{{Crime rate in Nyamasheke district has dropped in the past two months.
According to the district mayor, Jean Baptiste Habyarimana, crimes in the district have significantly reduced compared to the same period in 2012.}}
Habyarimana says Nyamasheke is secure urging residents to maintain its safety to spur development in the district.
According to Chief Inspector of the Police in Nyamasheke district CIP Francois Segakware, crimes have significantly reduced in the 3 consecutive months of December 2012, January and February 2013.
According to Colonel Jean Bosco Rutikanga the army commander in Nyamasheke and Rusizi district, resolutions to maintain security should be put in place and Security Councils should play their role and prevent crimes in all possible ways.
Preventing idling of people was also agreed upon as a resolution to stable security and this will be done by having every individual that works in a certain trading center being identified in at least one cooperative.
Rwanda and Sierra Leone will clash in their third Africa Volleyball championship Group A game today in Tunisia, where the tournament is taking place.
Rwanda made an excellent take off in their first game beating West Africans, Congo Brazzaville 3-1 but slumped in their second outing as the tournament’s hosts and one of the favourites, Tunisia, were too strong for them.
With Tunisia thrashing Paul Bitok’s team 3-0 one would expect them to have lost a little confidence in their volley skills but the advantage they for this third game is that they would be facing another team that is also just from losing.
Sierra Leon were on Sunday overpowered by another volley giant and this edition’s favourite, Algeria three sets to nothing.
As both teams prepare to do battle over the net, Rwanda’s hopes of qualifying for the World Championship in Mexico are dangling given that they must finish in the top four of the competition.
Rwanda would play their last group game tomorrow against Algeria.
{{Although Rwanda has managed to improve access to clean water; some residents in different parts of the country still lack access to safe water.}}
Residents of Nyakiriba Sector in Rubavu District are afraid of contracting waterborne diseases from the only available unsafe sources especially Nyabisazi River.
Residents told IGIHE that the river is contaminated with toxic waste and that there is no other option.
Areas affected include; Gikombe Cell and Bisizi cell; both cells are located in Nyakiriba Sector.
However, there are water kiosks in the area but residents told IGIHE that they have not been functional since their establishement.
The Executive Secretary of Nyakiriba Sector, Dukundimana Esperance says the problem of lack of clean water will get solved as soon as possible.
The Aqua Virunga Project has constructed water taps to facilitate area residents to access safe water but the taps have been closed.
Residents said the project failed due to its mismanagement.
{{Joining effort among Rwandans could significantly boost access to electricity among Rwandan communities.}}
Hakizimana Emmanuel, a Rwandan student studying in Germany who said that if efforts are scattered nothing can be sustainable.
Hakizimana an Electrical engineering student was commenting on the project he is slated to implement in Rwanda to allow many Rwandans access the electricity.
Hakizimana working in collaboration with a Germany investor Dr. Teubner revealed that the project will help Rwandans to use solar energy instead of remaining without access to electricity.
He assures that once the project is successfully implemented, it will reduce the number of Rwandans who have no access to electricity.
“The project will help everyone according to his ability, we have divided it into categories; we have 10euro –solution, 100 euro-Solution, 2000euro- Solution, 10000 Euro- Solution and each beneficiary will be able to use solar energy according to family’s need” Hakizimana told IGIHE.
{{Rwanda has launched a document tracking system aimed at improving overall efficiency, accountability and transparency in government through the use of electronic documents and records lifecycle management.}}
The Document Tracking and Workflow Management System (DTWMS) named E-Mboni, will promote government organisational efficiency.
The Minister of Youth and ICT Jean Philbert Nsengimana said; “The system will improve inter and intra governmental efficiencies ultimately geared to serving Rwandans in an efficient and effective manner.
The system is flexible and mobile; one can work wherever he or she is in order to serve clients without delay.”
According to Patrick Nyirishema (ICT Department at RDB), “The System is a solution oriented – it is meant to drastically reduce the use of paper based processing and also automate, accelerate and simplify administrative processes.”
The project was co-funded by the Government of Rwanda and the World Bank.
It has been launched at the local government level in Kigali City council, an institution that has championed implementation of the system.
