Author: Théophile Niyitegeka

  • Rubavu: Youth crime preventers streamline community policing activities

    {Members of Rwanda Youth Volunteers in Community Policing (RYVCP) in Rubavu District have resolved to strengthen their efforts safety and development activities in the district.}

    The decision was reached at the end of the one-day meeting of all coordinators of the twelve sectors of Rubavu, held recently to review the activities and performance of the youth volunteers as per the set targets.

    The meeting adopted a five-point roadmap including streamlining partnership with security organs and local leaders to ensure successful implementation of security and development programmes; mass mobilization for more youth members, and effective performance of committees.

    Present was also the District Community Liaison Officer (DCLO), Inspector of Police (IP) Solange Nyiraneza, and the district coordinator of RYVCP, Jean Bosco Rwibasira.

    Out of over 102000 members of the youth volunteers’ organization countrywide, over 19800 are in Rubavu.

    The meeting also emphasized effective use of police communication channels for real time information sharing, active participation in human security activities like Umuganda and supporting vulnerable families partly through providing them shelter; fronting the ideal of Pan African Movement (PAM-Rwanda).

    Pan African Movement-Rwanda, which was officially launched in the country in 2015, has the support of the Government with President Paul Kagame as its patron.

    The movement advocates for unity of Africans, advocates for gender equality and fighting gender based violence, among others.

    “It is both having the bigger number of members but who are also committed to the general cause of implementing all policies and programmes towards security and development,” Rwibasira said.

    “With now leadership structures at the district, sector and cell levels, the target is to have at least 3000 members in each of the 12 sectors (36, 000) in Rubavu,” he added.

    Currently, all coordinators and members of executive committees at the district level were availed with easy means of communication with the police while the force also runs at least nine toll-free lines.

    They include 116 for Child-Help-Line, 3512 for GBV, 110 (Maritime); 111 (Fire and Rescue Brigade); 112 (Emergency); 113 (traffic accident); 997 (corruption); 3511 for abuse by police officers; 3029 for Isange One Stop Centre.

    “We are going to work together to ensure that each and every members is defined by Rwandan values, and strengthen our outreach programmes in community gatherings and in home visits,” Rwibasira explained.

    Also on their agenda is environmental protection.

    During their recent special Umuganda, the youth volunteers in Rubavu conducted various activities that were valued at about Rwf3 million. They included renovating houses for the vulnerable families and roads that connects different villages in Kanama Sector.

    The Rwanda Youth Volunteers in Community Policing include secondary and university students, and those who have so far graduated. It was created in 2013 by the youth themselves with an aim of contributing to the socio-transformation by fighting and preventing crimes in partnership with police and local authorities.

  • 8 things your partner wants to hear regularly

    {Communication is important in every relationship and you keep the spark in your relationship alive when you say the right things.}

    Here are 8 things your partner wants to hear from you regularly

    {{1. “You make a difference in my life”}}

    There are certain efforts your partner make always that makes a difference in your life and it’s important you appreciate your partner for such efforts as you make him/her do even more when you appreciate.

    {{2. “You are my priority”}}

    Your partner has to be your priority and you make your partner feel extra special when you tell him/her that you consider him/her before you do anything or take any decision.

    {{3. “I can’t find anyone better”}}

    You make your partner know he/she is the best in the world when you tell him/her that you can’t find anyone better.

    {{4. “I love being with you”}}

    When was the last time you told your partner this? It’s important you always remind your partner that you enjoy his/her company and love being with him/her.

    {{5. “How was your day?”}}

    This is a very important question everyone should ask their partner everyday. Small gestures like asking your partner about his/her day can do a lot more than you can imagine for your relationship.

    {{6. “I’m sorry”}}

    Saying sorry when you are wrong doesn’t make you less of who you are, it only shows how much you value your relationship. If you value your relationship, you should be brave enough to admit your mistakes and apologise.

    {{7. “I like it when you do that”}}

    Appreciating the little things in a relationship matters so if you really like something your partner does, don’t forget to let your partner know.

    {{8. “I love you”}}

    You should never let a day pass without telling your partner you love him or her. Always remind your partner of how much you love him/her.

    Source:Elcrema

  • Rulindo: Police sensitize public on road safety

    {Police in Rulindo District have begun the exercise to educate residents on proper road usage in a bid to minimize road accidents and improve road safety.}

    The campaign comes after recent accidents registered in the area some of which were attributed to pedestrians’ poor observance of traffic regulations and lack of knowledge on road signs such as zebra-crossings.

    The District Police Commander of Rulindo, Supt. Aphrodis Gashumba, said that road safety means each and everyone having knowledge on safe usage and the meaning of signposts.

    He reminded them that pavements were constructed entirely for pedestrians which they should use rather than working in the road, which results into such accidents.

