said in an interview.

    “Given the fact that Rwanda has been recently ranked the top country in the region in doing business despite having minimal resources Rwandans should attribute this achievement to the peace and security experienced in the country today where everyone is free to work 24hours a day with no interference,” he added.

    In order to make their clients more secure, the Montel-pub has introduced metal detectors used to search their clientele whether they seeking for accommodation or getting their services and leave.

    “We have equipped our security staff with security skills and in addition purchased metal detectors that we use to ensure security of clients and their property.”

    Hello’s Corner is a Motel-Pub located in Remera opposite control techniques. This facility operates 24hours 7days a week and offers variety of services such as Sauna, Massage and Lodges.