Author: Publisher

  • EAC experts Visit Rwanda National Police Remera Motor vehicle Inspection Centre

    EAC experts Visit Rwanda National Police Remera Motor vehicle Inspection Centre

    {on January 20, A team of experts from the East African Community (EAC) member countries visited Rwanda National Police (RNP) General Headquarters in Kacyiru to assess the process in the establishment of the Traffic Management (TM) Regional Centre of Excellence, which will be hosted by Rwanda. }

    The centre of excellence will be responsible for innovation, research and capacity building of Police officers in EAC in road traffic-related matters.

    On January 21, the delegation visited one of the TM facilities – Remera Motor vehicle Inspection Centre (MIC) where they were explained on how it operates and how it has reduced on road accidents caused by mechanical faults

    RNP

  • Rwanda fourth most economically free in Africa according to Heritage Foundation

    Rwanda fourth most economically free in Africa according to Heritage Foundation

    {Over the last 10 years, Rwanda has undertaken serious economic reforms
    that have made it climb doing business rankings. A recent report by
    Heritage Foundation ranked Rwanda the fourth economically free country
    in Africa after Mauritius, Botswana, and Cape Verde.}

    Rwanda’s overall economic freedom score stands at 64.7 per cent,
    making its economy the 65th most free in the world. The report pointed
    out that over the 20-year history of the Index, Rwanda has improved
    its economic freedom score by 26.4 points, the fifth-best increase of
    any country.
    The Minister of Finance and Economic planning Claver Gatete,
    attributed Rwanda’s tremendous progress to the wider process of
    economic liberalisation which allows everyone to operate any business
    freely.

    “We have made it easy for people to do business in Rwanda through
    creation of investment freedom, and fiscal freedom where we simplified
    the taxation policies by encouraging the use of electronic means to
    pay taxes,” Minister Gatete said.

    Commenting on the report, the Minister of Commerce and Trade Francois
    Kanimba mentioned the importance of proper planning and visionary
    leadership as well as increasingly regional integration.

    “Our internal economic governance as well as entry into regional
    economic initiatives like trade partnerships with our neighbours has
    increased our performance in terms of economic freedom,” said Minister
    Kanimba, adding that “several financial facilities like easy access to
    loans have unlocked a number of potentials within the economic
    sector.”

    The report reads that Rwanda scored 0.6 point better than last year,
    reflecting improvements in the management of government spending,
    business freedom, and labour freedom. Rwanda is ranked 4th out of 46
    countries in Sub-Saharan Africa, and its score exceeds the world
    average.

    Recording score improvements in nine out of the 10 economic freedoms,
    Rwanda has advanced from economic repression 20 years ago to a
    “moderately free” economy today, it says.

    Within the East African Community, Uganda was next to Rwanda with a
    score of 59.9, making it the 91st freest economy in the world and 10th
    in the Sub-Saharan region. Tanzania and Kenya are the 15th and 17th in
    the Sub-Saharan region, while Burundi is ranked 31st and comes last in
    the EAC.

    Nonetheless, substantial challenges remain, according to the report,
    particularly in implementing deeper institutional and systemic reforms
    that are critical to strengthening the foundations of economic
    freedom.

  • Is Dr. Mugesera really sick or facing Trauma?

    Is Dr. Mugesera really sick or facing Trauma?

    {The court hearing of Dr. Léon Mugesera was postponed yesterday, 21st January 2014 due to illness.
    }

    The Director of the Central Prison of 1930 which is Mugesera’s home came to announce that the tenant is sick. Later, he told reporters that Dr. Léon Mugesera wrote to the direction of the Prison saying he is seriously ill, that management has made contact with the physician of King Faisal Hospital for medical consultation. It is said that his illness is related to psychological trauma. The recent appearance of the accused on Tuesday of last week had also been delayed by the fact that the fourth prosecution witness said the 28 PMC had not appeared on the pretext of illness.

    Jean Félix Rudakemwa, the defense lawyer said his client is really sick.