    He also advised them against crossing the road aimlessly or while speaking on phone.

    Inspector of Police (IP) Francois Ndayambaje the district traffic officer asked cyclists to always wear reflectors while riding especially at night.

    IP Ndayambaje castigated members of the public who benefits from road accidents by stealing merchandise during accidents.

    Residents were also asked to share information about errant drivers and passengers who litter roads by dropping empty bottles on road sides.

  • What happened to the sun over 7,000 years ago?

    {Analysis of tree rings reveals highly abnormal solar activity in the mid-Holocene.}

    An international team led by researchers at Nagoya University, along with US and Swiss colleagues, has identified a new type of solar event and dated it to the year 5480 BC; they did this by measuring carbon-14 levels in tree rings, which reflect the effects of cosmic radiation on the atmosphere at the time. They have also proposed causes of this event, thereby extending knowledge of how the sun behaves.

    When the activity of the sun changes, it has direct effects on the earth. For example, when the sun is relatively inactive, the amount of a type of carbon called carbon-14 increases in the earth’s atmosphere. Because carbon in the air is absorbed by trees, carbon-14 levels in tree rings actually reflect solar activity and unusual solar events in the past. The team took advantage of such a phenomenon by analyzing a specimen from a bristlecone pine tree, a species that can live for thousands of years, to look back deep into the history of the sun.

    “We measured the 14C levels in the pine sample at three different laboratories in Japan, the US, and Switzerland, to ensure the reliability of our results,” A. J. Timothy Jull of the University of Arizona says. “We found a change in 14C that was more abrupt than any found previously, except for cosmic ray events in AD 775 and AD 994, and our use of annual data rather than data for each decade allowed us to pinpoint exactly when this occurred.”

    The team attempted to develop an explanation for the anomalous solar activity data by comparing the features of the 14C change with those of other solar events known to have occurred over the last couple of millennia.

    “Although this newly discovered event is more dramatic than others found to date, comparisons of the 14C data among them can help us to work out what happened to the sun at this time,” Fusa Miyake of Nagoya University says. She adds, “We think that a change in the magnetic activity of the sun along with a series of strong solar bursts, or a very weak sun, may have caused the unusual tree ring data.”

    Although the poor understanding of the mechanisms behind unusual solar activity has hampered efforts to definitively explain the team’s findings, they hope that additional studies, such as telescopic findings of flares given off by other sun-like stars, could lead to an accurate explanation.

    Picture of the bristlecone pine forest in California, the United States where the bristlecone pine sample for this study used to live (taken by Prof. A.J.T. Jull). In this forest, there are many living old trees exceed 1000 years old. Harsh environments make bristlecone pines very dense and long lives.
  • 4 things your interviewer wants you to know about having a successful interview

    {As you brace up for that tough interview, and you practice answers to the probable questions you’ll be asked, have you ever thought about what the interviewer wants from you in that interview?}

    Interviewers are humans like you, and they have what they expect from you. These are some of their expectations:

    {{1. To look charming }}

    Believe it or not, your interviewer wants you to look good and charming as you walk into that door. The interviewer wants to be swept away by your aura, charm and personality. This will make the interviewer warm up to you.

    2. The interviewer wants you to feel confident about the interview. The interviewer sees your confidence level, and they’d love it if you had more belief in yourself.

    3. The interviewer expects you to represent yourself very well. Be the best representation of yourself, and try to be reasonable in the answers you give. Drop every form of nonchalance at home.

    4. Your interviewer also expects you to listen, to be focused and to be professional in the interview.

    If you can bring these into your interview, you’ll definitely leave an impression on your interviewer, and you’ll be one step away from getting that job.

  • Gene therapy restores hearing in deaf mice, down to a whisper

    {Improved delivery vector better penetrates the inner ear, also restores balance in a mouse model of Usher syndrome.}

    In the summer of 2015, a team at Boston Children’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School reported restoring rudimentary hearing in genetically deaf mice using gene therapy. Now the Boston Children’s research team reports restoring a much higher level of hearing — down to 25 decibels, the equivalent of a whisper — using an improved gene therapy vector developed at Massachusetts Eye and Ear.

    The new vector and the mouse studies are described in two back-to-back papers in Nature Biotechnology.

    While previous vectors have only been able to penetrate the cochlea’s inner hair cells, the first Nature Biotechnology study showed that a new synthetic vector, Anc80, safely transferred genes to the hard-to-reach outer hair cells when introduced into the cochlea (see images). This study’s three Harvard Medical School senior investigators were Jeffrey R. Holt PhD, of Boston Children’s Hospital; Konstantina Stankovic, MD, PhD, of Mass. Eye and Ear and Luk H. Vandenberghe, PhD, who led Anc80’s development in 2015 at Mass. Eye and Ear’s Grousbeck Gene Therapy Center.

