Author: IGIHE

  • Brussels Airlines opens new destinations to India and away

    Comfort flight lovers have got yet another reason to smile, following the opening of new flight destinations by the Belgian giant Carrier—Brussels Airlines.

    New destinations and higher flight frequencies are soon greeting the 2017 summer season, which runs from end of March till October, with highlights of the schedule being the launch of the new Mumbai route and the growth of the European network with new leisure destinations.

    Both the European and intercontinental offer grow significantly during the 2017 summer season. In an average summer week, Brussels Airlines offers 8 percent more seats compared to last year. The company’s statement reveals an overview of what is to come for short and mid haul.

    “With Palma de Mallorca (Spain), Rhodes (Greece), Funchal (Portugal) and Comiso (Sicily), Brussels Airlines adds 4 popular vacation islands to its network of leisure destinations. Yerevan (Armenia), a destination that already welcomed Brussels Airlines charter flights during the winter season and was not directly connected to Belgium before, will be operated weekly and even two times per week in July and August,” it reads.

    Brussels Airlines also increases its number of flights to many existing destinations.

    Porto and Lisbon are served twice a day during the whole summer and Faro in the Algarve is served daily. The popular vacation destination Alicante (Spanish Costa Blanca) will also be connected daily. More frequencies are also added on the routes to Ibiza, Billund, Bordeaux, Paris CDG, Nantes, Naples, Warsaw and Athens.

    The seat offer to Milan Linate, Milan Malpensa, Oslo, Marseille, London Heathrow, Florence, Bologna, Madrid, Rome, Geneva, Vienna and Hamburg will also grow significantly thanks to the use of larger aircraft on these routes.

    Intercontinental flights improvements

    The biggest newcomer in Brussels Airlines’ intercontinental network is Mumbai. From March 30, Brussels Airlines will fly five times weekly to the economic heart of India.

    The Mumbai-Brussels flights can all be combined with Brussels Airlines’ connections to Africa, the US and Canada. Abidjan (Ivory Coast) will be served daily during the summer season, instead of the current six times weekly. Accra’s frequency increases from four to five flights a week.

    Summer destination Washington D.C. also relaunches for the season and will be served six times a week as from end of March. The Canadian Toronto will be connected to Brussels Airport five times per week and New York remains a daily destination. Travelers who want to connect to one of the many other North American destinations that Brussels Airlines offers in partnership with Air Canada and United, can connect smoothly via Toronto and Washington.

    On long haul flights, the airline operates an all new Business Class with full flatbeds and state of the art inflight entertainment, and a brand new Economy class with ergonomic seats and individual inflight entertainment touchscreens. Long-haul flights are operated with Airbus A330-200 and A330-300 aircraft.

    In addition to its 23 destinations in Africa and North America, Brussels Airlines and its intercontinental partners also offer long-haul codeshare flights to the United Arab Emirates, Japan and Thailand.

    Brussels Airlines, a member of Lufthansa Group and a Star Alliance member, is the Belgian airline that offers the widest choice of flights to and from the capital of Europe, Brussels Airport.

    Founded in 2002 and owned by SN Airholding, Brussels Airlines offers cargo capacity on all its flights, commercialized by the Cargo Department and handles the daily maintenance of its aircraft fleet.

    By Jean d’Amour Mugabo

  • First Made-in-Rwanda nutritious porridge flour unveiled

    Africa Improved Foods (AIF), the Rwanda-based manufacturer has unveiled two commercial products to boost nutrition for the first 1,000 days of child development.

    The high quality complementary foods were launched early this week and Prosper Ndayiragije, AIF’s Country Director is excited and confident about the positive impact that the foods are going to create especially to infants above six months as well as pregnant and breastfeeding mothers.

    “We are proud to have unveiled the Nootri range products, the first of its kind in Rwanda. They are highly nutritious foods that are made in Rwanda using European technology to provide the right foundation to children in their first 1,000 days starting from their conception,” he said.

