Blog

  • Against all odds: Young crooner determined to succeed

    He is an unpretentious man from a humble background, and opts to keep his personal life private. Mani Martin, which is his name on and off the stage, does not know his place of birth which is why he perhaps avoids going into the details about his family.

    Martin, 22, says that he fell in love with music when he was six years old. He grew up listening to music by such renowned Rwandan crooners as Cecile Kayirebwa and Jean Paul Sambutu and hitherto, Martin draws inspiration from the two artistes.

    The young and talented artist, who has been singing for the last five years, has never turned his back to music. So far, Martin has released two albums with a third one due soon.

    He says he is optimistic that his music would feature in the international scene in coming days.

    When IGIHE.com asked his about the challenges he encounters in music, his answer was succinct, “The first problem is a low market for our music here in Rwanda.”

    He however explains that this does not stop him from producing his music no matter how little the money is.

     He says that he could do a collaboration with an upcoming artist as long as they share similar interests.

    Mani Martin appeals to the media to help develop the music industry in the country. He further calls upon the government to shore up the music industry and ensure that local music is archived for posterity.

  • Police spokesman warns against graft

    Rwanda’s zero tolerance to corruption can be illustrated by
    the recent incidence of corruption in Kanombe, Kicukiro District of Kigali,
    where a primary court judge, Lillian Maombi, was apprehended after being caught
    in a malevolent act of bribery.

    In an exclusive interview with IGIHE.com, the spokesperson
    of the Rwanda National Police, Mr Theos  Badege, said the incident
    should serve as an example to all individuals from the average citizens to
    those occupying high positions in government institutions that corruption
    should be avoided and prevented.

    “Its heavy a crime, it’s a bad principle, it’s a way of
    hindering the progress and development that we are undertaking and also a
    blemish to the judicial system in our country,” he observes.

    “In this nationwide sensitisation of anticorruption, we
    wish to suppress the idea that power lies in those who are able carry out these
    activities of bribery and deceit. True power lies in abiding by the law. We
    should use this unfortunate occurrence as an example that there is no one above
    the law, be it those who facilitate in establishing it, such as
    judges. Most importantly, we should not be afraid to notify or report to
    the authorities in case of any malevolent activities like these,” the Police
    spokesman reiterates.

    Rwanda has demonstrated outstanding dedication in fighting
    against corruption. It is a principle that all citizens should continue to
    embrace to sustain development and responsibility to protect and preserve the
    rules that govern us.

    And the battle has had rewarding results. A survey
    conducted by transparency international in 2010, showed Rwanda to be the least
    corrupt country in East Africa by a considerable margin. Incidents of bribery
    are so low with a prevalence of 6 percent compared to neighbouring countries
    such as Uganda and Burundi that range from 30 percent.

    This impressive fact can perhaps be attributed to the
    nationwide anti-corruption drive and divulging of cases of corruption by citizens.

  • Rwanda’s tourism income rises sharply compared to 2010

    The first quarter results of Rwanda’s tourism sectoral performance were released, and the earnings confirmed by government sources are in the region of US$56 million, compared with a figure of only US$43 million last year.

    Visitor arrivals also went up by an astonishing 32 percent compared to the same period in 2010, underscoring the successful efforts by Rwanda to market the country abroad and confirming Rwanda as an emerging destination in Eastern Africa.

    Sources contacted in the tourism industry attribute the success of the first three months of 2011 to a greater variety of tourism products and destinations, with one citing the Nyungwe National Park’s canopy walk, which since its commissioning last year, has already entertained thousands of visitors. Further, forests are being considered for conversion into national parks and lake-based tourism activities are also now taking hold, offering yet more to see and to do when visiting Rwanda. New “birding routes” are also set to be launched later this year, allowing visitors to see the wide variety of bird life resident in “the land of a thousand hills. ”

    The generous visa regime has also been cited as a key factor in attracting more and more visitors every year, with a number of important source countries not needing a visa at all, which sets Rwanda apart from all her East African partners.

    In a related development, the theme of this year’s “Kwita Izina” gorilla naming festival was revealed, which is “Community Development for Sustained Conservation.” Twenty-two baby gorillas born since the festival last year will be formally named on June 18, and hundreds of extra visitors will be coming to Rwanda to participate in this event, which will be accompanied by a series of guest lectures, workshops on conservation and community relations, and sporting events designed towards the annual celebration.

     

  • US professor to testify in genocide suspect’s case

    A United States Professor Scott Straus, who lectures at the University of Wisconsin–Madison, would serve as an expert witness in a genocide case involving genocide suspect Lazare Kobagaya. This is the first genocide to be carried out in US soil. Straus’ extensive knowledge of genocide and African politics has landed him as an expert witness in the trial of Kobagaya who is charged with ordering mass murders during the 1994 Rwandan genocide.