    “We have shown that Anc80 works remarkably well in terms of infecting cells of interest in the inner ear,” says Stankovic, an otologic surgeon at Mass. Eye and Ear and associate professor of otolaryngology at Harvard Medical School. “With more than 100 genes already known to cause deafness in humans, there are many patients who may eventually benefit from this technology.”

    The second study, led by Gwenaëlle Géléoc, PhD, of the Department of Otolaryngology and F.M. Kirby Neurobiology Center at Boston Children’s, used Anc80 to deliver a specific corrected gene in a mouse model of Usher syndrome, the most common genetic form of deaf-blindness that also impairs balance function.

    “This strategy is the most effective one we’ve tested,” Géléoc says. “Outer hair cells amplify sound, allowing inner hair cells to send a stronger signal to the brain. We now have a system that works well and rescues auditory and vestibular function to a level that’s never been achieved before.”

    Ushering in gene therapy for deafness

    Géléoc and colleagues at Boston Children’s Hospital studied mice with a mutation in Ush1c, the same mutation that causes Usher type 1c in humans. The mutation causes a protein called harmonin to be nonfunctional. As a result, the sensory hair cell bundles that receive sound and signal the brain deteriorate and become disorganized, leading to profound hearing loss.

    When a corrected Ush1c gene was introduced into the inner ears of the mice, the inner and outer hair cells in the cochlea began to produce normal full-length harmonin. The hair cells formed normal bundles (see images) that responded to sound waves and signaled the brain, as measured by electrical recordings.

    Most importantly, deaf mice treated soon after birth began to hear. Géléoc and colleagues showed this first in a “startle box,” which detects whether a mouse jumps in response to sudden loud sounds. When they next measured responses in the auditory regions of the brain, a more sensitive test, the mice responded to much quieter sounds: 19 of 25 mice heard sounds quieter than 80 decibels, and a few could heard sounds as soft as 25-30 decibels, like normal mice.

    “Now, you can whisper, and they can hear you,” says Géléoc, also an assistant professor of otolaryngology at Harvard Medical School.

    Margaret Kenna, MD, MPH, a specialist in genetic hearing loss at Boston Children’s who does research on Usher syndrome, is excited about the work. “Anything that could stabilize or improve native hearing at an early age would give a huge boost to a child’s ability to learn and use spoken language,” she says. “Cochlear implants are great, but your own hearing is better in terms of range of frequencies, nuance for hearing voices, music and background noise, and figuring out which direction a sound is coming from. In addition, the improvement in balance could translate to better and safer mobility for Usher Syndrome patients.”

    Restoring balance and potentially vision

    Since patients (and mice) with Usher 1c also have balance problems caused by hair-cell damage in the vestibular organs, the researchers also tested whether gene therapy restored balance. It did, eliminating the erratic movements of mice with vestibular dysfunction (see images) and, in another test, enabled the mice to stay on a rotating rod for longer periods without falling off.

    Further work is needed before the technology can be brought to patients. One caveat is that the mice were treated right after birth; hearing and balance were not restored when gene therapy was delayed 10-12 days. The researchers will do further studies to determine the reasons for this. However, when treated early, the effects persisted for at least six months, with only a slight decline between 6 weeks and 3 months. The researchers also hope to test gene therapy in larger animals, and plan to develop novel therapies for other forms of genetic hearing loss.

    Usher syndrome also causes blindness by causing the light-sensing cells in the retina to gradually deteriorate. Although these studies did not test for vision restoration, gene therapy in the eye is already starting to be done for other disorders.

    “We already know the vector works in the retina,” says Géléoc, “and because deterioration is slower in the retina, there is a longer window for treatment.”

    “Progress in gene therapy for blindness is much further along than for hearing, and I believe our studies take an important step toward unlocking a future of hearing gene therapy,” says Vandenberghe, also an assistant professor of ophthalmology at Harvard Medical School. “In the case of Usher syndrome, combining both approaches to ultimately treat both the blinding and hearing aspects of disease is very compelling, and something we hope to work toward.”

    “This is a landmark study,” says Holt, director of otolaryngology research at Boston Children’s Hospital, who was also a co-author on the second paper. “Here we show, for the first time, that by delivering the correct gene sequence to a large number of sensory cells in the ear, we can restore both hearing and balance to near-normal levels.”

    Unaffected mice, at left, have sensory hair bundles organized in 'V' formations with three rows of cilia (bottom left). This orderly structure falls apart in the mutant mice (middle column), but is dramatically restored after gene therapy treatment.
  • Senior politicians’ retirement benefits reduced

    {The government of Rwanda has reduced emoluments and other fringe benefits offered to retired senior occupiers of political offices from the second to fourth category with cash benefits contracted from 12 to 6 months as per the organic law N°01/2017/OL of 31/01/2017 published in the Official Gazette N° 06of 06/02/2017. }

    High government politicians are classified into four categories; the president of the Republic, the second with the president of Senate, president of parliament and Prime Minister. The third category includes ministers, vice presidents of senate, vice presidents of parliamentary commissions of deputies and State Ministers.

