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  • Will Smith and Wife Seen Showing Love Against Split Rumour

    Will Smith and Wife Seen Showing Love Against Split Rumour

    {{American Movie star Will Smith and his celebrity wife Jada Pinkett have been seen enjoying on Hawaii Beach crashing rumours that they couple was about to split.}}

    The couple is regularly battling breakup rumours in the tabloids, but the married couple of nearly 17 years appeared to be more in love than ever over the weekend.

    Jada, 42, was photographed kissing and holding hands with her 45-year-old husband on the beach in Hawaii. The couple was snapped as they giggled and twirled around on the beach (doesn’t everybody?), appearing relaxed during their getaway.

    Though Will also spent some of his vacation working out with a trainer on the sand, it’s Jada’s super fit bikini body that caught our attention. Can you say ripped?

    Daughter Willow eventually joined her parents down by the ocean as well.

    Last month, the 13-year-old made headlines after a photo of her lying on a bed with her friend, Moises Arias, emerged on social media. Arias was shirtless, which led many to call into question the appropriateness of their relationship as he is 20.

    “Here’s the deal,” Jada told a sea of paparazzi shortly after the incident blew up. “There was nothing sexual about that picture or that situation. You guys are projecting your trash onto it. You’re acting like covert pedophiles and that’s not cool.”

    We’re guessing the Smith clan was definitely ready for a drama-free vacation.

  • Ministry Bans ‘Welcome to Bed’ Video Song

    Ministry Bans ‘Welcome to Bed’ Video Song

    {{Just less than a week after its release, ‘Welcome to Bed’ video song has been banned by the Ministry of Culture and sports after holding a lengthy meeting aimed at assessing the song and how it contravenes Rwandan cultural values.}}

    Mr Makuza Lauren an official in charge of culture development at the ministry said the ministry has not held any talks with Dr Jiji the producer of ‘Welcome to Bed’ but decision was taken to ban the song after it emerged that the video with extreme scenes.

    He said, “Dr Jiji is a new artist in the Rwanda entertainment industry. As a ministry we commended the Rwandan media for immediately criticising the song soon after it was released. the Video is not good, there is no message in the song”, the official said.

    The decision to ban the song was achieved after a lengthy meeting held on 9 June.

    {{Makuza Lauren from the Ministry of Culture and Sports told IGIHE that the welcome to Bed video song by Dr Jiji has been banned because of lack of message and extreme suggestive scenes. Below are some snap shots from the video song. you can also click to watch the song below.}}

    {{Here is the man behind the controversial song Wlecome to Bed. He calls himself the Ladies lover.}}

    {Click to watch video song}

  • Police Pays Medical Insurance for 500 Families

    Police Pays Medical Insurance for 500 Families

    {{The Rwanda National Police has paid medical insurance premiums for 500 vulnerable families in Karongi District as part of the force’s support to the development of the health sector and poverty eradication in the country. }}

    The insurances were handed over to the beneficiaries on June 9 in Karongi as the force launched the Police Week.

    The week-long exercise are also part of the activities to mark the RNP 14th anniversary and to mark the 20th liberation celebrations.

    Police also distributed 200 mosquito nets to families in Karongi.

    Jeanne d’Arc Gakuba, the Vice President of the Senate, who presided over the official launch, commended the partnership between Police and other institutions and the public especially in reinforcing security and safety in the country.

    “A lot has been achieved in terms of security in the past 20 years and let’s continue to build on that to ensure sustainable security,” Gakuba said.

    She lauded Police for its health development initiatives including the establishment of Kacyiru Police hospital, Isange One stop centre and Rugabano health centre in Karongi.

    Isange which operates under Kacyiru Police hospital provides free medical, psycho-socio and legal services to gender violence victims and is being scaled-up to all district hospitals across the country.

    It has received about 7000 patients since its establishment in 2009.

    Kigabao, on the other had was established in 2007 by RNP in partnership with the Ministry of Health and Karongi district and serves about 800 families living in the area.