    The production of Nootri is inspired by solid evidence that the first 1,000 days, from conception to a child’s second birthday, are critical for their physical and mental development. It is widely proven and acknowledged that offering the right nutrition during this window is essential for a child’s healthy growth and cognitive development.

    “Older infants above six months and young children should receive adequate nutrition and high quality complementary foods, while continuing to be breastfed until a child is two years of age or more. AIF finds it important that all children get the opportunity to develop to their full potential by giving them a proper nutrition,” Ndayiragije added.

    However, AIF also recommends exclusive breastfeeding for the first six months of an infant’s life and to continue breastfeeding until the child is two years of age to achieve optimal growth, development and long-term health.

    The Nootri range products are now available in different retail outlets in the country at Rwf1,400 for a 500gms pack of Nootri Mama and Rwf1,500 for a 500gms pack of Nootri Toto. These foods are produced with locally grown maize and soya beans, which are then milled and blended with micronutrient pre-mix, skim milk powder and soya oil.

    AIF has committed to produce at least 45,000 tones of the two products annually to satisfy the local market and export the surplus to the East African region.

    Ndayiragije told IGIHE that AIF also produces non-commercial fortified blended foods called Shisha Kibondo in collaboration with the Government of Rwandan and Super Cereal in collaboration with the World Food Programme, both with the intention to help address children’s malnutrition and stunting amongst the population at the base of the pyramid.

    AIF Rwanda is a joint venture between the Government of Rwanda and a consortium of Royal DSM, Dutch development bank (FMO), DFID Impact Acceleration Facility managed by CDC Group plc and IFC, the investment arm of the World Bank.

    President Paul Kagame takes a close look at Nootritoto, one of AIF Rwanda's commercial products during a brief tour of the plant.

    By Jean d’Amour Mugabo

  • Rwanda celebrates Forests Day with call for more private Investment in Forestry and Water Sectors

    Rwanda celebrated the 2017 International Forests Day with a call for more private investment and strong partnership in water resources management and forest landscape restoration.

    The Minister of Natural Resources, Vincent Biruta, made the call yesterday at Kigali Serena Hotel during a stakeholders’ symposium on investment opportunities in forests and water sectors.

    Organized as a part of celebrating the Forests Day which is succeeded by the World Water Day on 22ndMarch, the symposium has been graced by Government officials, Ambassador of the Kingdom of Netherlands, representatives of Belgium and Germany Embassies in Rwanda and many representatives of the private sector, NGOs, the civil society, churches and financial institutions.

    In his keynote speech delivered to participants, Hon. Minister of Natural Resource Vincent Birutahighlighted that Rwanda presents a unique investment opportunities for forestry and water sectors to cope with the rapidly growing country with extremely valuable natural resources threatened by development pressures.

    “The private sector has the power to save forests and water and generate enormous social, economic and ecological benefits.

    To date, the business community has played a relatively obscure role in restoration of deforested and degraded land, yet it has many of the essential capabilities required to scale up and accelerate landscape restoration such as a hands-on approach, the ability to mobilize local communities and the resources to finance on the ground projects,” Minister Biruta noted.

    He reiterates the government of Rwanda’s commitment to creating a favourable environment for the private sector to engage in different landscape restoration intervention and investments adding that the Ministry of Natural Resources is taking the private sector as a vital partner to achieve the national landscape restoration targets.

    Apart from private sector, Minister Biruta also calls upon the civil society including financial institutions, Energy and Water Producers, Manufacturers,Telecommunication Companies, Mining Companies, the service and industrial sector at large to integrate forestry and water investments in their plans and policies.

    “We shall strive to build stronger partnership between government, development partners, the private sector and civil society in order to raise the momentum for investments in forests and water”, He underlines.

    For the effective management of water resources there is Integrated Water Resources Management (IWRM) Investment Fund which aims to facilitate Government of Rwanda investments in structural and non-structural projects for the management of Rwanda’s water resources.