    This category also incorporates other government officials who may be appointed by the president if necessary, province governors and the mayor of Kigali city. The fourth category comprises of senators and parliamentarians.

    Under the new law, a politician retiring without committing crimes leading to conviction in court continues to receive monthly remunerations for six months, a house rent, pocket money to be spent on domestic staff, footing water and electricity bills, security services and money for maintaining his private car.

    This law also indicates that the six months remunerations and facilities are suspended when a politician is appointed to other duties by the government or finds a job in the private sector.

    In case of high profile officials dismissed for malpractices leading him to court, the salary and other benefits will be recorded at the bank and the individual will receive them or not depending on whether he/she becomes innocent or guilty.

    Explaining the law to Senate , the Minister of Public Service and Labor, Uwizeye Judith explained that the reforms brought by the law aim at ensuring good management of public resources.

    The Minister of Public Service and Labor, Uwizeye Judith
  • We are capable of producing high quality products–Kagame

    {When President Paul Kagame visited the Kigali Special Economic Zone (SEZ) in Gasabo District yesterday, he toured four factories manufacturing various high quality products from construction materials, to medical and laboratory consumables, to food products.}

    The factories include StrawTec, which manufactures construction materials; PharmaLab, which produces medical and laboratory consumables; C&H Garments, which manufactures garments for local and international markets; and Africa Improved Foods, which produces fortified foods.

    In an interaction with SEZ business community, the Head of State said that it is not acceptable for Rwandans to import low quality goods while there are locally produced high quality products.

    “This is an opportunity to be part of the global value chain but we should also satisfy our own market. We have to ensure that the investments made here benefit the investors, but most importantly, benefit Rwandans,” President Kagame said.

    The President further reiterated that his visit is in line with the ‘Made in Rwanda’ campaign to embrace locally produced goods and services.

    “A lot has been done but we need to do more to satisfy the local market and compete on regional and international levels. Embracing locally produced goods results from a change of mind-set. We have the ability to produce high quality goods,” the President said.

  • Former Minister Imena to appear in court for bail application hearing

    {The former Minister of State in charge of Mining at the Ministry of Natural Resources, Evode Imena is set to appear in Nyarugenge court on a yet-to-be established date in for a bail application hearing, the Public Prosecution Authority spokesperson has said. }

    He was arrested for on 27th January 2017 along with two other former workers of the ministry on allegations of nepotism during his time as state minister. }

    His co-accused are the former Director of mining inspection unit in the department of Mining, Francis Kayumba and the head of technical department in mining, Joseph Kagabo.

    Prosecution alleges that preliminary evidence links him to nepotism and abuse of office that involved illegal issuance of official documents.

    The former Minister of State in charge of Mining at the Ministry of Natural Resources, Evode Imena was arrested on 27th January 2017 along with two other former workers of the ministry on  allegations of nepotism during his time as state minister.
  • Minecofin to follow up ghost teachers

    {The Ministry of Finance and Economic Planning (MINECOFIN) has unveiled a plan to investigate the case of ghost teachers who have been receiving monthly remunerations in Nyagatare district. }

    The Minister of Finance and Economic Planning,Amb. Claver Gatete noted this yesterday as he appeared before the parliamentary commission in charge of social welfare to explain mismanagement of employees’ cases raised in the Public Service Commission.

    MP, Mukarugema Alphonsine, the vice president of parliamentary commission in charge of social welfare raised concerns on how it happened that ghost teachers found their way on payroll.

    “Among people with whom we held discussions, the worst problem was realized in Nyagatare which recorded the largest number of paid ghost teachers. Rwanda Education Board explained that ‘we release the list of teachers in the annual budget along with their payment list’. Both lists should complement. But when you look back you find some teachers on the list of paid teachers without working. We ask it to make you aware of the matter. How do things go wrong?” she wondered.

    Minister Gatete said they are going to follow up the matter and seek whether it has not expanded to other districts to punish culprits.

    “We have limited budget to execute various activities. When it comes to one Franc lost in malpractices, we act. In this case we can’t wait for the report of the Auditor General. We are following it up as soon as we leave here,” he said.

    The 2015 -2016 Public Service Commission report presented to parliamentarians on 26th January 2017 revealed that Nyagatare district employed 1590 teachers but 1719 teachers receive the salary creating a difference of 129 ghost teachers non-existing personnel.

    The Minister of Finance and Economic Planning,Amb. Claver Gatete.