    The trial will take place in Kansas, where 84-year-old Kobagaya now resides, marking the first criminal prosecution in the United States to require proof of genocide, according to the U.S. Justice Department.

    Prosecutors allege Kobagaya illegally obtained United States citizenship by lying on his citizenship application, where he denied participating in the genocide.

    The U.S. Justice Department alleges Kobagaya directed mass burnings of Tutsi homes and killings of hundreds of Tutsis, in addition to ordering the murder of any Hutu women married to Tutsi men.

    Prosecutors are bringing in over 20 Rwandans to serve as witnesses for the case.

    Political Science Associate Professor Straus would not comment on the specifics of the case, but said he expects to testify sometime next week.

    According to the United Human Rights Council, 800,000 people died in the 1994 Rwandan genocide.

    If convicted, Kobagaya faces deportation and up to 10 years in prison.

     The octogenarian Rwandan is accused of lying about his role in the 1994 genocide in his home country to secure US citizenship.

    Kobagaya, a diminutive man with a graying mustache, on Tuesday this week, walked with a cane into the Wichita courthouse accompanied by a half-dozen family members.

    He listened to the proceedings with the aid of an interpreter, although he introduced himself at the start of jury selection in English, saying : “My name is Lazare Kobagaya.”

    The case is being heard in a Kansas federal courtroom because Kobagaya moved here in 2005 to join family members.

     But prosecutors allege Kobagaya lied on his December 2005 citizenship application by denying he had participated in the genocide and falsifying other aspects of his background.

     US immigration and citizenships forms routinely ask applicants if they have ever persecuted another person because of their race or social group, and also probe whether the applicant has committed any crime for which they have not been prosecuted.

     If convicted of lying on his citizenship application, Kobagaya faces deportation.

     Numerous witnesses are being brought to the central state of Kansas from Africa to testify about the events from April through mid-July 1994 when an estimated 800,000 people, most of them Tutsis, were killed in Rwanda.

     “I will tell you, some of the evidence is going to be pretty grim and disturbing,” US District Judge Monti Belot told potential jurors, adding that several witnesses are “people who actually participated in genocide.”

     Potential jurors questioned Tuesday said they had little or no knowledge of Rwanda or the events that occurred there nearly two decades ago.

    The indictment says most of those who were killed belonged to the Tutsi ethnic and social group, while most of the killings were carried out by members of the Hutu ethnic group.

     According to the indictment, Kobagaya was a wealthy Hutu who lived in southern Rwanda. It is alleged that he organized and incited violence against Tutsis on several occasions, including ordering Hutu to burn Tutsi homes, murder hundreds of Hutu who had tried to flee the violence, and kill Tutsi women who had married Hutu men.

    Kobagaya’s defense attorneys have argued in court papers that their client’s name never turned up in lists of genocide suspects compiled by independent sources in the aftermath of the violence.

     It was not until he gave a statement on behalf of another Rwandan convicted of genocide by a Finnish court that he was targeted by US investigators, the defense attorneys say.

     In addition to denying that he participated in genocide, Kobagaya told immigration officials that he had lived in the African nation of Burundi from 1993 to 1995, the indictment states.

     Kobagaya’s family declined comment during a break in the proceedings.

     Two translators are also being used in the courtroom as interpreters for many of the witnesses, just one of many complications that Belot said could cause the case to last for eight to 10 weeks.

    Meanwhile, the Government on Wednesday hailed the
    arrest of one the key genocide suspects, currently on trial before Wichita
    (Kansas) in the United States, saying this is a “landmark in fight against
    the culture of impunity” and a clear messages to all “genocidaires
    who are still hiding in several western nations. ” “Arresting
    this key genocide suspect (by U. S. justice) whose hands are stained with the
    blood of thousands of innocent people is a historic and unforgettable
    moment,” said prosecution spokesman Alain Mukuralinda Mukuralinda.

    Rwanda has made an extradition request to the U. S. justice, the
    spokesman said. “We hope that after years and
    years, justice will be finally served” Mukuralinda told the media in Kigali.

  • Rwanda participates in Burundian film festival

    Rwanda is taking part in an international film festival that is presently ongoing in the Burundian capital, Bujumbura.

    The festival dubbed Fest cab, which is taking place for the fifth time, started on 29th of April and shall end on 6th of May 2011.

     Among Rwandan films to be screened in that film festive include the ‘The Long Coat’ and ‘Mayibobo’, which are directed by Eduard Bamporiki and Yves M Niyongabo respectively.

