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  • AU Strongly Urges Sudan to Protect UNAMID

    AU Strongly Urges Sudan to Protect UNAMID

    {{African Union Peace and Security Council (PSC) condemned the disdain with which rebel groups reacted to its previous calls for peaceful settlement to the ten year conflict in Darfur and warned them against international sanctions.}}

    The council in its 400th meeting on 17 October also strongly urged the Sudanese government to take the appropriate measures to stop the upsurge of tribal violence, and to fulfil to its obligations by bringing to justice the perpetrators of attacks on the members of hybrid operation in Darfur.

    The meeting took place days after two attacks on the African Union United Nations Mission in Darfur (UNAMID) with the participation of Sudanese government and representatives of Rwanda, France, United Kingdom, and United States, as members of the UN Security Council.

    The PSC “notes with concern that some of the armed groups have consistently rejected peace efforts and agreements with impunity and total disregard for the fate of the people they claim to be representing and the efforts of the international community”, said a statement released on Friday.

    The African body reiterated its call to the holdout rebel groups to join the negotiating table for talks with the Sudanese government “without any further delay and without preconditions”, adding that peace process cannot endlessly remains open.

    The 15-member body further warned it intends to ” take measures and recommend to the UN Security Council to do the same against those impeding the search for peace in Darfur”.

    Three main rebel groups including Justice and Equality Movement (JEM)°led Gibril Ibrahim, Sudan Liberation Movement led by Abdel Wahid Al-Nur (SLM-AW) and SLM of Minni Minnawi (SLM-MM) demand a comprehensive process to discuss all the regional conflicts in Sudan.

    The holistic process, according to the Sudanese rebel groups, should include also all the political opposition parties and must lead to establish an interim government before to hold free elections leading to a democratic regime.

    In its previous statements, the PSC urged the rebels to hold peace talks with the government under the Doha Document for Peace in Darfur (DDPD), reminding that constitutional reforms could intervene after the settlement of armed conflicts in Darfur and South Kordofan.

    The continuation of the armed conflict hampers the international efforts to establish peace in the region, including the deployment of joint mission composed of over 19.000 peacekeepers and some 4.000 civilian international and local staff.

    The UNAMID, which deployed in the troubled region since 2008, lost over 50 peacekeepers who become an easy target for unidentified gunmen. Under the Status of Forces Agreement signed between Sudan and UN the Sudanese army have to protect the joint mission.

    The Sudanese government in the past blamed the hybrid mission for not cooperating with its army by informing them of their displacements, the mission underlined its independence and neutrality.

    However, observers say that the Sudanese authorities, even if they were able, in some cases, to identify the armed groups, do not take the necessary measures to arrest and prosecute the culprits.

    The “Council stresses that this unacceptable situation and its attendant humanitarian consequences have the potential to seriously undermine the search for a lasting solution to the conflict in Darfur”, said the statement.

    The statement further called on the Sudanese government to strongly “demonstrate good faith by taking all necessary measures” in order to bring to justice the perpetrators of attacks against the UNAMID and its peacekeepers.

    The PSC ” underlines that the decision to deploy UNAMID constitutes an act of solidarity with the people of Sudan and support to the search for peace”, underlined the statement.

    It further demanded the Sudanese government to update the council members, in a meeting to be held next November to review the situation in Darfur, about the steps taken to “bring to justice the perpetrators of these grave crimes, as well as to ensure the protection of UNAMID personnel, bearing in mind its obligations”.

    Last week unknown gunmen killed a Tanzanian military observer and three Senegalese soldiers in North and West Darfur states.

    {sudantribune}

  • Kenyatta Can Perform Official Duties During Trial, ICC Says

    Kenyatta Can Perform Official Duties During Trial, ICC Says

    Judges at the International Criminal Court on Friday excused Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta from “continuous presence” at his impending trial for crimes against humanity.

    The decision to give Kenyatta permission to deal with some of his official duties at home rather than permanently attending the trial was adopted by a majority vote, with presiding Judge Kuniko Ozaki dissenting, the ICC said in a statement. Kenyatta’s trial is due to start on Nov 12.

    Kenyatta and his deputy, William Ruto, are accused of orchestrating a wave of violence in which 1,200 people died after contested 2007 elections. Both men deny the charges and have tried to have the prosecutions adjourned or halted.