    She appealed to residents to strengthen their cooperation with police in fighting and preventing crimes.

    The Inspector General of Police, Emmanuel K. Gasana thanked those who composed songs and poems which he said carry messages that enhance crime prevention like assault, theft and drug abuse.

    “We are here today to celebrate the existing partnership between RNP and Karongi district in ensuring human security and fighting crimes in general,” IGP Gasana said.

    He however said that road accidents and drug abuse, among others, are still major challenges to security and cautioned drivers and motorcyclists against violating traffic rules.

    He also echoed the need to strengthen cooperation to fight those few security threats and report people involved.

    The district mayor, Bernard Kayumba said the partnership with Police has improved security in the district through various awareness campaigns and arresting of suspected criminals.

    Kayumba added that the health centre has helped about 60, 000 patients since its establishment.

    “It’s also our responsibility to ensure our own security and we will continue to strive for it,” he said.

    During the event, Police awarded Indashyikirwa cultural group and Nyirimanzi Dieudonné with Rwf200, 000 each for composing the best song and poem respectively that promote the Police-public partnership.

  • Rwandans Join British to Celebrate Queen’s Birth Day

    Rwandans Join British to Celebrate Queen’s Birth Day

    {Elizabeth II is the constitutional monarch of 16 sovereign states known as the Commonwealth realms, and their territories and dependencies, and head of the 53-member Commonwealth of Nations. She was born on April 21, 1926.}

    {{Rwandans have joined the British in celebrating the birthday of Her Majesty the Queen. This is also a moment for the two countries to reflect on their friendly relations that have also culminated in Rwanda’s joining of the larger commonwealth league of nations which has been headed by the queen for the past 60 years.

    IGIHE held an exclusive interview with William Gelling OBE the British High commissioner in Kigali during which several issues were explored.
    Below is an excerpt of the entire interview;}}

    {{IGIHE}}: Would you walk us through the celebration of Her Majesty’s birthday in Rwanda on Tuesday 10th June?

    {{British High Commissioner}}: This is a happy day for us in the UK and here in Kigali we will be celebrating the birthday of Her Majesty the Queen, which for us is an important day.

    It is also a time to remember the British and Rwandan people who contributed so much to the links between the UK and Rwanda. So we have invited on June 10, several hundred people that have played a role in improving the relations between UK and Rwanda.

    Those invited include business people, charity workers, government officials, ministers, volunteers, staff of the high commission, and everyone has a role to play now.

    {{How is the Queen’s birthday party going to be celebrated specifically in Rwanda?}}

    I will be doing it twice this year; I will be doing it once in Kigali, one in Bujumbura. In Kigali, we are hosting a large party; I think one of the largest we’ve done. I will be making a short speech about what has been special for the UK and the UK-Rwanda relations; I will be mentioning for example that we had the birth of a new prince in the UK, Prince George, which has been an exciting time for people in commonwealth especially in the UK.

    I will be talking about how previously the British economy has turned the corner, and is now going strongly and I will be saying that I hope that the British companies looking abroad to invest, would come here to look at the climate in Rwanda which we think is one of the opportunities; in addition to being a secure, stable and very positive place to do business.

    {{What specific opportunities in Rwanda are you recommending to the British entrepreneurs?}}

    We are helping the Rwanda government to see if there are Rwandan goods for exports that we can encourage. So things like honey, nuts and other agricultural products that at the moment are exported in all forms; if there is a way to get more value added to them, packaging them, promoting them, that kind of thing.

    {{The Queen was born in April but we are celebrating her birthday in June. Why? }}

    Her Majesty the Queen’s birthday is on 21st of April. But Queen Victoria, two centuries now, decided that she would always celebrate her birthday during summer, because you know the weather in the UK is unreliable, it is not as reliable as in Rwanda. It made it easier to always celebrate on a date in summer.

    So in the UK now we have two weeks and all over the world, British embassies, companies and people would be celebrating the Queen’s birthday in this two weeks period.

