Author: admin

  • Eastern Province Complex Smashed

    {{The Eastern Province Headquarters have been destroyed by heavy rain which smashed off roofing tiles and soaked all office material. The complex was completed this year 2012 and is worth Frw 3,172,007,171.}}

    The governor of the province Uwamariya Odette has expressed shock at how such a new building could be destroyed by just rain. She says the province officials are yet to assess the cost of damages.

    The flashy state of the art complex emerged from a sensitive investigation and later a court case which showed that the tender awarded to Enterprise Alexis Mugarura (EMA) flauted procurement procedures.

    The prosecution then claimed the tender did not follow the normal channels.

    On March 10, 2007 former governor of the East Province Theoneste Mutsindashyaka allegedly informed the (EMA) Construction firm in writing that it had won Rwf 1.7 bn tender, contrary to regulations that only empower Rwanda Public Procurement Authority (RPPA) to announce the winner.

  • Inyamibwa Troupe to Stage Cultural Show

    {{Inyamibwa-cultural troupe of the National university of Rwanda plans to present their outreach activities promoting Rwandan culture at Amahoro Stadium from March 21 to 23.}}

    The students intend to convey Rwandan culture through the youth to share the rich heritage.

    150 members of Inyamibwa-cultural troupe will travel around the country senstising the youth about dangers of drugs, AIDS and the true values of the Rwandan culture.

    Inyamibwa troupe will perform original Rwandan traditional songs and dance.

    The troupe also aims at encouraging elite Rwandans to embrace their traditional culture . Some strategies include teaching cultural studies in high schools.

    At the function people will have the opportunity to discover the varieties of original songs from several corners of the country and decoration accompanying their dances.

  • Servant of State is God ‘s Servant –Pastor Gasare

    {{Pastor Michael Gasare has noted that a servant of state is also a God’s servant.}}

    He made the remarks while closing the second session of University Students’ representatives training about Godly leadership, good governance, Christian ethics in business environment, and Rwandan culture vs Biblical ethics, and Bible Advocacy.

    Organized by the Bible Society of Rwanda (BSR), the training aimed at promoting both Godly and societal values and the possibility for the country to be led by the Bible especially in conduct and fulfillment of leaders’ duty.

    Trainees are University Students’ representatives taught about norms of good governance to prepare them for future leadership.

    “When you look back to the world’s history, there are people who started up well and ended tragically; some fled their countries or have been jailed and some ended with a bad reputation”, Pastor Gasare said.

    Trainees who talked to IGIHE said they were glad and shall change their behavior and sensitize others to get such skills.

    Evariste Ndengejeho from level 5 at INES Ruhengeri, in the Faculty of Applied Statistics says,“Knowledge gained from here will help us become helpful to others guiding them on good leadership with vision for their country while valuing the Bible teachings”.

    Christina Natukunda from the School of Finance and Banking in charge of Gender, says she gained leadership skills.

    The National University of Rwanda Students’ Association guild president, Christopher Muhima noted, “What I learnt from these trainings is that all leadership comes from God.”

    The Bible Society of Rwanda started its activities in 1997 with duties to translate the Holy Scripture into the understandable language and getting them close to people.

    Their values include leadership with fear of God, integrity and bringing change and promotion of solidarity.

  • Fatih University to Honour President Kagame With PHD

    {{On Friday President Paul Kagame will receive an honorary doctorate from Fatih University in recognition for his leadership in Rwanda as well as his contribution within the international community.}}

    President Kagame Tuesday arrived in Istanbul, Turkey for a three-day visit at the invitation of members of the Turkish business community.

    During the three-day working visit President Kagame will meet with prominent Turkish business people, including several investors who have already been to Rwanda. President Kagame is also scheduled to tour manufacturing companies in Istanbul.

    Turkey and Rwanda enjoy cordial relations and the country is represented in Rwanda through its Embassy in Uganda.

    Rwanda is represented in Turkey since 2009 by an Honorary Consul, and as of September 2011, has a full-fledged Honorary Consulate and an office of the Rwanda Development Board, both in Istanbul.

  • Butcherman Cuts 4Men With Machete

    {{Police in Kicukiro is holding a man for brutally cutting other four men with a machete.

    The suspect has been identified as Harindababiri Bernard 30. He works at a butchery at Kicukiro business center.

    Harindabari swung his machete into action yesterday injuring four men. The cause of the attack has not yet been known pending Police investigations although Harindabari has since refused to utter any word to Police.

    The attack occurred at Ihuriro Village, Gatenga Cell, Gatenga Sector in Kicukiro. Below Hagenimana Emmanuel one of the victims of the attack shows wounds sustained from the attack}}

    Another victim identified as Jean de Dieu Sindikubwabo said, “we were playing cards with a friend and suddenly were attacked by a machete wielding man who began cutting them. We were wounded on different parts of our body.”