    The war crimes proceedings in The Hague against Ruto were delayed last month to allow him to deal with an Islamist militant assault on the Westgate mall in Nairobi in which 67 civilians and members of the security forces were killed.

    Kenyatta’s trial is the court’s most high profile case since it was established a decade ago and the first against a sitting president.

    An African Union summit last weekend criticised the court and complained it had only pursued Africans. It said that if the UN Security Council failed to put the cases on hold Kenyatta should refuse to attend his trial.

    reuters

  • Mozambique army launches retaliatory attack on Renamo

    Mozambique army launches retaliatory attack on Renamo

    {{Mozambique’s army launched a retaliatory attack on the mountain headquarters of the opposition Renamo movement on Friday, a day after a rebel ambush in which seven soldiers were killed, senior Renamo and government officials said.}}

    The assault on Renamo’s hideout in the remote Gorongosa mountains started in the middle of the afternoon, Renamo Member of Parliament Ivone Soares told Reuters after being granted safe passage by police through the front line.

    A police commander in the central Sofala province said “lots of injured” were being taken to hospital after the worst flare-up in a year of tensions between government forces and Renamo, a guerrilla movement that waged a 1975-1992 civil war.

    There was no other information on the number of casualties.

    The fighting, a month before municipal elections that Renamo has vowed to disrupt, is likely to unnerve foreign mining investors in the southern African nation, which has recently discovered vast coal and off-shore gas reserves.

    Mozambique has been one of Africa’s fastest-growing economies in the last three years, largely because of huge mining investment, although the simmering insurgency has cast a shadow over the boom.

    Renamo raids in April and June in the central province of Sofala killed at least 11 soldiers and police and six civilians, and forced a temporary suspension of some coal exports to the coast by rail.

    Road traffic and the tourist trade were also affected.

    A million people are thought to have died in the civil war that followed Mozambique’s independence from Portugal and the fighting has made many people nervous, even though analysts say a slide into all-out conflict is remote.

    Renamo was formed as an anti-communist rebel group in the 1970s by the secret service of white-ruled Rhodesia, and has been the main opposition to the ruling Frelimo party, a former Marxist movement, since the end of the war.

    Analysts say this year’s violence is a reaction to Renamo being pushed into political and economic obscurity by Frelimo, which is expected to dominate November’s municipal elections and a nationwide poll in just over a year.

    Major foreign mining investors include Brazil’s Vale and global giant Rio Tinto.

    {agencies}

  • Father of Roma girl expelled from France speaks out

    Father of Roma girl expelled from France speaks out

    {{The father of a Roma immigrant girl who has become a cause célèbre in France said on Friday that his family claimed to be from Kosovo in the hope of gaining pity – and political asylum.}}

    The lie didn’t work, and he and his family were expelled as illegal immigrants. His revelation is the latest twist in a tale that has shaken the French government and sent thousands of French high school students protesting in the streets on behalf of Leonarda Dibrani and other similarly deported classmates.

    Dibrani, 15, was taken by police from a school field trip last week, then sent to Kosovo with her family.

    While such expulsions occur regularly as France tries to stem illegal immigration, the circumstances of the arrest – in front of Leonarda’s shocked classmates and teachers – outraged many.

    France’s Socialist government is investigating, with Interior Minister Manuel Valls saying he expected the results of the investigation on Saturday.

    Meanwhile, questions have surfaced over the Dibrani family history.

    Activists who worked with the family initially said they had fled Kosovo because of discrimination against Roma, or Gypsies, and limited opportunities.

    {{A lie for a better life}}

    But Leonarda’s father, Reshat Dibrani, told The Associated Press on Friday that the Kosovo story was a lie aimed at achieving a better life for his six children.

    Presenting copies of their birth certificates, he said he was born in Kosovo but moved to Italy years ago, and that his children were born in Italy but don’t have Italian citizenship.

    He believed they had a better chance at permanently settling in France than Italy, so he moved the family to France, claiming the whole family was from impoverished, post-war Kosovo.

    “We said in France that we had come from Kosovo so that we could get the papers,” he said in Mitrovica, in northern Kosovo. “If I had told them that I am Kosovar and that [the children] were born in Italy, then France would say, ‘Go back to Italy’.”

    He said many immigrant families try similar stories. “You look to do what’s best for the family,” he said.

