Author: IGIHE

  • Kagame, Ethiopia Prime Minister join citizens in community work

    {President Paul Kagame and Ethiopia Prime Minister, Hailemariam Desalegn have joined residents of Kacyiru sector, Gasabo district in monthly community work to build the library for Groupe Scolaire Kacyiru II.}

    It was attended by First Lady Jeannette Kagame and the wife of Ethiopia’s Prime Minister, Roman Tesfaye.

  • Rwanda-Ethiopia sign 11 bilateral agreements

    {Rwanda and Ethiopia have signed 11 bilateral agreements meant to further strengthen diplomatic relations between the two nations.}

    President Paul Kagame and Ethiopian Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn, who is on a three-day state visit to Rwanda, witnessed the signing ceremony, which took place at Urugwiro Village in Kigali City.

    The bilateral agreements signed are in the areas of:

    Extradition Treaty
    Mutual Legal Assistance
    Communication, Information and Media
    Youth and Sports
    Tourism, Health
    Education, Culture
    Cooperation in Correctional Services
    Gender, Women and Children and
    Water resources management

    Addressing a joint press conference after the signing, President Kagame pointed out that the cooperation between Ethiopia and Rwanda brings together people at all levels.

    “The aspirations of African countries are very similar: prosperity for our people. The people of Rwanda and Ethiopia are very determined to achieve,” President Kagame said.

    The Head of State further reiterated that for the two nations to achieve their desired development, they must learn from each other with a vision, put in place strategies on how to get where they want to be, and identify what they should do to get results.

    Ethiopian Premier Hailemariam Desalegn commended the Government of Rwanda for putting in place programmes meant to ensure enhanced citizen wellbeing. He described relations between Rwanda and Ethiopia as unique.

    “Our relationship is unique and we want to nurture and expand it. It is not just diplomacy but mutual understanding and respect,” He stressed.

  • Rwf 2,094.9 billion for 2017/2018 budget

    {The Minister of Finance and Economic Planning, Ambassador Claver Gatete has presented a draft budget for 2017/2018 showing a significant rise from Rwf 1954.2 billion in 2016/2017 to Rwf 2094.9 billion. }

    Internally generated revenues and loans account for 83% of the total budget; 17% will come from foreign aid.

    As he presented the draft budget to both chambers of the parliament, Minister Gatete explained that recurrent budget take Rwf 1122.9 billion while development budget activities will take Rwf 774 billion.

    A total of Rwf 159.1 billion will be allocated to public investment like construction of Bugesera international Airport and expanding RwandaAir activities among others.

    It is expected that the nation’s economy will grow by 6.2% in 2017 and 6.8% in 2018.

    The Minister of Finance and Economic Planning, Ambassador Claver Gatete presenting the draft budget for 2017/2018.
  • BRD supports vulnerable genocide survivors

    {A delegation of Development Bank of Rwanda – BRD led by the Chief Risk Officer Peter Rwambala visited 90 INCIKE (Elderly Survivors of the Genocide Against the Tutsi) to deliver the promised iron sheets of 22 constructed houses in completion phase in partnership with Kirehe District and the Reserve Force of Rwanda Defence Force}

    During the visit, BRD team helped to complete the roofing of house belonging to Mukasharangabo Imelda, a 44 year old single mother of 6, residing in Ruhanga, Nyakarambi II Village of Kirehe District.

    The elderly Woman participated in the work and has now found renewed Hope with her new Four-Bedroom House.

    In Kirehe District,BRD CSR Program has contributed in the rehabilitation of Nyarubuye Memorial Site and provided Sewing machines to Women Tailor cooperative in addition of providing them with a paid 6 months training to boost their Capacity.

    Since 2016, the bank supports a total of 300 Genocide Survivors with paid Health Premium Insurances of 3 Years.

    Murelangabo Imelda, one of the beneficiaries.
  • Rwanda, South Africa relations on steady mend

    {South Africa’s ambassador to Rwanda, George Nkosinati Twala, has said good strides have been taken in strengthening bilateral relations between his country and Rwanda and on steady path of restoring to normal the erstwhile deteriorated relations.}

    Amb. Twala noted this yesterday as South Africa celebrated 23 years since the end of apartheid. It was on 27th April 1994 when black South Africans from 18 years and above were, for the first time, allowed to vote for the first time. Only the whites were allowed to vote before that.