  • Rwandair Orders for 2 Bombadier Jets

    {{Rwandair has placed a firm Order for two Bombadier CR J900 NextGen Aircraft. Delivery for both aircraft is expected in October 2012. Transaction includes options on two additional CRJ900 NextGen regional jets with Bombardier Aerospace.}}

    RwandAir will become the first operator of CRJ900 aircraft in Eastern Africa.

    Based on the list price of the CRJ900 NextGen airliner, the firm-order contract is valued at approximately $89 million US. The value of the contract would increase to $185 million US should both options be exercised.

    “Our two 50-seat CRJ200 aircraft have performed very well for us and have helped grow our business to the point that we require aircraft with more capacity,” said John Mirenge, Chief Executive Officer, RwandAir.

    “Based on our experience with the CRJ200 aircraft, the dual-class 75-seat CRJ900 NextGen aircraft was the logical upgrade. CRJ900 NextGen aircraft also provide exceptional reliability and have much in common with other CRJ aircraft. These aircraft will be configured to have 7 business class seats and 68 economy class seats”.

    “Other key factors that contributed to our decision to choose the CRJ900 NextGen aircraft are Bombardier’s customer support offering and cooperation in further developing RwandAir’s technical capacity,” added Mr. Mirenge.

    “In the CRJ900 NextGen regional jet, RwandAir will have an aircraft with the best economics in its class,” said Mike Arcamone, President, Bombardier Commercial Aircraft.”

    “The aircraft is of the ideal size to allow the airline to connect its regional markets that have become too large for smaller aircraft, but too small for RwandAir’s larger jets to serve efficiently.”

    Operating from Kigali as its hub, RwandAir’s fleet includes two Boeing 737-800NG, two Boeing737-500, and a Dash8-200. The carrier serves most East African Community capital cities with daily flights and it flies to Johannesburg, Brazzaville, Libreville and Dubai.

    There are currently more than 200 Bombardier regional jet and turboprop aircraft in service with, or on firm order from, approximately 50 operators in the Middle East and Africa.

    Bombardier’s Commercial Aircraft Market Forecast for the period 2011-2030 projects that the fleet of Bombardier commercial aircraft in the Middle East and Africa will continue to grow, forecasting deliveries of 980 aircraft, or seven per cent of the worldwide total of 13,000 units in the 20- to 149-seat market segments during that period.

    Including the order from RwandAir, Bombardier has recorded firm orders for 1,711 CRJ Series aircraft (including 268 CRJ900 and CRJ900 NextGen aircraft), with 1,661 aircraft delivered as of December 31, 2011.

  • Private Sector can Boost Food Security in Africa

    {{The Minister of Trade and industry Francois Kanimba has told a Kigali meeting of Agriculture ministers from Seven African countries that the private sector has a large role to play in enhancing food security in Africa.}}

    Kanimba also urged Africa to emphasize at the May G8 summit the role of private sector in advancing Africas progress.

    The meeting concluding today started March 19 attracting participation from Ethiopia, Burkinafaso, Kenya, Tanzania, Mozambique, Ghana and Rwanda to discuss problems facing the agricultural sector in Africa.

    “The Conference will solve key challenges by supporting private sector investment in agriculture,” said Kanimba.

    Kanimba noted that to achieve food security, African states should not always expect foreign aid. “Africans should rely on their own efforts; the opportunities presented by their respective countries, and especially encourage investment in agriculture through the private sector”.

    The Kigali meeting was initiated by the African Union (AU) as a preparatory meeting of the Addis Ababa Summit to be held next May that will review the results of the Kigali meeting.

    Arne Cartridge the Representative of the World Economic Fund (WEF) says, “ the process of African development is supported by both the AU and the WEF.”

    The Summit in Addis Ababa will be followed by the May (15 – 22) G8 summit in Chicago at McCormick Place Convention Center, 2301 S. Lake Shore Drive. The last time the G8 summit was held in the United States was in 2004, at Sea Island, Georgia.

    The Group of Eight was created in 1975 to allow the heads of the governments of the world’s largest economies to convene and discuss global issues such as energy, food security, health, terrorism and the environment.

    Boaz Blackie Keizire representing the AU meeting observed that postponing the promotion of private sector investment in agriculture would be costly to Africans in the future.

    Representatives of seven African countries have reviewed the various challenges they face in promoting investment in agriculture including; land management, lack of national policies on promotion of private sector investment in agriculture and assistance to promote agricultural business internationally.

    The Addis Ababa Summit will analyze the range of challenges to develop strategies to attract foreign investment in agriculture on the African continent.

  • No Decision by US Court in Munyenyezi Case

    {{In the trial of Suspected Rwandan genocide fugitive Beatrice Munyenyezi at New Hampshire court, the Federal Judge declared a mistrial in her case.}}

    Munyenyezi is accused of obtaining US citizenship by denying her role in the 1994 Rwanda Tutsi genocide in which a million lives were lost.

    Last week the Jurors had said that they couldn’t agree on the two counts in the case of Beatrice Munyenyezi after nearly 19 hours of deliberations over several days. Thursday, Chief U.S. District Judge Steven McAuliffe instructed them to try to reach a unanimous verdict.