    The case of the Dibrani family and an Armenian high school student expelled last weekend prompted protests by high school students around Paris.

    Thousands of teenagers, saying the expulsions are unfair to immigrant children trying to get an education and a better life, rallied peacefully at the Place de la Bastille.

    A few threw stones and pens at riot police trying to slow down their march, and were met by tear gas.

    Leonarda Dibrani said she’s “very grateful” for the students’ support.

  • Suicide Bomber kills 13 at Restaurant in Somalia

    Suicide Bomber kills 13 at Restaurant in Somalia

    {{A suicide bomber killed at least 13 people outside a restaurant popular with Ethiopian and Somali troops in the town of Baladweyne in central Somalia on Saturday, a local politician said.}}

    More than 10 people were also wounded in the blast near a military base, Dahir Amin Jesow told Reuters over the phone from Baladweyne.

    No one immediately claimed responsibility for the attack.

  • Snowden Says he took no secret files to Russia: New York Times

    Snowden Says he took no secret files to Russia: New York Times

    {{Former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden said he did not bring any of the documents he took from the agency with him to Russia, the New York Times reported on Thursday.}}

    Snowden told the newspaper he gave all the documents to journalists he met in Hong Kong before flying to Moscow and said he did not keep copies for himself. Taking the files to Russia “wouldn’t serve the public interest,” Snowden said in an interview with the newspaper.

    Snowden, who worked for a contractor as a systems administrator at an NSA facility in Hawaii, was the source of disclosures that included details about programs under which the government collects vast amounts of information such as telephone and Internet records.

    He has polarized opinion in the United States, where many have been outraged by the extent of government snooping.

    But others have labeled him a traitor for stealing information from the NSA after vowing to respect its secrecy policies and fleeing first to China and then to Russia with classified U.S. data.

    Russia has granted Snowden a year’s asylum. U.S. authorities want him to return to the United States to face espionage charges.

    The former contractor, 30, also told the Times he believed he was able to protect the documents from Chinese spy agencies because he was familiar with Beijing’s intelligence capabilities.

    He said he feels he has boosted U.S. national security by prompting a public debate about the scope of U.S. data collection.

    An NSA spokeswoman did not respond to the New York Times’ request for comment on Snowden’s assertions.

    reuters

  • World Economic Forum Gathers Leaders to Reignite Russia’s Economy

    World Economic Forum Gathers Leaders to Reignite Russia’s Economy

    {{Kaluga shines so brightly in the regional investment firmament that it has regularly drawn cheers from President Vladimir Putin and various economists.}}

    Some of the reasons why the region, 160 kilometers southwest of Moscow, is leading the way as a target for new business ventures include the decision by Governor Anatoly Artamonov to share his mobile number with prospective investors, and a simplified process for obtaining construction permits.

    These and other groundbreaking best practices have been undergoing scrutiny by the World Economic Forum, or WEF, the same group that stages the annual business conference in the Swiss resort of Davos. The organization is preparing to unveil a report aimed at plotting a way forward for Russia’s sputtering economy by showcasing the achievements of its regions.

    Business and political leaders will gather in a local hotel this weekend for the WEF’s annual Moscow Meeting to discuss interim findings of this report, which is scheduled to be presented at the next Davos forum in January. The forum intends to prepare a list of specific institutional changes that could help gross domestic product grow at a faster rate.

    The report builds on the conclusions of a previous WEF report on various scenarios for Russia’s development that was unveiled in Davos last January.

    “We have explored this very question of how to improve institutions as a driver for growth in further detail,” said Stephan Mergenthaler, the forum’s deputy head of strategic foresight, who leads the research effort. “The report will focus on which specific measures, specific institutional reforms, have the biggest effect on growth.”

    The Moscow gathering at the Baltschug Kempinski hotel is the forum’s only formal meeting with broad participation from different stakeholders, such as business leaders and government members, he said. As part of this ongoing research, participants have already had a number of more informal meetings with several regional administrations since January during field trips around the country. The St. Petersburg International Economic Forum also hosted a discussion on the subject in June.

    The experts first set out to study how to underpin Russia’s long-term economic development in the beginning of 2012 — work that ended with a presentation of various scenarios for the country at the latest Davos forum in January. The scenarios hinged on three conditions: how popular discontent would play out; the extent of the impact on the country of major shifts in global energy trade; and Russia’s ability to reform its institutions.