    Léon Mugesera (born 1952) is a Rwandan man and a former resident of Quebec, Canada. He was deported from Canada for an inflammatory anti-Tutsi speech which his critics allege was a precursor to the 1994 genocide against Tutsis.

    An ethnic Hutu, Mugesera has been a member of the dominant Hutu MRND party, which had close ties to the military. He was MRND Vice-Chairman for Gisenyi prefecture.

    In a speech given on November 22, 1992 in Rwanda, Mugesera allegedly told 1000 party members that “we the people are obliged to take responsibility ourselves and wipe out this scum” and that they should kill Tutsis and “dump their bodies into the rivers of Rwanda.” This statement does not exist in the official translation of the speech, as presented in a legal document before the Minister of Citizenship and Immigration of Canada on August 8, 2003.

    Do not be afraid, know that anyone whose neck you do not cut is the one who will cut your neck—Léon Mugesera on 22 November 1992,

    Following this speech, the Rwandan Minister of Justice, Stanislas Mbonampeka, issued an arrest warrant against him for inciting hatred. He fled with his family first to the Rwandan army and then to Quebec City in Quebec, Canada. Shortly afterwards, Mbonampeka resigned as Minister of Justice in protest.

  • Kayonza: Three killed in a Car accident

    Kayonza: Three killed in a Car accident

    {Yesterday three people were killed in a car accident that involves a truck brand Scania heading to Rusumo which struck a passenger vehicle in Kayonza District near Nyamirama Modern Secondary School.}

    Eye witness said the accident that killed 3 was caused by the minibus Dyna which tried to overtake another vehicle carrying passenger’s mark Hiace regardless that Scania was coming in the opposite direction and was hit hard as the two vehicles drove at fast speed.

    The truck had tried to avoid the collision and hit two children on the roadside as the car was moving faster, the driver also passed away. Passengers who were in Dyna were seriously injured and rushed to the nearest hospital.

  • FA charges Anelka for ‘quenelle’ salute

    FA charges Anelka for ‘quenelle’ salute

    {French footballer Nicolas Anelka, who plays striker for the English club West Bromwich Albion, has been charged for allegedly making an anti-Semitic salute during a recent match, the Football Association (FA) announced on Tuesday.}

    The 34-year-old performed the ‘quenelle’ salute, which is made by putting one arm across his chest and straightening the other, during West Brom’s 3-3 draw at West Ham United in the Premier League last month.

    “The FA has charged the West Bromwich Albion player Nicolas Anelka following an incident that occurred during the West Ham United versus West Bromwich Albion fixture at the Boleyn Ground on 28 December 2013,” read a statement on the FA website.

    “It is alleged that, in the 40th minute of the fixture, Anelka made a gesture which was abusive and/or indecent and/or insulting and/or improper, contrary to FA Rule E3[1].

    “It is further alleged that this is an aggravated breach, as defined in FA Rule E3[2], in that it included a reference to ethnic origin and/or race and/or religion or belief.”

    Anelka has until 6pm (GMT) Thursday to respond to the charge.

    If found guilty, he faces a minimum five-game suspension under new anti-discrimination measures introduced by the FA in May last year.

    The ‘quenelle’, popularised by French comedian Dieudonné M’bala M’bala, has been described by critics in France as an inverted Nazi salute, but Anelka has insisted that it was merely “a dedication” to the comic.

    M’bala M’bala, who is known simply as Dieudonné, says the gesture is anti-establishment and not anti-Semitic.

    The FA’s decision to charge Anelka, after a three-and-a-half-week investigation, comes a day after West Brom’s shirt sponsors, property website Zoopla, decided to end their affiliation with the club. British media reports suggested the company had called on West Brom to drop Anelka over the affair.

    Anelka has continued to appear for the club despite the furore, playing for 77 minutes in West Brom’s 1-1 draw with Everton on Monday.