Kigali City Mayor, Fidele Ndayisaba, noted: “E-Mboni has come at a time when we actually need it. We are already using it in services like offering Construction Permits, Modern and Smart City (MIS) are now being offered more efficiently due to this system.
We are using less time and less paper which saves on cost and is environmentally friendly.
Files are more secure and are directed to the right person and in good time. There will be better service delivery with this system.”
{{China has overtaken the US as the world’s largest net importer of oil, in a generational shift that will shake up the geopolitics of natural resources.}}
US net oil imports dropped to 5.98m barrels a day in December, the lowest since February 1992, according to provisional figures from the US Energy Information Administration.
In the same month, China’s net oil imports surged to 6.12m b/d, according to Chinese customs.
The US has been the world’s largest net importer of oil since the mid-1970s, shaping Washington’s foreign policy towards energy-rich countries such as Saudi Arabia, Iraq and Venezuela.
As China overtakes the US as the world’s leading net oil importer, Beijing is likely to face pressure to take a larger role in patrolling the world’s key shipping lanes.
China has already taken a more assertive foreign oil policy in countries such as Sudan, Angola and Iraq, where state-owned Chinese companies have invested billions of dollars.
“The US is taking strides towards energy independence,” said Eric G Lee, a commodities analyst at Citigroup who first reported the shift.
Although December figures are often volatile due to end-of-the-year tax reasons, analysts and traders say the shift will continue, affecting global oil trade routers and the geopolitics of energy.
The figures include crude and refined petroleum products such as diesel and kerosene.
{{Years of universal healthcare, rising health spending, cancer screening, immunisation and anti-smoking laws have failed to stop Britain falling behind in reducing early death and disease, a study showed on Tuesday.}}
Researchers who compared Britain’s health performance since 1990 with 14 European Union countries plus Australia, Canada, Norway and the United States said its pace of decline in premature death was “persistently and significantly” behind the average – a finding they described as “startling”.
Chris Murray, who led the work at the University of Washington, said Britain’s poor performance was partly due to dramatic increases in Alzheimer’s disease and in drug and alcohol abuse problems, and to a failure to tackle leading killers such as heart disease, strokes and lung diseases.
“Concerted action is urgently needed,” said Murray, director of the university’s Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation.
Using data from a vast study called the Global Burden of Diseases, headline findings of which were published last year, researchers analysed patterns of ill health and death in Britain, calculated the contribution of various preventable risk factors, and ranked it among high-income countries that spent similar amounts on health in 1990 and 2010.
They found that only in men older than 55 years had Britain seen significantly faster drops in death rates than other nations over the last 20 years.
Britain’s ranking in premature mortality rates for adults aged between 20 and 54 had “worsened substantially”, they found.
This was partly due to dramatic growth in problems linked to drugs and alcohol, which were ranked among the least important causes of death in this age group in 1990 – ranked 32nd and 43rd respectively – but rose to sixth and 18th place in 2010.
({Rwandan Commandos undergoing tough training at a base})
{{On first blush, you probably think that struggle is a bad thing. After all, it has the connotation of weakness, indecisiveness, and incompetence, thanks in large part to societal taboos.}}
Yet despite what society would have you believe, years of research into the topic indicates that struggle is actually essential for career advancement.
Rather than avoiding struggle — or worse, denying it exists — those looking to take their career to the next level must learn how to embrace struggle as an opportunity for learning and growth.
Making this shift requires determination; it means bucking beliefs that have surreptitiously seeped into our collective sub-conscious — that struggle is a sign of weakness and therefore a source of embarrassment and shame.
This attitude toward struggle is not only counterproductive — leading to self-defeating behaviors including retreating inward with self-doubt and avoiding necessary risk for fear of failure — it is also wrong.
The fact of the matter is that struggle is a natural and inevitable part of career growth. But it doesn’t have to be painful.
By breaking away from cultural stereotypes to embrace struggle as an art to be mastered, you open a new set of possibilities for career growth.
{{Seek challenging assignments and difficult goals}}
If you are constantly doing the same things over and over again, chances are you are not growing. Instead, seek out situations where there is rapid change.
This will keep you on your toes. Look for projects that can expand your skills and capabilities, ideally those that give you the charter to work autonomously, so you have the freedom to experiment.
Numerous psychological studies find that performance is at its best when goals are difficult but still attainable with effort and imagination.