    “What really came out of this work was an uncertainty among the stakeholders about the way forward,” Mergenthaler said. “The conclusion from that scenarios work is that Russia really needs to build a more resilient economic model against the background of this changing external environment.”

    That is where the question of improving institutions popped up very prominently. The forum will attempt to provide answers in the report at its next meeting in the beginning of next year, Mergenthaler said.

    A very detailed economic analysis is building on practical examples from the experience of Russia’s regions, which have scored high for competitiveness, foreign direct investment and other metrics in international rankings, he added.

    “In this second report we want to analyze good examples of best practices from some of the top performing regions in Russia,” Mergenthaler said.

    At the Moscow meeting Sunday, the experts will present interim results to a broad gamut of national and regional government figures, business leaders and fellow experts. Mergenthaler declined to name the business and government participants but said that, from the business side, they would include representatives of Russian and international companies, some of which supply products and services in various domestic regions.

    The expert community will partly be represented by members of the forum’s council on Russia, such as former Finance Minister Alexei Kudrin and Aleh Tsyvinski, a professor of economics at Yale University.

    The findings will try to link the regional achievements with an analysis of which of biggest reforms have the biggest effect on growth. The outcome of a discussion of these conclusions could make it into the final report that will see the daylight in Davos.

    What stands out in the early findings, Mergenthaler said, is that no single region performs at the top across all the different indicators that international organizations, such as the World Bank, use to rank regional business environments.

    “There is a huge variety of results and some regions score very well in terms of FDI attractiveness but score worse on other indicators,” he said. “Moscow, for example, is the leader in attracting foreign direct investment but in other indicators, such as ease of doing business, it scores rather low in the ranking of different Russian cities.”

    One of the regions that came under scrutiny was Kaluga, which is regularly cited in various rankings for creating a positive business environment and diversifying its economy, he said.

    Kaluga region Governor Artamonov intends to travel to the meeting Sunday, according to his spokesman Nikolai Anisin. He declined further comment about the region’s possible trendsetting role in the forum’s report, but pointed to Putin’s praise for Kaluga’s track record of job creation rate during the president’s meeting with entrepreneurs May 23.

    Vitaly Ivanov, head of regional research at Civil Society Development Foundation, a think tank led by former chief of the Kremlin’s internal policy department Konstantin Kostin, acknowledged Kaluga’s accomplishments.

    “Kaluga is a quite serious story,” he said. “They built an entire system of encouraging investment.”

    He added, however, that all the money coming in did not translate into visible improvements in the region’s appearance.

    “If you come to Kaluga, you will not immediately recognize it as a regional investment capital,” Ivanov said. “And you will not recognize it as such a while later, either.

    “I cannot say it drastically improved the state of affairs in the region, and the landscape, for that matter. There are no autobahns and skyscrapers, and I have not seen any modern neighborhoods.”

    Ivanov listed a few other regions that, he said, were steaming ahead in presenting a better environment for business. He named the Sverdlovsk, Khabarovsk, Krasnoyarsk, Leningrad, Nizhny Novgorod and Moscow regions.

    Mergenthaler declined to discuss specific measures featured in the preliminary report because the forum was still in the process of surveying the regional administrations and engaging in discussions.

    He said only that the report examined measures that would address the usual culprits of any economic deficiency — the burden of corruption and cumbersome procedures for receiving commercial and construction permits. Other areas that are in focus are access to credit to finance growth and innovation and a sufficiently present skilled workforce.

    The single purpose of the research is to stimulate debate among policy makers and a broader community, Mergenthaler said.

    “From what we are told by various people, the first report triggered wide discussion in Russia among policy makers and business leaders. That is what we want to achieve: We want to trigger a discussion,” he said.

    “This report will try to develop the discussion further by giving concrete examples of what it means to improve institutions, what specific steps can be taken and what the examples of best practices are from within Russia in those areas.”

    {The Moscow Times }

  • EU Strikes Trade Deal with Canada, Looks to U.S

    EU Strikes Trade Deal with Canada, Looks to U.S

    {{The European Union and Canada agreed a multibillion-dollar trade pact on Friday that will integrate two of the world’s largest economies and pave the way for Europe to clinch an even bigger deal with the United States.}}

    The deal will make Canada the only G8 country to have preferential access to the world’s two largest markets, the EU and the United States, home to a total of 800 million people.

