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  • Islamist Militants kill 15 More in New Attack in Kenya

    Islamist Militants kill 15 More in New Attack in Kenya

    Somali-linked Islamist militants killed at least 15 people and torched houses in a second night of attacks on Kenya’s coast, a day after an assault on a town left almost 50 dead.

    Armed men went door to door hours before dawn in Poromoko village, ordered people outside and made them recite the Islamic creed, said one witness. He did not see what happened to anyone who failed.

    Somalia’s al Shabaab militants claimed responsibility for the two days of attacks and said it would continue its campaign in the east African nation, whose tourist industry has been battered by a rise in militant violence.

    The militant group has said it is punishing Kenya for sending troops to Somalia to confront its Islamist fighters.

    Sunday’s assault on the town of Mpeketoni was the worst since al Shabaab gunmen stormed Nairobi’s Westgate shopping mall in September, leaving 67 dead.

    The new attacks have fuelled mounting public criticism of the government for failing to do more to prevent a string of grenade and gun attacks on the coast and the capital since Westgate.

    Al Shabaab on Monday declared Kenya a “war zone”, telling tourists to leave the country or stay “at their own peril”.

    Kenya has said it would not withdraw its forces from Somalia and has promised to track down the gunmen.

    reuters

  • Ivory Coast yr/yr Inflation Rises to 0.9% in May

    Ivory Coast yr/yr Inflation Rises to 0.9% in May

    Ivory Coast’s year-on-year consumer price inflation jumped to 0.9 percent in May from deflation of 0.2 percent in April, data from the National Statistics Institute showed on Tuesday.

    The institute’s monthly report showed housing and utility prices added 0.3 percent, food and soft drink prices dropped 0.2 percent and transport costs declined 0.4 percent.

    Healthcare prices jumped 0.8 percent and communication costs were up 1.1 percent.

    The economy of the world’s top cocoa grower makes up around 40 percent of the eight-nation West African CFA franc currency zone.

  • ADEPR Commemorates 126 Members Killed in Genocide

    ADEPR Commemorates 126 Members Killed in Genocide

    ADEPR Christian denomination has sought forgiveness saying it didn’t do much to curtail ethnic divisionism among its followers which led to genocide.

    The statements were made during the commemoration event to honour 126 members of ADEPR faith that lost their lives during the 1994 genocide against ethnic Tutsi.

    The genocide against ethnic Tutsi in Rwanda claimed over a million lives.
    ADEPR held commemoration event at G.S. Gihundwe school, conducted walk to remember and the body of Kamirindi Cazimili- father to pastor Matayo Intwaza formerly member of ADEPR church was accorded decent burial at Kamembe genocide memorial site.

    According to testimonies delivered during the commemoration event, it was revealed that Tutsi who sought protection at ADEPR churches were actually abandoned by the ADEPR leaders until they were later killed by interahamwe.

    In his testimony Twagirumukiza Antoine accused former spokesperson of ADEPR church Nsanzurwimo Joseph saying during the genocide he came to the church with policemen guarding him, “I wondered why the church spokesperson was being guarded by policemen.

    This is why I say there was no effort by ADEPR church to prevent ethnic divisionism within the church. The church did not at that time denounce genocide nor did they prevent such ethnic divisionism.”

    Meanwhile the current ADEPR spokesperson Rev Pastor Jean Sibomana noted that before and during the genocide, some leaders in the church were filled with fear and this led to no action against ethnic divisionism and killings that targeted the Tutsi that had also sought refugee at the church.

    Rev Pastor Sibomana said its against this background that ADEPR church found it fitting to seek forgiveness from all Rwandans because the church leaders failed to play their roles as required of them.

    Serge Nzabonimana represented the Ministry of culture and sports during the ceommemoration event. He said survivors need to be supported and together work towards the reconstruction of Rwanda.

    During the commemoration, a monument with 35 names of genocide victims inscribed on it was unveiled. The names include those killed at Gihundwe ADEPR centre.

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  • Kagame On Terrorism: I am Not Threatening, I am Warning

    Kagame On Terrorism: I am Not Threatening, I am Warning

    bdnf-2.jpgPresident Kagame at the 2nd Graduation ceremony of the Rwanda Defence Force, Senior Command and Staff College – Nyakinama, 6 June 2014

    President Paul Kagame has explained that his recent message on June 5 while addressing residents of Nyabihu district was not meant to threaten anyone but was clearly a warning in his reaction to the recent rise of insecurity in the northern part of Rwanda and some parts in the western province.

    In his interview with Jeune Afrique, President Kagame explored several issues and below we bring you the detailed except of the interview.

    Jeune Afrique: Your speech at Rambura was interpreted as a response to the release of U.S. State Department statement and the last report by Human Rights Watch, both criticising the action of security forces in the north-west of Rwanda. Is this right?

    President Paul Kagame: There is nothing fundamentally new in what I said in front of people in Nyabihu district.