    The State Minister for transport in the Ministry of Infrastructure, Dr Alexis Nzahabwanimana represented Rwanda during the ceremony held at the residence of South Africa’s ambassador to Rwanda in Nyarutarama.

    Dr Nzahabwanimana said Rwanda-South Africa relations existing since 1999 are currently improving.

    RwandAir has been flying to Johannesburg twice a week and seeks to expand travels in the country. South Africa’s companies are investing in Rwanda but cooperation between the two countries has been hazy with complications in accessing visas for Rwandans traveling to South Africa.

    “We hope that existing friendship between our countries will grow stronger. It is a wish of Rwandans in need of flying to South Africa to visit brothers and sisters there and we hope every Rwandan will attain it in the near future,” he said.

    Dr Nzahabwanimana explained that South Africans wanting to visit Rwanda are welcome, whether for business or visiting.

    South Africa’s ambassador to Rwanda, George Nkosinati Twala said both countries are jointly following up the revival of cordial relations.

    “They are respecting guidelines of both heads of states when they met. When President Paul Kagame met his South African counterpart last year, Jacob Xhuma, they discussed various issues to be addressed.

    In 2014, South Africa suspended provision of Visas for Rwandans traveling to the country. At the time South Africa expelled three Rwandan diplomats in Pretoria accusing them of being behind armed attacks to Kayumba Nyamwasa who fled to the country.

    Later, Rwanda expelled six South Africa diplomats based in Kigali accusing South Africa of hosting masterminds of renegades behind bomb blasts in Kigali.

    South Africa’s ambassador to Rwanda, George Nkosinati Twala (left) with the State Minister for transport in the Ministry of Infrastructure, Dr Alexis Nzahabwanimana during celebration of 23 years since the end of apartheid yesterday.
  • Scythian horse breeding unveiled: Lessons for animal domestication

    {Nomad Scythian herders roamed vast areas spanning the Central Asian steppes during the Iron Age, approximately from the 9th to the 1st century BCE (Before Common Era). These livestock pastoralists, who lived on wagons covered by tents, left their mark in the history of warfare for their exceptional equestrian skills. They were among the first to master mounted riding and to make use of composite bows while riding. A new study published in Science led by Professor Ludovic Orlando and involving 33 international researchers from 16 universities, now reveals the suite of traits that Scythian breeders selected to engineer the type of horse that best fit their purpose.}

    The study took advantage of exceptionally preserved horse remains in royal Scythian burials, such as the site of Arzhan, Tuva Republic, where over 200 horses have been excavated but also at Berel’, Kazakhstan, where no less than 13 horses were preserved in a single, permafrozen funerary chamber. Applying the latest methods in ancient DNA research, the researchers could sequence the genome of 13 Scythian stallions. These were 2,300-2,700 years old and included 11 specimens from Berel’ and two from Arzhan. The researchers also sequenced the genome of one 4,100 year-old mare from Chelyabinsk, Russia, belonging to the earlier Sintashta culture, which developed the first two-wheeled chariots drawn by horses.

    The DNA variation observed at key genes revealed a large diversity of coat coloration patterns within Scythian horses, including bay, black, chestnut, cream and spotted animals. Scythian horses did not carry the mutation responsible for alternate gaits, and as a consequence, were not natural amblers. However, some but not all individuals carried variants associated with short-distance sprint performance in present-day racing horses. This indicates that Scythian breeders valued animals showing diverse endurance and speed potential.

    “With the exception of two horses, none of the animals were related. It fits with Herodotus’ depiction of Scythian funerary rituals, whereby sacrificed horses represented gifts from allied tribes spread across the steppes,” says Dr. Pablo Librado, post-doctoral researcher at the Centre for GeoGenetics, University of Copenhagen, Denmark, and co-leading author of the study.

    Importantly, none of the ancient horses analyzed in the study were inbred, which suggests that Scythian breeders succeeded in maintaining natural herd structures and did not perform selection through a limited number of valuable lineages. This contrasts with modern management practice where single stallions can be used to father hundreds of offspring. Patterns of genetic variation along the genome also revealed a total of 121 genes selected by Scythian breeders, most of which are involved in the development of forelimbs. This is reminiscent of the morphological indices measured on bones, and indicates that Scythian breeders selected horses showing more robust morphologies.