    “This is the biggest deal our country has ever made,” Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper said in Brussels, adding that it outstripped the North American Free Trade Agreement between Canada, the United States and Mexico.

    Talks between the two sides launched in May 2009 but stalled for months over quotas for Canadian beef and EU cheese.

    Harper and European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso met in Brussels to resolve outstanding issues and seal the deal.

    In a cheeky touch, chefs served Italian gorgonzola and Greek feta cheese at a four-course lunch laid on for the two leaders to celebrate the deal, which EU trade chief Karel De Gucht called a “template” for negotiations with the United States.

    {agencies}

  • Maldives Presidential Poll Stopped by Police

    Maldives Presidential Poll Stopped by Police

    {{Maldives police have stopped a fresh presidential poll that was to be held on Saturday, the archipelago’s Election Commission said, despite a court ruling that the poll could go ahead.}}

    The Indian Ocean chain of tropical holiday islands has been in turmoil since February 2012 when former president Mohamed Nasheed, who won the Maldives’ first free elections in 2008, was ousted in disputed circumstances his supporters called a coup.

    The latest delay could see a rise in violence. Nasheed’s supporters have been demanding a free and fair election and have staged violent protests since he was ousted.

    Elections Commissioner Fuwad Thowfeek said police had surrounded the commission’s secretariat.

    “We cannot proceed with the election if police are obstructing it,” Thowfeek told a news conference. He said the commission was disappointed and frustrated and that police had “overstepped their authority”.

    Thowfeek also doubted the election could be held before the end of the current presidential term on November 11.

    Commission member Ali Mohamed Manik said: “This is a dark day for democracy”.

    Nasheed looked set to win a run-off vote on September 28, after he came first in a September 7 first round. The Supreme Court cancelled the run-off, citing first-round fraud, despite international observers saying the election was free and fair.

    The court later ordered a fresh election by October 20 and a run-off by Nov 3, if required.

    The Supreme Court upheld that decision in an early-morning ruling on Saturday after a request by the election commission.

    There was some confusion over whether the election could go ahead with or without candidates signing a new voter registry.

    The voter registry, which Nasheed’s party has signed, was not ready by Friday because of objections by some of his rivals.

    The police, who played a major role in ousting Nasheed, said they would not support an election held “in contravention of the Supreme Court verdict and guidelines”.

    Nasheed was forced to resign last year after mutinying police and military forces armed opposition demonstrators and gave him an ultimatum.

    In the latest election he faces resort tycoon Gasim Ibrahim, who was finance minister under Maumoon Abdul Gayoom, who ruled for 30 years and was considered a dictator by opponents and rights groups. The incumbent president, Mohamed Waheed, is not contesting the election.

    Critical issues the new president will face include a rise in Islamist ideology, human rights abuses and a lack of investor confidence after Waheed’s government cancelled the country’s biggest foreign investment project with India’s GMR Infrastructure.

    Nasheed, who once held a cabinet meeting under water, with members in scuba gear, to highlight the danger of rising sea levels, won the September 7 polls with 45.45 percent of the vote, short of the 50 percent needed to avoid a run-off.

    Tension has been high in recent weeks. Men in masks fire-bombed a television station that backs Nasheed on October 7.

    {agencies}

  • Rwandans in Geneva to Use Arts For 20th Commemoration of Genocide

    Rwandans in Geneva to Use Arts For 20th Commemoration of Genocide

    {{An Association of Young Rwandans living in Geneva,Switizerland are working on a project known as ‘Upright Men’ in collaboration with IBUKA in preparation of the forthcoming 20th commemoration of the genocide against ethnic Tutsi’s in Rwanda.

    IGIHE Reporter Aimable Karirima was recently in Geneva where he met with members of Swiss based association where they discussed various issues.

    Below are excerpts of the entire conversation.}}

    IGIHE: {{Tell us about this Project}}

    RWA association: ‘Upright Men’ is an artistic project coming from a long reflection by the visual artist Bruce Clarke, a British artist and activist of South African parents trained in the field of anti-apartheid struggle, deeply involved in various projects in Rwanda including the “Garden of Memory ” which is underway in Kigali.