    Development is unachievable without security and stability – our people have suffered enough to know that.

    But the reason I wanted to repeat this message during the meeting with citizens on June 5 is due to two recent developments.

    The first is the recent rise of insecurity in the north and certain parts in the west of the country in recent weeks.

    People were killed, including the child of the Mayor of Musanze district in an attack that was targeting her directly.

    The origin of these terrorist acts is of course armed groups operating in eastern DR Congo.

    The second element, are the statements and reports to which you refer that have been produced without any consideration for the context that I have just mentioned.

    Let me be clear, outsiders can applaud or criticise us, they can support or seek to destabilise us, at the end of the day, the responsibility for our security is up to us and no one else.

    Lastly, my message was to those who operate and control those who throw grenades: we will defend the stability and security of our people in accordance with the law.

    We know that what we do in this domain is scrutinised by the external world but this will never stand in the way of us being firm, decisive, proactive and determined in the fight that we lead against you.

    Does this justify the arrests and disappearances you are accused of?

    What are we talking about? Our security forces and our legal authorities have provided explanations case by case, to investigators from these NGOs. Why the arrests occurred? What happened to those who were interrogated? What is the law? Etc.

    They then decided to publish a report in which we have no right to contribute: it is neither serious nor professional and it is far from objective.

    Nobody goes missing in Rwanda and no one is arrested without abiding by the law. But it is true that we have become used to unfounded accusations…

    When you publicly say that you will not hesitate to shoot your enemies in broad daylight, you know very well what kind of response to expect…

    That is obvious. What I meant is that we never hesitate to act decisively and we have been acting in strict adherence of the rule of law.

    If this is not sufficient to convince enemies of our people to renounce terrorism, then we will move on to another much more serious stage. The opinion of observers or other governments is not what matters most.

    I find it quite astonishing that people, who practice executions and whose drone strikes have led multiple times to civilian deaths, feel that they have the right to criticise us on this point.

    Rwanda had the courage to abolish the death penalty to achieve reconciliation, while our prisons were full of genocidaires who would have deserved death.

    Wasn’t your speech also a form of warning to the people of this region: “If you help the FDLR [Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda], you will suffer the consequences”?

    What I made clear to the people that day is that they were also responsible for their own security.

    This of course means that they should in no way be associated with the killers, even if they are close relatives. A recent example is the person who tried to assassinate the Mayor of Musanze.

    He was an elected local leader of flawless reputation. The police investigation revealed that the man had acted on behalf of one of his brothers who is an active senior member of the FDLR, with whom he was secretly in contact.

    A warning, then…?

    So what? Everyone must understand that when it comes to terrorism, kinship does not apply. Nobody should accept to be used.

    If you lend a helping hand or turn a blind eye to infiltration of terrorists from across the border and these people indiscriminately throw grenades in markets in Kigali, do you really think they will first ensure that none of your loved ones will be among the victims?

    This is what I said in Nyabihu district: in the face of the fight against terrorism, family is not a consideration because the very people you are protecting might kill your own family.

    This is not a threat but a warning: do not stand idly by as if your indifference, or worse, your complicity has no consequences.

    At the end of the day, despite reports and critics: you feel it is your right to neutralise anyone you believe poses a threat to your security…

    We reserve the right to eliminate those who seek to kill us. When I say eliminate, I do not mean kill anyone, anywhere, indiscriminately without following any procedures.

    In Rwanda, as in Europe or America, there are laws that govern these extreme cases.

    So-called experts who clearly consider the Rwandan victims of terrorist attacks as collateral damage and thus legitimise such acts can continue to publish wrongly intentioned reports that lead to biased press statement.

    But our commitment to protecting our security will remain firm. By repeating this, I do not think I am teaching anything new to anyone.

  • Obama Appoints New Ambassador to Rwanda

    Obama Appoints New Ambassador to Rwanda

    The President of United States has Nomitated Erica J. Barks Ruggles as new envoy to Rwanda to replace the outgoing ambassador Donald Koran.

    President Barack Obama said, “Our nation will be greatly served by the talent and expertise these individuals bring to their new roles. I am grateful they have agreed to serve in this Administration, and I look forward to working with them in the months and years ahead.”

    Erica J. Barks Ruggles, Nominee for Ambassador to the Republic of Rwanda, Department of State

    Erica J. Barks Ruggles, a career member of the Foreign Service, Class of Minister-Counselor, is Consul General at the U.S. Consulate in Cape Town, South Africa, a position she has held since 2011.

    From 2009 to 2011, she served as Deputy to the U.S. Permanent Representative to the United Nations. From 2005 to 2008, she served as Deputy Assistant Secretary of the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor at the Department of State (DOS).

    From 2004 to 2005, Ms. Barks Ruggles was a Member of the Policy Planning Staff in the Office of the Secretary of State.