    “In this study we wanted to go beyond the myth of Scythians being aggressive warriors, drinking the blood of their enemies in skull mugs. We wanted to reveal the many facets of the exceptional relationship that these people developed with their horses,” says Ludovic Orlando, Professor of Molecular Archaeology at the Centre for GeoGenetics, University of Copenhagen and CNRS Research Director at the AMIS laboratory, University of Toulouse.

    The genome data set generated in the study also reveals important lessons for the history of horse management, which started some 5,500 years ago, and animal domestication as a whole. By contrasting patterns of genetic variation in ancient and present-day horses, the authors found support for a significant demographic collapse during the last 2,300 years, which resulted in an important reduction of genetic diversity within horse domesticates. During the same time period, reproductive management has involved an increasingly reduced number of stallions, up to the point that, today, almost all domesticates virtually carry the same, or highly similar, Y-chromosome haplotype(s).

    “Many Y-chromosome haplotypes co-existed within Scythian horse populations. The first three millennia of horse domestication thus preserved a large diversity of male lineages. It only vanished within the last 2,000 years,” adds Dr. Cristina Gamba, post-doctoral researcher at the Centre for GeoGenetics at the time of the study, and co-leading author of the study.

    The authors also found that the demographic collapse and loss of Y-chromosomal diversity observed within the last 2,300 years was mirrored by a significant accumulation of deleterious mutations in the genome of the horse. As these mutations reduce the fitness of their carriers, it shows that the last two millennia of horse management have negatively impacted the horse. However, early domestication stages, as represented by the Sintashta and Scythian genomes, did not have such an impact. This contrasts with the Cost-of-domestication hypothesis, which posits a negative impact starting from early domestication stages. In the case of horse domestication, it is likely that the demographic collapse within the last 2,000 years reduced the efficacy of negative selection to purge out deleterious mutations, which could then accumulate in the horse genome.

    Finally, the researchers developed a novel statistical method to investigate the genome data for signatures of positive selection in early domestication stages. They found that the genomic regions showing the most extreme signatures were involved in the development of the neural crest, and expressed within tissues derived from the neural crest.

    “The neural crest hypothesis proposes a unified model for the origin of similar traits commonly found in most domestic animals. As the neural crest represents a temporary group of cells during development which gives rise to many tissues and cell lineages, selection for genetic variants affecting the neural crest can almost in one go co-select for a range of traits. The over-representation detected in our study supports the neural crest as key to animal domestication and to the rise of common domestic traits in independent animal lineages,” concludes Professor Ludovic Orlando.

    These are Kazakh horses in North Central Kazakhstan.

    Source:Science Daily

  • AIF Rwanda staff pay tribute to Genocide victims

    {Staff Members of Africa Improved Foods (AIF) Rwanda have paid tribute to over one million victims of the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi and visited Kigali Genocide Memorial to learn how the Genocide was planned, executed, its devastation and the recovery over the last 23 years.}

    Led by the company’s Chief Executive Officer, Amar Ali, the group toured the memorial, yesterday, and laid wreaths on mass graves in tribute to more than 250,000 victims of the Genocide against Tutsi laid to rest there.

    The visit was in line with the 23rd Genocide commemoration (Kwibuka23) under the theme “Remember the Genocide against the Tutsi, Fight Genocide Ideology, Build on Our Progress.”

    The team which was mainly comprised of the Company’s Management got to learn about the consequences of the Genocide and how Rwandans are steadily rebuilding the nation by promoting social cohesion and reconciliation.

    Amar conceded that Genocide against the Tutsi was a very humbling yet baffling experience.

    “The fact that Rwandans have found it in their hearts to forgive and actually build something new is very inspiring not just to me or Rwandans in general but to the whole continent. Not many people do that. It’s very inspiring to witness and be part of,” Amar said.

    AIF CEO Amar (right) lay wreaths on mass graves at Kigali Genocide Memorial, on Wednesday.
    AIF CEO Amar delivers message to staff at Kigali Genocide Memorial, on Wednesday.
    AIF CEO Amar delivers remarks to staff at Kigali Genocide Memorial, on Wednesday.
    AIF Rwanda Staff lay wreaths on mass graves at Kigali Genocide Memorial
    AIF Rwanda Staff pay tribute to Genocide Victims at Kigali Genocide Memorial.