    Burundian Minister of Culture and Youth Jean Jacque Niyongabo said that this year’s festival was more high profiled compared to previous ones.

    “We have many renowned actors, who won different awards such as Eddy Munyaneza, and Jean Marie Ndihokubwabo and many others”.

    Participants are drawn from several countries including Rwanda, Burundi, Uganda, and Kenya, Belgium among others.

    The president of Fest cab Leonce Ngabo said that the festival would help participants to discover different cultures and also the history of different countries.

  • Rwandan rebel leaders due in court in Germany

    Two senior Rwandan Hutu rebel leaders go on trial Wednesday accused of masterminding from Germany atrocities in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).

    In the dock in the southwestern German city of Stuttgart are Ignace Murwanashyaka, 47, the head of the “terrorist” Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR), and his deputy Straton Musoni, 49.

    Justice minister Tharcisse Karugarama has hailed Germans continued efforts to prosecute the two Rwandan genocide fugitives 

    Before their arrest in Germany in November 2009, the two ordered mass killings and rapes from Germany together with a third man living in France who has been extradited to the International Criminal Court (ICC), prosecutors say.

    They will face 26 counts of crimes against humanity and 39 counts of war crimes committed by militias under their command between January 2008 and the date of their arrest.

    Those crimes’ foundation in international law dates back to the Nuremberg trials of top Nazis after World War II.

    The United Nations hailed the trial as a breakthrough after repeated calls by the Security Council to bring FDLR commanders living abroad to justice and to bar them from unleashing further violence in the strife-wracked eastern DRC.

    “This cooperative burden-sharing in prosecuting individuals for serious international crimes will greatly advance the fight against impunity,” UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said in January.

    “Legal action against FDLR leaders also reinforces efforts to demobilize and repatriate FDLR fighters, which would significantly contribute to stabilizing the eastern DRC.”

    A resident of Germany for two decades, Murwanashyaka studied in the western city of Bonn and was afforded asylum, settling in Mannheim in the southwest. He is married to a German woman.

    Musoni, his right-hand man since 2004, has lived in Germany since 1994.

    Prosecutors say Murwananshyaka ordered around 200 killings and “large numbers” of rapes by his milititas, had them use civilians as “human shields” and sent child soldiers into battle in eastern DRC.

    “I am the president and… the supreme commander” of the FDLR, “I know exactly what is happening” on the ground, he told German media in interviews in 2008 and 2009.

    A UN report counted 240 telephone calls between Murwananshyaka, known as the “The Doctor” for his PhD in economics, and his officers during the same period.

    A protege of former DRC president Laurent-Desire Kabila, Murwananshyaka also paid occasional visits to his troops in the country’s dense forests, according to the UN.

    At the time of their arrest, the rebel group said that the two were “in no way involved in the atrocities committed against civilians in eastern DRC,” calling their detention “unfair and unjustified.”

    The trial is to run until at least July.

    The FDLR was created by the perpetrators of the 1994 Rwandan genocide, who fled to neighbouring DRC after President Paul Kagame took power.

    Its around 5,000 Hutu fighters are seen as a major source of instability in Africa’s resource-rich Great Lakes region.

    Kagame has criticised Western countries in the past for not doing enough to bring FDLR leaders to justice, and the UN mission in DRC, known as MONUSCO, has called on other countries to follow the example set by France and Germany.

    Murwanashyaka, head of the FDLR since 2001, was among 15 people whose assets were frozen by the Security Council in 2005 on suspicion of involvement in war crimes.

    He had been arrested but later released in Germany in 2006 due to a lack of witnesses for the prosecution. Germany declined a request to extradite him to Rwanda in 2008 but later launched another inquiry.

    Prosecutors said they questioned witnesses in Africa “in very difficult conditions” with the aid of the UN and non-governmental organisations.

    In January, a former mayor, Onesphore Rwabukombe, went on trial in Germany charged with ordering and organising during the Rwandan genocide the killing of at least 3,730 Tutsis who had sought refuge in church buildings.

    France is holding a third alleged senior leader in the FDLR, Callixte Mbarushimana, who faces a trial at the International Criminal Court in The Hague. Belgium is also among European countries arresting suspected Rwandan genocidaires with the country having captured four in the last two months.

  • MTN Rwanda to augment mobile cash service

    MTN Rwanda plans to develop more applications on its mobile money transfer service to allow more transactions and tap into the booming demand for the facility.

    The firm announced it had transferred over Rwf12 billion ($201 million) since its launch last year with an estimated 6,000 transactions carried out daily. It has so far attracted 261,000 users and 310 agents across the country.