    Investment projects backed by the fund will concentrate on issues of importance in the context of IWRM, such as erosion control, soil conservation, land husbandry and landscape rehabilitation, flood protection, riverbank protection, water supply system rehabilitation, and waste management.

    The Fund is managed by the GoR, with technical support from Water for Growth Rwanda.

    Team Leader of Water for Growth Rwanda, EbelSmidt says “The Embassy of the Kingdom of the Netherlands has reserved €18 million for investments which are linked to the plans identified in the four demonstration catchment areas.”

    The Dutch Ambassador to Rwanda, Frederique de Man clarifies that the Fund is certainly not only collaboration between Rwanda and the Netherlands.

    “We welcome other partners to contribute to the fund. Most importantly, the mechanism of this Fund should succeed in triggering more private investment”

    In the quest for the Green economy, Rwanda also established FONERWA as an engine of green growth in Rwanda and serves as an example for what’s possible – in Africa and around the world.

    The fund invests in the best public and private projects that have the potential for transformative change and that align with Rwanda’s commitment to building a strong green economy. The Green Fund also provides expert technical assistance to ensure the success of its investments.

    The Minister of Natural Resources, Vincent Biruta during a stakeholders’ symposium on investment opportunities in forests and water sectors yesterday at Kigali Serena Hotel.

  • Israel’s African ally: President Paul Kagame, hero of the Rwandan genocide

    On May 21 our organization, The World Values Network, will present President Paul Kagame of Rwanda with the Dr. Miriam and Sheldon G. Adelson Prize for Outstanding Friendship with the Jewish People. The award comes at our Champions of Jewish Values International Awards Gala in New York City, which in previous years has honored luminaries like Elie Wiesel, Ambassador Ron Dermer, Sen. Bob Menendez (D-N.J.), Dr. Mehmet Oz, Newt Gingrich, Sean Penn, Anne Frank’s closest childhood friend, Jacqueline van Maarsen, and Sir Ben Kingsley.

    As a head of state, few friends of the Jewish people and Israel deserve it more than President Kagame.

    Of chief importance, of course, is Kagame’s unmatched humanitarian achievement in being the one man living today to have ever stopped a genocide.

    In 1994, as Hutu militants and civilians hacked to death over a million innocent men, women and children, the entire world watched and remained silent — a tragic trend with which we Jews are all too familiar. Kagame, however, rebuilt his army, the Rwandan Patriotic Front, in Burundi and launched a startling, brilliant campaign that saw him reconquer Rwanda and restore calm all within three months. In doing so he saved millions of lives, even as the United Nations Peacekeepers under Kofi Annan largely withdrew, leaving Rwanda to its grisly fate.

    Since then, Kagame has helped the nation of Rwanda rise from the ashes of genocide to become one of the most promising countries on the African continent. He inherited one of the most broken nations on earth. Yet, in the past years he’s overseen the rebuilding of the country’s institutions from the ground up, with Rwanda becoming a budding tech powerhouse.

    A personal stickler for cleanliness, he has made Rwanda one of the cleanest countries on earth. Litter there is virtually nonexistent. A self-made man, his purpose is to grant Rwanda the dignity of self-sufficiency by developing industry and reducing foreign aid, a goal toward which he has made considerable progress. He created the Rwandan Development Board where companies can be registered in just six hours, cutting through what would normally be months of government regulation and red tape. And, as a great military strategist, he has insisted, like Israel, on the strength of Rwanda’s defense forces so that no one can slaughter his people again.

    Few personalities alive have brought healing and harmony to such a devastated people. I have personally witnessed the monthly meetings in towns across Rwanda where all citizens now meet as brothers and friends.

    But our organization honors President Kagame not just for what he’s done for his people but for what he continues to do for the Jewish nation.

    In recent years, Paul Kagame has risen to the fore of the international arena as one of the strongest allies of Israel and Jewry.