    By Jean d’Amour Mugabo

  • Seyoboka trial stalls as he awaits legal representation

    {Nyamirambo Military court has adjourned the trial of Second Lieutenant Henri Jean Claude Seyoboka as he says that he awaits a response from the Minister of Justice whom he petitioned for a defense lawyer. }

    Seyoboka who appeared today in court without a defense lawyer has said that he was not ready for trial before he gets feedback from the minister.

    The lead Capt. Kayijuka Kagiraneza said that Seyoboka disregarded explanations he received during the bail application.

    Prosecution had informed court that the ministry of justice only provides a defense lawyer for a person extradited from other countries noting however that Seyoboka’s was dismissed.

    Capt. Kagiraneza explained that Seyoboka was connected with his wife whom he called and made arrangements for legal representation.

    “He may not be tried today without defense lawyer but it should not be the reason next time because we facilitated him in the process of getting a defense lawyer,” he said.
    Seyoboka.

    Seyoboka, 50 was deported from Canada to be tried in Rwanda. He is accused of genocide crimes in various attacks killing Tutsi in Kiyovu among other regions.

    Seyoboka fled to Canada in 1996 and received asylum which was revoked later after finding him guilty of telling lies and concealing the fact that he was Second Lieutenant in Ex-FAR militia.

    Second Lieutenant Henri Jean Claude Seyoboka in Nyamirambo Military Court.He is accused of genocide crimes in various attacks killing Tutsi in Kiyovu among other regions.
  • Copa Coca-Cola commits continued support to Rwanda’s football

    {Copa Coca-Cola marks its 9th year, by continuing to give its support to young Rwandan football stars. Building up on the theme for last year “Everything for Football”, Copa Coca-Cola will continue to drive the development of grassroots football in Rwanda.}

    “Our ambition for Copa Coca-Cola is to make it the biggest and most inclusive football tournament in Rwanda. Currently 480 teams all over Rwanda compete with the hopes of being a part of the 64 teams that participate at the qualifying stage.” Julius Kayoboke, Marketing Director of Bralirwa commented.

    “This year we awarded certificates of participation to all the players competing at the Copa Coca-Cola District preliminary level. This is our way of acknowledging and giving more to these Rwandan youth, since they already inspire us with their dedication and passion to the game. We will visit players during their practice session at schools with our Copa heroes and our brand ambassadors, as well as continue our tradition awarding cash prizes, medals, trophies and a special award for the best player.” he added.

    In Africa, the Coca-Cola COPA tournament is run in over 20 countries giving more than 50,000 young players the opportunity to display their talent. Over the years, bona fide professional stars have emerged from the tournament including Zambian national team goalkeeper Kennedy Mweene and his teammates Nathan Sinkala and StophilaSunzu; Ugandan international defender Timothy Batabaire; Nigeria FC Porto midfielder MikelAgu; Kenyan midfielder McDonald Mariga; Tanzanian striker Thomas Ulimwengu; and South African duo MandlaMasango and Happy Jele among others.

    Locally, Copa Coca-Cola has crafted football talents like the goal keeper AhishakiyeHeriter, the defender Emery Bayisenge and Anchorman YannickMukunzi who now play for our National Team,-Amavubi and the local club APR FC.

    Copa Coca-Cola has also supported the development of Women’s Football.As a result of playing in the tournament,the 18-year old football starlet Florence Imanizabayo, was scouted and currently plays for the Women’s Football Club of Kamonyi as well as the Rwandan Women’s National Football team.

    The tournament kicks off this Sunday 30th April at INES Pitch in Musanze with subsequent games slated across the country.

    Copa Coca-Coal tournament kicks off this Sunday 30th April at INES Pitch in Musanze with subsequent games slated across the country.
  • Kagame receives Ethiopia Prime Minister

    {President Paul Kagame has received Ethiopian Prime Minister, Haile Mariam Dessalegn who has arrived in Rwanda for a three-day state visit. }

    He is accompanied by his wife Roman Tesfaye.

    Dessalegn will visit various projects in Rwamagana district as his wife visits Kayonza district.

    Dessalegn comes to Rwanda following President Kagame’s visit to Ethiopia in February where he attended the 28th African Union Summit.

    Rwanda and Ethiopia have cooperation in various sectors including agriculture, trade and education among others.