If you find yourself breezing through your day, easily meeting your goals, it could be a sign that your goals are too easy.
See what happens when you set a higher bar for yourself.
{{Treat negative feedback as a gift}}
It’s natural to cringe when you receive negative feedback. It may feel like a personal attack and can evoke a whole host of powerful emotions.
But receiving valid feedback is the most valuable of gifts, allowing you to step outside your delusional cocoon and become connected with external metrics of success.
When you stop doing the things that aren’t working, you clear a space for more things that get you the results you want.
My friend and former Microsoft CFO Frank Gaudette used to say: “I reserve the right to wake up smarter every day.” In this mindset, you interpret all feedback as a learning opportunity.
If you don’t have the skills you need, rather than feeling angry or upset about it, find a way to get them.
{{Learn how to remain grounded and centered}}
The more anchored and centered you are, the less likely you will be thrown off balance by the inevitable challenges that come your way.
Train yourself to become more stress-resistant by engaging in a set of daily and weekly practices that keep you on a steady course.
There are many options, including: exercise, meditation, journaling, prayer, or even just becoming immersed in nature by walking in the woods, sitting by the water, or planting in the garden. Choose the mix that’s right for you.
Personal centering practices are only part of the answer. In addition, build a support community—family, friends, peers, mentors, and coaches—to give you the advice and assistance you need during stressful times.
By challenging yourself, readily embracing feedback, and remaining grounded and centered, you can embrace struggle head on and use it as fuel for your career growth.
These practices are like the foundation of a building; they keep the building steady, even through storms and the passage of time.
The sturdier the foundation, the taller the building it will support.
CNN
{Author is the managing director of Snyder Leadership Group, a consulting firm dedicated to cultivating inspired leadership. He is the author of “Leadership and the Art of Struggle”}
{{President Hugo Chavez is breathing with greater difficulty as a new and severe respiratory infection has taken hold, Venezuela’s government said, describing the cancer-stricken president’s condition as “very delicate.”}}
A brief statement read on national television by Communications Minister Ernesto Villegas late Monday carried the sobering news about the charismatic 58-year-old socialist leader’s deteriorating health.
Villegas said Chavez is suffering from “a new, severe infection.” The state news agency identified it as respiratory.
Chavez, 58, has been undergoing “chemotherapy of strong impact,” Villegas added without providing further details.
Chavez has neither been seen nor heard from, except for “proof-of-life” photos released in mid-February, since submitting to a fourth round of surgery in Cuba on Dec. 11 for an unspecified cancer in the pelvic area. It was first diagnosed in June 2011.
The government says he returned home on Feb. 18 and has been confined to Caracas’ military hospital since.
{{Malaysia launched airstrikes and mortar attacks against nearly 200 Filipinos occupying a Borneo coastal village Tuesday to end a bizarre three-week siege that turned into a security nightmare for both Malaysia and the Philippines.}}
The assault follows firefights this past week that killed eight Malaysian police officers and 19 Filipino gunmen, some of whom were members of a Muslim clan that shocked Malaysia and the neighboring Philippines by slipping by boat past naval patrols last month and storming an obscure village on Borneo’s eastern Sabah state.
The crisis has sparked jitters about a spread of instability in Sabah, which is rich in timber and oil resources. Unknown numbers of other armed Filipinos are feared to have encroached on other districts in the area recently.
More than seven hours after fighter jets were deployed, Malaysian Home Minister Hishammuddin Hussein said no injuries occurred among Malaysian police and military personnel who went in to raid houses near palm oil plantations there.
“On the enemy’s side, we have to wait because the operation is ongoing. We have to be careful,” the minister said, refusing to elaborate on whether there were Filipino casualties or captives.
National police chief Ismail Omar said ground forces encountered resistance from gunmen firing at them.
The clansmen, armed with rifles and grenade launchers, had refused to leave the area, staking a long-dormant claim to Malaysia’s entire state of Sabah, which they insisted was their ancestral birthright.
Prime Minister Najib Razak defended the offensive, saying Malaysia made every effort to resolve the siege peacefully since the presence of the group in Lahad Datu district became known on Feb. 12, including by holding talks to encourage the intruders to leave without facing any serious legal repercussions.