    Across the world, hostility toward Israel is becoming the norm, proving the sad historical trend that anti-Semitism is the world’s oldest hatred. I am a great lover of Africa. But the African Union has at times been dominated by harsh and unfair critics of Israel like Egypt, Libya and, most surprising of all, the great South Africa.

    The African Union has already denied Israel observer status three times — a privilege it has offered such countries as Turkey, Haiti, Serbia, Ukraine, and the Palestinians. This, despite Israel’s offers of assistance to the continent in agriculture, chemical engineering, mining, irrigation and hydro-electricity — industries that are critical to many African countries and within which Israel is an international leader. In fact, Israel has diplomatic relations with only 11 out of the 54 African Union member-states.

    When my daughter Chana served as a soldier in the Israel Defense Forces, she met the Rwandan chief of staff who was visiting Israel and mentioned to him that her father had for years been deeply attached to Rwanda because of the experiences it shared with the Jewish people. Through that introduction I ended up visiting Rwanda and meeting its eloquent foreign minister, Louise Mushikiwabo, who announced at a press conference we organized in New York City in October 2012 that Rwanda planned to open an embassy in Israel.

    In 2013 I brought together the world’s two most important names in anti-genocide activism, Nobel Peace Laureate Elie Wiesel and Paul Kagame of Rwanda, for a public conversation I moderated on how we can prevent mass slaughter in the modern era. In 2014 I was invited by President Kagame to offer a keynote address at the 20th Anniversary of the Rwandan Genocide at Amahoro National Stadium in Kigali.

    Since then, President Kagame has solidified his stalwart support of the Jewish State and his friendship with the Jewish people. Last July he joined the leaders of Ethiopia, Uganda and Kenya in inviting the prime minister of Israel to visit his country. Before that, the president had visited Israel himself on a few occasions, most famously for Shimon Peres’s 90th birthday, where the two presidents sat immediately beside one another.

    Kagame’s actions of friendship toward the Jewish people and Israel have had a global impact. In 2014, Rwanda used its position as a rotating-member of the U.N. Security Council to stop an anti-Israel resolution that called on Israel to withdraw to the suicidal pre-June 1967 lines by late 2017, and the establishment of a Palestinian state, which all polls show would be quickly overtaken by genocidal Hamas, with east Jerusalem as its capital. Rwanda abstained on the vote, depriving the Palestinians of the nine votes they needed to pass the biased motion. Banjamin Netanyahu thanked Kagame personally for this act.

    Rwanda likewise abstained from the 2011 UNESCO vote to admit Palestine as a state, along with the General Assembly vote in 2012 that sought to grant the Palestinians non-member observer state status. Such actions would have prejudged final status negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians, would have inflamed the region and undermined efforts at peace.

    Just last September, at the International Atomic Energy Agency, Rwanda was one of four African countries that voted against an Egyptian resolution calling for international monitoring of Israel’s nuclear facilities.

    It was therefore fitting that last week, after our organization announced we’d be presenting President Kagame with the Adelson Prize, AIPAC also announced that President Kagame would be addressing its policy conference this month in Washington. It will mark the first time ever that an African leader will address the pro-Israel lobbying group in person.

    In all, President Kagame’s kinship with the Jewish people is natural. After all, Rwanda is a brother-nation to the people of Israel. We are among the few peoples on earth healing from the torturous trials of genocide. We are bound, however, not by the horrors of our history or the pain of the past but by our shared commitment to building a more harmonious, promising and blessed future, bringing together people of different ethnicities as one people under God.

    It is in this shared mission of renewal that Kagame has found true friendship with the Jewish people and Israel. It’s a friendship that, unlike many others that occur between nations, is rooted not in expediency but in values; not in opportunity but in hope.

    Israel’s African ally: President Paul Kagame, hero of the Rwandan genocide

    Shmuley Boteach is an American Orthodox rabbi, an international author of over 30 books, a TV host, activist and speaker. He was rabbi to Michael Jackson, Cory Booker and other public figures and has been recognized as one of the nation’s most influential rabbis by Newsweek and The Washington Post. Reach him on Twitter @RabbiShmuley.