    This project aims to honour the genocide victims with dignity and sensitise people about the events of 1994; and create a bridge between the survivors and the rest of the world.

    By using art in the form of paintings of women, children and men standing upright, larger than life; it gives a strong and beautiful image of Rwandan people and allows them to go through a phase of rebuilding that informs us that survivors remain standing and worthy despite of all they have endured.

    The project also intends to give an international dimension to the act of remembering needed after a genocide, which, by definition, concerns all of humanity.

    In Rwanda, by painting men, women and children standing, on the outside of memorial places (churches, schools, town halls, hospitals), we wish to represent symbols of nobility of those who have disappeared but whom we remember standing with dignity.

    The massacre memorial sites will be marked, by these beautiful and dignified images so that nobody can forget.

    At the international level, the international community must also honour the victims, salute the survivors and must never forget the meaning of genocide.

    On April 7, 2014, day of remembrance but also the international day of genocides, people will simultaneously stand upright on different symbolic places (Place des Nations in Geneva, Neumünster Abbey in Luxembourg, the Cathedral of Lausanne, Brussels, Paris, etc…) through light projections and giant printed canvases.

    The more places around the world will respond to the call of upright men, the stronger the message will be. These projections will commemorate not only our lost ones but also send a strong and unified message to other affected communities.

    The involvement of the Rwandan people is essential in this project because, above all, this project is for us, Rwandans.

    This is the reason why, the project is in partnership with IBUKA (France, Belgium and Switzerland) and the Association RWA (association of young Rwandans of Switzerland) and most importantly is supported by several Rwandans individually.

    Furthermore, the main project patron is Gaël Faye, a young Franco-Rwandan artist who is a big success at the moment.

    IGIHE: {{How do you intend to create awareness on the project in Rwanda and elsewhere in the world?}}

    RWA association: In order to create awareness to a wider audience, we invited the public to photograph themselves, standing, in a dignified manner with the words “I’m standing upright”, in solidarity with the victims of genocide and other crimes against humanity.

    These pictures are posted on different social networks, and will be used to create a larger image of an upright man or woman, consisting of a multitude of photos, which will serve as a poster to advertise the various events on April 7, 2014.

    We will spread the message worldwide to all who feel concerned with the memories and dignity of victims of genocide.

    For more information, here’s the video of the launch of the Action Photo

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I69WdP0Kwdw (Aperçu)

    The campaign was also well received in Rwanda and elsewhere in the world. Since the beginning of the photo action, we received pictures of men, women and children from around the world.

    We want our fellow citizens to understand the beauty and scope of the message and continue to take pictures and send them before 31 December 2013; they can share their photos at me@uprightmen.org

    IGIHE: {{As Rwandan, how does this project inspire you?}}

    RWA association: We were children during the genocide; therefore this project is a tool for us not only for remembering our lost ones with dignity, but also to create awareness of this tragic episode of our history. We see this project as a message of solidarity to every Rwandan and in particular, to the survivors and victims of the genocide.

    Moreover, this project is also a way of fighting against genocide denial, reminding the world that genocide had indeed taken place. For example, the fact that paintings will be placed in front of the Palais des Nations in Geneva from April 1 to June 1, 2014 will send a very powerful message and symbolic significance of the role played by the United Nations during the genocide.

    This project affects us. Bruce Clarke’s approach is delicate and beautiful. We want all Rwanda people to feel like upright women, children and men.

    IGIHE: {{What do you think of the idea of using art to raise awareness about the genocide?}}

    RWA association: Bruce Clarke often reminds us that “It is in the art that historical events are recorded in the popular consciousness.” We particularly believe that his paintings easily talk to everyone. This is importantly a way to make our history accessible.

    Since the end of the genocide, the art illustrations have repeatedly been a tool used to raise awareness about the Rwandan genocide. To illustrate that, the Groupov (which also works with Upright Men) created a play about the genocide entitled RWANDA 94.

    The other example is the collective “Rwanda: writing for the duty of memory”, saw ten African writers write books on various aspects of the genocide that allowed the general public to understand. Upright men project is therefore in the same process.

    We believed the project to be able to help everyone to feel involved and affected by history of Rwanda, for the crime of crimes that is genocide.

    We invite you to discover our action by watching the video and by sending us your pictures!