    {{There will be trooping of colours in the UK; will you do the same in Kigali?}}

    Well, you need many thousands of soldiers to do that and I am afraid we don’t have any. But tomorrow we will mark it here in Kigali and on 19th in Bujumbura.

    {{What does the celebration mean to us Rwandans?}}

    For us it’s the celebration of a very long standing leader who has given a lifetime service to the UK, perhaps there is something that Rwandans can relate to, but the Queen is the head of commonwealth, you all know Rwanda joined the commonwealth just a few years ago, so it’s a chance for us to say thank you to her for her leadership at the commonwealth for 60 years but for the ordinary Rwandan it’s a chance to celebrate the ties between the two countries.

    {{How is the birth of Prince George special for British people and the Queen’s birthday?}}

    Prince George was born sometimes ago and for us it is an exciting moment because he is the next person in line to the throne after his father and his father’s father, I suppose for us it shows the future of the monarchy in the UK.

    {{Rwanda and many commonwealth nations count several people who did outstanding actions and risked their lives for citizens. Do such people have rights to recognition as far as the Queen’s birthday honours are concerned?}}

    Some do and some do not. You can have an honorary award and anyone is welcome to recommend someone else for that.

    You can log onto the internet and go to the British government’s website and recommend someone for an honour. You can recommend anyone you think deserves an honour from the queen.

    {{So you mean if nobody in Rwanda was honoured before is because nobody recommended him?}}

    Exactly! You can never guarantee you will get an honour but if there is something that people have done that has particularly helped in education in Rwanda or relations between UK and Rwanda, that’s could be something.

    {{What’s the current level of relations between UK and Rwanda?}}

    I think there are three parts of the relations between the two countries: There is a lot investment from DFID, about £70 or £80 million a year for assisting Rwandan government in its development programs and the Rwandan people.

    This money is very well spent here and we are constantly impressed with the way the government uses that money.

    There is the commercial relationship, as I said I hope it will improve now, and most of my time and my deputy’s is now spent on commercial work. So we are encouraging British and Rwandans to work together.

    And finally there is the political relationship, and we are very much concerned that Rwanda would be a force for stability in the region and we pay tribute to the changes that happened for the last twenty years after genocide.

    And we hope that Rwanda will continue to develop including its democracy in its civil society space.

    {{Some members of the royal family visited several commonwealth realms at the occasion of the Queen’s diamond jubilee on her behalf; is Rwanda receiving a special visitor for the Queen’s 88th anniversary? Or maybe sometimes in the future? }}

    As far as I know at the moment there is planned.

    {{When you say that you are strengthening commercial ties between UK and Rwanda, does it mean that at a particular time UK will stop aid and the country looks after itself?}}

    No! That will continue. But I think what really makes a country secure in a long term is sustainable trade.

    {{I asked the question because most western countries do caution African countries to be more careful about Asian grants. Would you comment on that?}}

    My view on that is that some grants and some contracts cannot be reliable to some countries and more reliable with others.

    It’s up to the Government of Rwanda, I think we have to be very careful about who you sign your contract with to make sure that even if it looks cheap and when it looks cheap you know it will results in poor quality of service.

    {{The US always reacts politically and most of the time takes actions in global issues. It has also been giving its say on regional issues, especially on FDLR putting down their arms; why don’t we see the UK, also a super power, taking microphones on global conflicts? }}

    We do make statements. It’s not for us to lecture anyone but when we feel that we want to make a point, we do it and we will do it.

    {{How would you comment Rwanda’s matching in the footsteps of other developed commonwealth nations?}}

    I think in sense of development, Rwanda is doing enormously well and it has made colossal progress over last twenty years. It’s a fact, when you come to Kigali you can only be impressed.

    And in sense of values to the commonwealth, in many areas, it has well matched, for example education, democracy and others and we are looking forward to working with Rwanda to expand that space of democratic interaction here.