    Source:The Hill

  • Finally: Vatican apologizes for church role in Rwanda genocide

    Pope Francis has today begged forgiveness for the “sins and failings of the church and its members” during Rwanda’s 1994 genocide against Tutsi, and told Rwanda’s president that he hoped his apology would help the country heal.

    In an extraordinary statement after Francis’ meeting with Rwandan President Paul Kagame, the Vatican acknowledged that the church itself bore blame, as well as some Catholic priests and nuns who “succumbed to hatred and violence, betraying their own evangelical mission” by participating in the genocide.

    During the 100-day genocide, many of the victims died at the hands of priests, clergymen and nuns, according to some accounts by survivors, and the Rwandan government says many died in the churches where they had sought refuge.

    During the 25-minute meeting in the Apostolic Palace, Francis “implored anew God’s forgiveness for the sins and failings of the church and its members,” the Vatican said.

    He “expressed the desire that this humble recognition of the failings of that period, which unfortunately disfigured the face of the church, may contribute to a ‘purification of memory’ and may promote, in hope and renewed trust, a future of peace.”

    The Rwandan government has long pressured the church to apologize for its complicity in the genocide, but both the Vatican and the local church have been reluctant to do so. The church has long said those church officials who committed crimes acted individually.

    In 1996, St. John Paul II refused to take blame on the church’s part for what transpired in Rwanda, saying in a letter to Rwandan bishops that: “The church in itself cannot be held responsible for the misdeeds of its members who have acted against evangelical law.”

    Four years later, however, he did make a general apology for a host of Catholic sins and crimes over its 2,000-year history.

    Rwanda’s Catholic bishops last year apologized for “all the wrongs the church committed.”

    The ministry of local government rejected the apology then as inadequate. During Rwanda’s annual dialogue in December, Kagame said he didn’t understand why the church was so reluctant to apologize for genocide when popes have apologized for much lesser crimes.

    “I don’t understand why the pope would apologize for sexual offenses, whether it is in the U.S., Ireland or Australia, but cannot apologize for the role of the church in the genocide that happened here,” Kagame said at the time.

    On Monday, the Rwandan government called Francis’ meeting with Kagame a “positive step forward.”

    “Today’s meeting was characterized by a spirit of openness and mutual respect,” said Foreign Minister Louise Mushikiwabo. “It allows us to build a stronger base for restoring harmony between Rwandans and the Catholic Church.”

    However, Mushikiwabo repeated charges that even before 1994, Catholic institutions helped divide Rwandans and “laid the intellectual foundation for genocide ideology.”

    “Today, genocide denial and trivialization continue to flourish in certain groups within the church and genocide suspects have been shielded from justice within Catholic institutions,” the statement said.

    With slight edits from AP

    President Paul Kagame with Pope Francis today in Vatican

  • Gahutu attacks Education Minister over Rusizi University closure

    The Chancellor and Legal Representative of Rusizi International University, Dr Gahutu Pascal has written to the Prime Minister claiming that the suspension of his university teaching services was unlawful, illegally influenced by the Minister of Education.

    In the letter written on 11th March 2017, Dr Gahutu appealed for justice saying the Minister of Education based his decision to close the university on conflicts among shareholders of Rusizi International University.

    Dr Gahutu explained that the Minister of Education has on several occasions declined meeting him face to face for talks but rather meets his colleagues with whom they’re conflicting.

    In the letter, Dr Gahutu talks about the minister being behind his imprisonment in February 2017 accused of using forged documents and misallocating university resources.

    Dr Gahutu was arrested on 8th February 2017 and appeared in court on 20th February 2017 for a bail application hearing where-after he was released on 24th February.