    But they again deadlocked. Jurors sent out at note at about 3:20 p.m. saying they could not reach unanimous verdicts and all agreed that no consensus would be reached through further deliberations.

    “You have not failed your duty as jurors,” Judge McAuliffe told them. “Sometimes no decision is the right decision.”

    All 12 jurors after being dismissed declined to comment on the case or whether the majority was for guilt or innocence. Lawyers on both sides said they had not been told what the split was.

    Munyenyezi, 42, who became a U.S. citizen in 2003 and moved to Manchester, did not testify during her 12-day federal trial. She had faced deportation to Rwanda if convicted, and her citizenship would automatically be stripped.

    Munyenyezi buried her face in her hands when the jury foreman announced the outcome but did not cry. She remained stoic.

    Estimates in costs of prosecuting and defending Munyenyezi thus far totals nearly $3 million. More than a dozen witnesses and defense investigators were flown in from Rwanda and housed in hotels.

    Three interpreters of Kinyarwandan were hired and housed. Investigators from both sides made trips to Rwanda to prepare for trial.

    Prosecutors say Munyenyezi was an extremist Hutu who killed and ordered the rapes of untold Tutsi victims — not the innocent refugee she claimed to be in 1995, when she applied for a visa and later when she applied for and obtained citizenship in 2003.

    To prove Munyenyezi lied on her immigration and naturalization papers, prosecutors had to convince the jury she took an active part in the genocide, contrary to sworn statements on the federal forms.

    The only other similar trial in the U.S. involving immigration fraud related to the Rwanda genocide ended in a hung jury last May in Kansas.

    Prosecution witnesses testified they saw her direct rapes and killings, but her relatives testified they never saw that, nor did they see her carry a gun or wear a military uniform.

    They said Munyenyezi, who was pregnant with twins at the time, mostly stayed inside the family-owned hotel that prosecutors said was the scene of the some of the brutality.

  • Uwinkindi Trial: Candidates for Monitoring Mechanism Listed

    {{A list of international institutions has been submitted to the President of the Tribunal which could be selected to serve as Monitoring Mechanism for the genocide trial of Pastor Jean Uwinkindi in Rwanda.}}

    The Registrar of the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR) submitted on March 16.

    The list includes the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Right (ACHPR) which was first considered for the job but demanded a total of 571,920 US dollars per year.

    Others candidate are ICJ-Kenya, Amnesty International, {L’Observatoire International des Avocats}, the Pan African Lawyers Union and the International Senior Lawyers Project.

    In his report, the Registrar asked the ACHPR to reconsider its position on the remuneration of its commissioners whom alone would take nearly 300,000 US dollars of the proposed package. According to the report no response has been received so far.

    On February 24, then ICTR President Judge Khalida Rashid Khan ordered the stay of transfer to Rwanda of Pastor Uwinkindi until the establishment of a suitable monitoring mechanism for his trial.

    ‘’The President has invited the parties (defence and prosecution) to give their comments on the report in seven days from the date they received it if any,’’ said the Tribunal Spokesperson, Roland Amoussouga.

    All these institution according to the Registrar report , would not request remuneration but asked for subsistence and travel allowances, monitors privileges and immunities and security.

    Pastor Uwinkindi is charged with genocide and extermination.

    The accused was born in Rutsiro commune, Kibuye prefecture (west Rwanda) in 1951. He was arrested in connection with the charges on June 30, 2010 in Uganda as he was coming into the country from the neighboring Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).

    He was transferred to ICTR in Arusha, Tanzania on July 2, 2010.

  • Family Arrested over Illegal Border Crossing

    {{Five members of a family were yesterday arrested while attempting to illegally cross the border into neighbouring Tanzania. The incidence happened at Nyagatare district involving three children and their father and mother.}}

    The suspects are held at Rwimiyaga Police Station.

    Didas Gakwandi, Gotheni Kankindi with their children Fred Nsengiyumva, Penzi Kemirembe and Katurebe did not posses any travelling documents and were seized while attempting to cross through an illegal route known as Karushuga.

    According to Police sources, the family will be held as Police investigates whether they weren’t fleeing from justice.

    Police is using the brief detention to advise them to refrain from illegal border crossing and seek legitimate travel documents.

    According to Gakwandi, the family was leaving the country to seek greener pastures and join relatives in Tanzania. He claimed that getting travel documents was expensive.

    District Police Commander, Superintendant Edward Kayitare said that illegal border crossing is common to people crossing over to Uganda but was rare for people to cross to Tanzania.

    “We are sensitizing people mostly through community gatherings to bring awareness about the dangers involved in crossing borders illegally and mobilize them to seek travel documents”, said SUPT Edward Kayitare.

    Police Spokesperson, Superintendant Theos Badege said that the methods and routes used in illegal border crossing are dangerous and risky.

    “The process of acquiring travel documents has become much easier and shouldn’t be used as an excuse to travel illegally,” Badege said.