    From 2001 to 2004, she served as the Economic Section Chief at the U.S. Embassy in Oslo, Norway.

    From 2000 to 2001, Ms. Barks Ruggles was an International Affairs Fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations and Visiting Fellow at the Brookings Institution.

    She was the Special Assistant to the Under Secretary for Political Affairs at DOS from 1999 to 2000, and Director of African Affairs at the National Security Council from 1996 to 1999.

    Ms. Barks Ruggles was a Line Officer in the Executive Secretariat at DOS in 1996 and was the Desk Officer in the Bureau of African Affairs from 1994 to 1996.

    From 1992 to 1994, she served as the Vice Consul at the U.S. Consulate General in Chennai (Madras), India.

    Ms. Barks Ruggles received a B.A. from Swarthmore College.
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    Erica J. Barks Ruggles

  • Four Survive as Car Overturns

    Four Survive as Car Overturns

    Over the weekend a saloon car (reg. RAC 399F) veered of the road and overturned. However all the people travelling in the car survived and managed to move out of the wreckage.

    The accident occurred along Kigali-Musanze road at Base in Gakenke district.

    The driver of the car told IGIHE that his car overturned after he attempted to avoid an approaching SUV that was driving at highspeed from Musanze and in the process he veered off the road overturning. The SUV did not stop despite the accident.

    The car driver said he sustained minor injury on his finger but the passenger including a baby and the mother survived.
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  • Umurabyo Editor Uwimana to Regain Freedom Soon

    Umurabyo Editor Uwimana to Regain Freedom Soon

    The Editor of Umurabyo vernacular newspaper will regain her freedom on June 18 after successfully completing her four year jail sentence.

    Uwimana Nkusi Agnes currently serving her sentence at Nyarugenge prison (a.k.a 1930)
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    Uwimana’s Arrest

    Uwimana in July,10, 2010 with her colleague Saidati Mukakibibi was sentenced to 17 years in prison for faulting the genocide ideology and sectarianism laws.

    On April 5, 2012, her sentence was reduced to four years in prison.

    The High Court charged Uwimana with endangering national security, genocide denial, defamation of the President, and divisionism.

    On February 4, 2011, the High Court sentenced Uwimana to 17 years in prison: 5 years for endangering national security, 10 for genocide denial, 1 for divisionism, and 1 for defamation.

    The Umurabyo editor has not been stranger to such charges. In January 2007 she was arrested and imprisoned for one year after she published an anonymous letter undermining the government in Umurabyo.

    On April 5, 2012, the Supreme Court cleared Uwimana on the charges of genocide denial and divisionism; however, the Court upheld her convictions for defamation and endangering national security.

    Her sentence was to be reduced from 17 years to four years in prison.

  • MINECOFIN Commemorates Staff Killed During Genocide Against Tutsi

    MINECOFIN Commemorates Staff Killed During Genocide Against Tutsi

    The Ministry of Finance and Economic planning on Friday, June 13 commemorated the lives of its employees who were killed during the 1994 genocide against the Tutsi.

    More than one hundred employees were massacred during the genocide.

    The event was characterized by testimonies and songs from genocide survivors who worked at the ministry as well as families of those who perished during the genocide.

    Under the theme Remember-Unite-Renew genocide survivors narrated their ordeals during genocide and their road to recovery.

    “We were hunted down and killed for who we are. We lost our loved ones but God who protected us during genocide against the Tutsi will always be with us.

    Today we have hope, we enjoy rights just like everyone and the future is bright thanks to the leadership that doesn’t discriminate whatsoever.

    Only if those who left us could see this transformation,” Alice Gasengayire, a representative of families of former MINECOFIN employees said.

    In his remarks Senator Jean Damascene Bizimana noted that before colonialism, Rwandans lived in harmony with no difference between Hutu, Twa or Tutsi.

    “Hate ideology was introduced into Rwandans by colonialists who differentiated Rwandans by their physical appearances.

    They planted the first seed of hate which culminated in the 1994 genocide against the Tutsi,” Senator Bizimana said.

    The executive secretary of the National Commission to fight Genocide (CNLG) Jean de Dieu Mucyo urged mourners to remember while planning for the future.

    “It is important that we remember our loved ones while we continue transform our country and our lives for the better to ensure that none of atrocities that befell us ever happen again,” Mucyo said.

    Minister of Finance and Economic Planning Claver Gatete said that remembering those who were killed during genocide against the Tutsi was away to honor and dignify their lives.

    “They should have been part of us today hadn’t the genocide against the Tutsi happened. We will forever remember those that we lost by recreating their lives through telling their stories,” The Minister said.

    He pledged that the Ministry would document the lives of its staff killed during the genocide so that their lives history will never be forgotten.

    “We want their lives to be remembered for generations and generations so that those who will come after us know and understand what happened,” Minister said.

    During the 1994 genocide against the Tutsi more than one million Rwandans were killed in a space of one hundred days.
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    Minecofin