    He explained that Rusizi University fulfills requirements of higher learning institutions and universities since its establishment in 2015. He claims the recent audit to have been done with vested motives. Dr Gahutu requested the Prime Minister to analyze all these cases with the aim of saving students in the region who are struggling for education services far from home and lecturers who may lose jobs.

    Rusizi University was licensed to operate in Rwanda on 20th March 2015 but has since been linked to mismanagement and conflicts among shareholders.

    At the beginning of February 2017, Dr Mugisha Sebasaza Innocent, the Executive Director of Higher Education Council in Rwanda said that they were working on a report derived from a recent forensic audit on standards in higher learning institutions universities to be released soon.

    On 16th March 2017, another higher learning institution, Gitwe University, announced to the student community that the Ministry of Education had suspended three courses including medicine, laboratory and general nursing.

    The closure followed a forensic audit carried out by the Ministry which established that the university lacked major necessities including; lecturers, laboratory equipment and library among other pedagogical materials. Affected students have since been sent home.

    The Chancellor and Legal Representative of Rusizi International University, Dr Gahutu Pascal.

  • Five genocide memorials to be upgraded

    The National Commission for the Fight Against Genocide (CNLG) has unveiled a plan to upgrade five genocide memorials to the level of Kigali Genocide Memorial at Gisozi.

    The executive secretary of CNLG, Dr Bizimana Jean Damascène has made the comments following parliament observations on 14th March 2017 that some employees at the Memorial have poor command of foreign languages.

    The latter was the only memorial in Rwanda having well trained employees in welcoming and guiding visitors, explaining history of the 1994 genocide against Tutsi. Their competencies, however, were recently questioned by parliament.

    Commenting on the issue, Dr Bizimana said : “It is difficult to be fluent in all languages but employees at Gisozi memorial try their best. What I assure you is that we will offer more relevant trainings extended to more genocide memorials beyond Gisozi.”

    “There are more five genocide memorials on national level though Gisozi is the most visited. These include Murambi, Bisesero, Nyarubuye, Nyamata and Ntarama. They also have permanent employees but we want to equip them with better competencies to the level of Kigali Memorial,” he added.

    Dr Bizimana has explained that Gisozi memorial has to be upgraded to international level.

    “Training is a regular and continuing process. This is where we are going to put much emphasis in collaboration with AEGIS Trust and other international partner organizations,” he said.

    The executive secretary of CNLG, Dr Bizimana Jean Damascène

  • RSSB to raise pensioners pay

    Rwanda Social Security Board (RSSB) has unveiled a plan to raise pension within four months following complaints from pensioners that existing payments are meager that cannot meet their needs given the current market prices.

    Talking to RBA, The president of Association of Retired Employees in Rwanda (ARR), Modeste Munyuzangabo has said “We don’t know what hinders the process of raising pension. We have been complaining that the cost of living has changed and the pension can’t sustain one in the current market prices.”

    Didas Niyonzima, another pensioner in Kigali city has explained that he receives Rwf 5000 per month which can only be spent on buying vegetables .He advises RSSB to revise the pension upwards to match the prevailing cost of living.

    The Director General of RSSB, Gatera Jonathan has said that the matter is well known adding that payments will be raised by July 2017.

    “I cannot be precise but the pension will have been raised by July 2017,” he said.

    RSSB collects at least Rwf 59 billion as pension contributions per year, pays Rwf 16 billion and allocates the rest to long term saving projects.

  • Amare:The new Brussels Airlines and Tomorrowland’s airbus enters the fleet

    New Airbus A320 codenamed Amare has already got into the fleet of Brussels Airlines to mainly facilitate visitors from all over the world to Brussels, Belgium, for Tomorrowland, the annual music festival that brings together young people during the summer season.

    Amare completion took nine months and made its maiden flight to Vienna, Austria, a fortnight ago, opening an amazing journey spanning the skies over Europe and beyond until 2022.