    (FRANCE 24 with AFP)

  • Russia, Iran criticize Tehran snub for Syria talks

    Russia, Iran criticize Tehran snub for Syria talks

    (AP) — {Russia and Iran criticized the U.N. chief’s decision to withdraw Tehran’s invitation to join this week’s peace conference on Syria, as delegates began to arrive in Switzerland on Tuesday for the long-awaited talks that aim to end the Syrian civil war.}

    A last-minute U.N. invitation for Iran to participate in the so-called Geneva conference threw the entire meeting into doubt, forcing U.N. chief Ban Ki-moon to rescind his offer late Monday under intense U.S. pressure after Syria’s main Western-backed opposition group threatened to boycott.

    After Ban withdrew the invitation, the opposition Syrian National Coalition said it would attend the talks aimed at ending Syria’s crippling three-year civil war, which has killed more than 130,000 and uprooted millions. The opposition said the conference should seek to establish a transitional government with full executive powers “in which killers and criminals do not participate.”

    That cleared the way for the negotiations to open Wednesday as planned in the Swiss resort city of Montreux, with high-ranking delegations from the United States, Russia and close to 40 other countries attending. Face-to-face negotiations between the Syrian government and its opponents — the first of the uprising — are to start Friday in Geneva.

    Expectations for a breakthrough at the conference are low. The front lines of the war have been largely locked in place since March, and despite suffering their enormous losses, neither the government nor the opposition appears desperate enough for a deal to budge from its entrenched position.

    It’s also unclear how the opposition Coalition, a weak and fractured umbrella group with almost no sway over the most powerful rebel groups inside Syria, could enforce any agreement reached in Geneva.

  • Rwanda stock Exchange Market report for Tuesday 21st   January, 2014

    Rwanda stock Exchange Market report for Tuesday 21st January, 2014

    {Today on RSE, the market activity was lower compared to the previous trading session. The total turnover for the day was Rwf 29,577,500 from BoK counter which recorded 7 transactions of 83,100 shares traded at Rwf 245 and Bralirwa counter which recorded 6 transactions of 11,000 shares traded at Rwf 838}.

    BoK share price remained unchanged from yesterday’s closing price of Rwf 245 and BRALIRWA share price closed down Rwf 1 at Rwf 838. KCB shares last transacted at Rwf 185 while NMG and Uchumi Supermarket shares last transacted at Rwf 1,200 and Rwf 165 respectively.

  • Kenyatta, Kagame Hold Bilateral Talks

    Kenyatta, Kagame Hold Bilateral Talks

    {President Uhuru Kenyatta on Tuesday held talks with visiting Rwandan President Paul Kagame who paid him a courtesy call at State House, Nairobi.}

    The two Presidents discussed regional integration, the South Sudan conflict, the forthcoming African Union (AU) Heads of State Summit and other bilateral issues.

    President Kenyatta and President Kagame noted the progress achieved in the East African integration process.

    They urged citizens of the member states to take advantage of the accruing benefits.

    On South Sudan, the two leaders affirmed their support for the ongoing efforts spearheaded by Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD), the AU, the International Conference on the Great Lakes Region (ICGLR) and the international community to end the conflict.

    They expressed optimism that an amicable solution to the South Sudan crisis would be found soon.

    They added that South Sudan will feature prominently at the AU summit later this month.

    On the bilateral front, President Kenyatta and President Kagame lauded the existing cordial relations between Kenya and Rwanda.

    They agreed to work closely to enhance co-operation for the benefit of the citizens of the two countries.

    President Kagame was in the country to attend Governors’ Summit held in Naivasha

    The Citizen

  • South African set to be first black ‘Afronaut’

    South African set to be first black ‘Afronaut’

    No one in Mandla Maseko’s family has ever stepped outside South Africa, but the young township DJ is set to rocket into space next year.

    From the dusty district of Mabopane, near Pretoria, 25-year-old Maseko has landed a coveted seat to fly 103-kilometres (64 miles) into space in 2015, after winning a competition organised by a US-based space academy.

    He beat off a million other entrants from 75 countries to be selected as one of 23 people who will travel on an hour-long sub-orbital trip on the Lynx Mark II spaceship.

    The former civil engineering student — who was forced to put his studies on hold because he could not pay the fees –will experience zero gravity and a journey that normally comes with a $100,000 price tag.