    {{If you were an investor interested in Rwanda, in which sector would you put your money?}}

    I wish I had money to do it, but personally I would put my money in value added agricultural products and if not that I would put my money in some kind of business services in Kigali.

    {Click to watch Video interview} . {{William Gelling OBE the British High Commissioner in Kigali responding to questions from Journalists.}}

  • EALA Drafts Constitution for Political Federation

    EALA Drafts Constitution for Political Federation

    {{The East African Legislative Assembly (EALA) has started the process of drafting a constitution for the political federation and developing the East African Community (EAC) constitution.}}

    During her budget speech, Phyllis Kandie, the chairperson of the Council of Ministers, said the community will also make a comprehensive evaluation of the performance of the customs union, common market and monetary unions and other EAC protocols.

    She observed that the move towards deeper economic integration in the community has gained new impetus with the signing of the Monetary Union protocol at the last EAC summit in Kampala.

    The protocol, she added, is a milestone outlining a ten-year roadmap towards a single currency by the year 2024.

    Partner states are expected to conclude the ratification process by July, 2014. She also added that the EALA is formulating stern legislations to stem increasing poaching of wildlife in the region, among other initiatives.

    The strategy, she stressed, focuses on enforcing tougher penalties, strengthening joint collaboration on law enforcement and capacity building of local communities to work jointly with law enforcement to protect wildlife resources.

    “Due to the increase in poaching, partner states have reiterated their commitment to re-enforce measures to protect our wildlife, Kandie said in the speech to EALA MPs.

    The speech was read by the Tanzanian deputy minister of EAC, Dr. Abdalla Sadallah Abdallah. Kenya’s wildlife service last week arrested two people after seizing a huge haul of ivory of at least 114 poached elephants in the port city of Mombasa.

    The find of 228 tusks and 74 ivory pieces, together weighing well over two tones, is thought to be biggest of its kind in the city so far this year, the wildlife service said.

    Kandie said a Bill on Disaster Risk Reduction and Management has been drafted to provide a legal framework for intervention and assistance to protect people, property, livelihoods and the natural environment affected by both natural and man-made disasters.

    It is expected to be considered by Council in August 2014.

  • Somali Warlord Defects from al-Shabaab

    Somali Warlord Defects from al-Shabaab

    {{A notorious Somali warlord allied to the Islamist al-Shabaab and on UN sanction lists has agreed to quit the extremists, the information ministry said at the weekend.}}

    Powerful arms dealer Mohamed Said Atom, who is under UN Security Council sanctions for “kidnapping, piracy and terrorism”, has been a close ally of the Al-Qaeda linked Shebab.

    But a government statement on Saturday quoted Atom as saying he had left the Shebab, accusing Islamist chief Ahmed Abdi Godane of working for a “foreign agenda.”

    “I would like to declare that as of today I have decided to resolve my religious and political issues through peaceful means and understanding,” Atom said, according to the government.

    Atom, as well as Shebab insurgents, have long operated from the rugged Golis mountains in the northern autonomous Somali region of Puntland, that forms the very tip of the Horn of Africa.

    His defection will be a blow to the Islamists, who have lost a string of towns to a 22,000-strong force of African Union troops fighting alongside the government.

    NV

  • US Embassy in Kampala Warns Against Terror Attack

    US Embassy in Kampala Warns Against Terror Attack

    {{The US embassy in Uganda has warned citizens Friday of the threat of attacks during televised screenings of the World Cup, amid a wave of bombings in east Africa blamed on Islamist insurgents.}}

    The statement warned citizens to “exercise caution when attending large viewing establishments that may attract large crowds.”

    The warning came as police said Friday it was taking reports “seriously” that “Shebab terrorists driving in four vehicles entered Uganda through our border with Kenya,” police spokesman Fred Enanga said.

    No specific group was mentioned in the US warning, but the Shebab or their supporters have been blamed for a string of attacks in the east African region.

    “The targets for these attacks could include hotels, restaurants, nightclubs, shopping malls, diplomatic missions, transportation hubs, religious institutions, government offices, or public transportation,” the US warning added.