    “Amare is not just an airplane; it brings people’s hearts together all the year round and symbolises some of the key values of Tomorrowland: love, friendship and unity,” reads the Brussels Airlines’ statement.

    Every summer since 2012, Brussels Airlines flies the world to De Schorre in Boom, Belgium, with visitors from more than 200 countries gathering for Tomorrowland, the magical music festival which calls itself the most international gathering in the world. During the festival, young people from Swaziland and Sweden to Fiji come together for an unforgettable weekend and friendship without borders as they enjoy the festival as well as discovering the rest of the country.

    The statement states that Brussels Airlines and Tomorrowland created Amare, the 180-seats aircraft with a cruising speed of 850km/h, operating 50 destinations in Europe and Middle East in order to bring people together for five years. Last summer Brussels Airlines flew more than 10,000 People of Tomorrow to Brussels on their 108 Tomorrowland flights.

    “In order to make flying with Amare a complete experience, special mood lighting is foreseen in the aircraft cabin. To get everyone in the right atmosphere, the Tomorrowland Hymn by Hans Zimmer is played every time travellers board Amare,” reads part of the statement.

    Fourth Belgian Icon

    Amare is the fourth special livery plane that Brussels Airlines adds to its Belgian Icons series. As an ambassador for Belgium, the airline wants to bring the best of Belgium to the world. In 2014 the company decided to dedicate Rakcham aircraft to Tintin and instantly became one of the most photographed planes in the world. In 2015, two Belgian Icons were unveiled to the public, namely Magritte, dedicated to surrealist painter René Magritte, and Trident, the aircraft of the Belgian Red Devils, the Belgian national football team. With Amare, Brussels Airlines now pays tribute to Tomorrowland, which has in fact become a true Belgian Icon.

    Brussels Airlines, a member of Lufthansa Group and a Star Alliance member, is the Belgian airline that offers the widest choice of flights to and from the capital of Europe, Brussels Airport.

    The company has more than 3,500 employees and 49 aircraft operating some 300 flights daily, connecting Brussels to over 90 premium European and African destinations and New York JFK, Washington D.C. and Toronto in Canada. As from this month (March 2017), the airline will operate five weekly flights to Mumbai, India.
    On long haul flights, the airline operates an all new Business Class with full flatbeds and state of the art inflight entertainment, and a brand new Economy class with ergonomic seats and individual inflight entertainment touchscreens. Long-haul flights are operated with Airbus A330-200 and A330-300 aircraft.

    In addition to its 23 destinations in Africa and North America, Brussels Airlines and its intercontinental partners also offer long-haul codeshare flights to the United Arab Emirates, Japan and Thailand.

    Founded in 2002 and owned by SN Airholding, Brussels Airlines offers cargo capacity on all its flights, commercialized by the Cargo Department and handles the daily maintenance of its aircraft fleet.

    Amare airbus

    By Jean d’Amour Mugabo

  • Rwandan in South Africa burnt to death

    Rwandan in South Africa burnt to death

    A Rwandan living in South Africa Cape Town, in Philippi, was burnt to death at the end of last week following accusations of seducing another man’s lover.

    The dead has been identified as Ndizeye Isaac was born 32 years ago in Nyakabuye of Rusizi district.

    According to credible information from his relatives in South Africa, the deceased went on a tour with his girlfriend and finding it difficult to return to his residence after 2am , he decided to spend the rest of the night at the home of the lady.

    Later, neighbors saw their house on fire and found Ndizeye, his girlfriend and a child all burnt beyond recognition.

    Ndizeye leaves a 4-year old boy. Authorities in South Africa have requested to conduct DNA test to seek whether the child burnt along with the couple belongs to Ndizeye so the family can bury the body.

    IGIHE has learnt that Ndizeye had received warning from a South African man against being in love with the lady.

    It is suspected the other lover bunt the trio with car tyres.

    Philippi is one of Cape Town’s most violent and drug-infested suburbs.

    Ndizeye, his girlfriend and a child all  burnt beyond recognition.