    Unless a rich black African books a tourist space ticket and blasts off before next year, Maseko will become the first black African to enter space.

    The “typical township boy”, who still lives at home with his parents and four siblings, was named one of the winners on December 5, only a few hours after the death of the country’s first black president, Nelson Mandela.

    He said he immediately thought of such “firsts”, not only Mandela but also Barack Obama, the first black president of the United States. In his exhilaration, he also imagined a conversation with Mandela.

    “I have run the race and completed the course, now here is the torch’, ” Maseko thought the president would have told him. ” ‘Continue running the race and here’s the title to go with it, go be the first black South African to space’.”

    IMPROBABLE JOURNEY

    His improbable journey from a middle-class township to the thermosphere began with a leap from a wall.

    The initial entry requirement for the competitors was to submit a photograph of themselves jumping from any height.

    His first choice was the roof of his parents’ three-bedroom house but his mother Ouma said “no”, fearing it was too high and that he would break his legs.

    He settled for the house’s two-metre (more than six feet) perimeter wall and a friend captured the feat using a mobile phone.

    The picture has helped propel Maseko, who works part-time as a DJ at parties, to new heights.

    He finally secured his seat on the rocket after gruelling physical and aptitude tests in the contest organised by AXE Apollo Space Academy and sponsored by Unilever and space tourism firm Space Expedition Corporation (SXC).

    It was a dream come true for a man from a humble background. His family says they never doubted the one-time altar boy at a local Anglican church, who now sings with a local township gospel choir, would be a high-flier.

    “While I was pregnant with Mandla, I knew I was going to give birth to a star,” said Maseko’s mother.

    FLAG ON THE MOON

    His 18-year-old sister Mhlophe agrees: “I don’t know what comes after space. I’m sure if there was something he would go.”

    Born to a school cleaner and an auto tool maker in Soshanguve township near Pretoria, Maseko has neighbours high-fiving him for putting South Africa’s townships on the “galactic map”.

    His long-term plans are to study aeronautical engineering and qualify as a space mission specialist with the ultimate dream of planting the country’s flag on the moon.

    South Africa’s Science and Technology Minister Derek Hanekom sees Maseko “as a role model to the future generation of space professionals and enthusiasts.”

    His experience could not have come at a better time “when Africa is gearing up its space ambitions” as host to the world’s biggest and most powerful radio astronomy telescope, said Hanekom.

    The director of that project, Bernie Fanaroff, also hailed young Maseko as an ambassador for science.

    “Anything that raises the profile of science up there must be good because it brings to the attention of young people what they can achieve in science and engineering.”

    Curious young neighbours often stop Maseko’s 13-year-old sister Mantombi on her way home from school and ask, “What is space? what is space?”
    “A very unique place,” she tells them. “Space is a very special place.”

    Maseko spent a week at the Kennedy Space Academy in Florida where he skydived and undertook air combat and G-force training.

    While there he met and posed for pictures with US astronaut Buzz Aldrin, who was the second man ever to set foot on the moon after Neil Armstrong as part of the 1969 Apollo 11 space mission.

    For Maseko, the encounter was magical. “This is how it feels to be out in space,” he recalls thinking.

    Daily Nation

  • Rubavu: Bralirwa commemorates employees

    Rubavu: Bralirwa commemorates employees

    {Bralirwa commemorated 39 employees who were killed on 19th January 1998 by Interahamwe militia } (abacengezi).

    The occasion resumed with prayers at Stella Maris before the visiting of the memorial where innocent civilians were massacred.

    Before the killings these employees had been asked to separate as Hutus and Tutsi’s whereby they refused to fulfill it as they ended up killed.

    According to Kabanda Innocent the representative of Ibuka in Rubavu district, he appreciated how Bralirwa recognizes victims of the ambush.

    We shall continue to support the families and orphans of the incident through education fees and other support. Said Karangwa Pascal the representative of Bralirwa.

    Nyirasafari Racheal an administrator in Rubavu district thanked Bralirwa about the project and also reminded the audience on “Ndi Umunyarwanda project”.