    Uganda is a key contributor of troops to the African Union force fighting the Shebab in Somalia, and the Islamists have carried out major attacks in retaliation.

    As well as almost daily attacks inside Somalia, the Shebab have also carried out attacks against other troop contributing nations, including Djibouti and Kenya, including September’s siege of Nairobi’s Westgate shopping mall in which at least 67 people were killed.

    Burundi and Ethiopia have also warned of the threat of attacks.

    NV

  • Ugandan TV Presenter Expected in Court Over Fraud

    Ugandan TV Presenter Expected in Court Over Fraud

    {{A Ugandan TV presenter Junior Dave Kazoora, is expected to appear before a court in Kigali today to answer alleged charges of fraud, IGIHE has reliably learnt.}}

    Kazoora was arrested on Thursday last week by Rwanda National Police over a couple of financial crimes committed between 2012 and 2013.

    Kazoora registered a media advertising company with a Rwandan friend but the duo later disagreed, prompting (Kazoora) to register another company with similar names, which is pointed at as breach of trust.

    According to Rwanda Revenue Authority tax department, a taxpayer who commits fraud is subject to an administrative net of two hundred percent (200%) of the evaded tax.

    In case of conviction, the taxpayer can be imprisoned for a period between six (6) months and two (2) years. -This applies if the taxpayer voluntarily evaded such tax, used false accounts or falsi fied documents.

  • Odinga’s Son Arrested over Driving Drunk

    Odinga’s Son Arrested over Driving Drunk

    Fidel Odinga has been fined ($345) Sh30,000 after he admitted driving under the influence of alcohol.

    Fidel, the son of former Prime Minister Raila Odinga, was not in court but sent his lawyer instead.

    Fidel, who was arrested along Ngong Road on Friday night joins a growing list of prominent personalities who have been arrested for driving under the influence of alcohol.

    Among those arrested previously are a judge and a Senator.

    The High Court on Monday morning ruled that alcoblow will remain in use after dismissing two cases filed by a bar owner and city motorist.

    {Fidel Odinga arrested for driving under the influence of alcohol}

    {capitalfm}

  • Khartoum Denies Shipping Weapons to Libya

    Khartoum Denies Shipping Weapons to Libya

    {{The spokesperson for the Sudan Armed Forces (SAF),al-Sawarmi Khalid Sa’ad, has denied accusations that his country sent weapons to Libyan Islamist militias.}}

    “The relations between Sudan and Libya and particularly the military [one] is now at its best and proof is the big military cooperation in the field of training,” SAF spokesperson said before noting that dozens of Libyan trainees are enrolled in Karari military college.

    Col. Sa’ad also recalled that Libya and Sudan have joint border forces to combat human traffickers and terrorists.

    Colonel Mohamed al-Hejazi, spokesperson to ex-general Khalifa Heftar forces, told Cairo-based al-Youm al-Sabe’ newspaper this week that the latest shipment arrived on Friday morning at Meetiga military base airport.

    He said these weapons have already been delivered to a militia loyal to Abdul Hakim Belhaj adding that Qatar funds these shipments.

    This week, the newspaper quoted unnamed sources as saying that Belhaj himself travelled to Sudan for meetings with officials there to coordinate logistics for Qatari aid.

    Khartoum has not commented on reports of Belhaj’s visit.

    Heftar’s rise came after he claimed that his forces represent the legitimate Libyan army and has managed to win the support of military units inside Benghazi for his offensive against the jihadists which he labelled as Operation Karama (dignity).

    The Libyan government, however, accused him of trying to stage a coup but Heftar says that these militias have wreaked havoc in the North African nation.

    Libya has been plagued by political infighting, with government and parliament unable to control militias that have continued to defy state authority since ousting Muammar Gaddafi in 2011.

    Photo: {{Sudanese army spokesperson al-Sawarmi Khalid Sa’ad}}

    {sudantribune}