    “We are expanding usage of the service beyond money remittance to allow clients from financial institutions such as MFIs to pay off loans and make deposits and transfer money from their savings account to their Mobile Money account,” MTN Rwanda’s head of mobile money Albert Kinuma said.

    Millicom International Cellular’s Tigo Rwanda and Rwandatel are in the process of launching mobile money transfer services too.

    Remittance charges

    Sending money through the MTN service attracts a fee of Rwf250 ($0.42) for any transaction between Rwf1,500 ($2.6) and Rwf300,000 ($504) for those registered while the transaction cost varies between Rwf600 ($0.90) and Rwf4,000 ($6) for the unregistered.

    However, users can only send between Rwf1,500 ($2.6) and Rwf 500,000($804) — the limit set by the National Bank of Rwanda for funds transfer through the service.

    Currently, the product, in which MTN Rwanda invested over $2 million, also allows users to buy airtime and pay for electricity upon registration.

    “The Mobile Money arena is still in its infancy,” said Mr Kinuma adding that MTN Rwanda is exploring possibilities of extending the service to enable transactions across the border.

    According to BNR director of payment systems John Bosco Sebabi, while MTN’s Mobile Money has registered tremendous progress, services offered on MTN’s Mobile Money need to be brought onto the national electronic payment platform.

    “If the value stored in the telephone can actually be used to pay for goods and services without necessarily picking up cash at the agent or, if it is transferable onto accounts at the bank, the unbanked can stop using cash,” Mr Sebabi said.

    Mr Sesabi added that the bank’s strategy of modernising payments systems in the country is to change Rwanda from a cash-based to a cashless society.

    Earlier last month, the central bank licensed the country’s second mobile operator Tigo Rwanda to provide a mobile payment service (Tigo Cash). The company is set to launch the service by end of this year.

    As part of modernising the national payment system, the central bank has begun implementing the Rwanda Integrated Payments Processing System, which is geared towards making payment systems in the country efficient and reliable.

    According to Mr Sebabi, the system will support new and innovative payment instruments and systems such as mobile money.

    “A mobile phone is owned by many people, thus the growth of cellular phones supersedes the growth of usual bank accounts. The growth of mobile money is thus promising and it is a good channel for electronic payments.”

    In addition to money remittances, MTN is working with other companies such as microfinance institutions (MFIs) to allow users the option to pay loans and make savings deposits, transfer money from their savings account to their mobile money account, and so on.

    MTN Mobile Money was officially launched in February 2010. The carrier invested over $2 million in the service developmen

    Currently, Rwanda’s mobile phone penetration stands at 35 per cent, the second lowest in the region after Burundi.

  • Minister underscores the importance of ceramic stoves to protect environment

    The state minister of infrastructure Hon. Eng. Coletha Ruhamya has stressed the importance of promoting the usage of clay and ceramic stoves as a way of protecting the environment.

    She made the remarks when she joined other top government officials, members of the private companies and development partners, top military officials and police officers to do their share of community service before assessing the Nyarugati Imbere energy sector project in Nyamata District of the Eastern Province last Saturday.

     “The cutting down of trees is not only affecting the environment of Bugesera but also by using stones and firewood, people are more prone to illness due to the smoke they breath in everyday,” the minister said in his address.

    “We want every Rwandan to have the opportunity to take care of our environment but this does not mean that by the stopping the cutting of trees, the people should not be able to find a way to sustain their daily needs. By working together, we can not only keep our country beautiful but we can help each other in finding affordable and safer ways in which we can prosper in great health,” she observed.

    The Nyarugati Imbere project involves a bio mass and energy sector project, which will train and promote an environmentally, cost effective, safe and reliable service to all sectors and households across Rwanda. The project began in Nyamata, which was the first district to produce a clay stove, proving that they are not only cost and environmentally friendly but are also reliable and durable.

    An exhibition held in the area underlined how cooking with firewood, which has until now been the only method of cooking in most rural areas, is not only affecting the environment but is also harmful to their health.

    Francince Mukaruberwa, a rural supervisor in Nyamata District told IGIHE.com that the project was a success.

    “Before this program was put in place, there was a four hour difference between how long it would take to cook a simple meal using firewood and the stove. ”

    From students, to the mayor of Bugesera, the minister of state herself, all took a lesson on how to build a stove for oneself.

    The training program’s team consists of two consultants from Kenya and fifteen students from the rural districts. The students would be trained for free to make clay and ceramic stoves. At the end of their training, each student from each district would be able to teach those in their home districts on how to build the cost effective stoves. According to the trainees, one stove could last up to ten years.

  • Did Green party leader deserve democracy award?

    The Swedish Parliament must have be misled when they recently awarded Frank Habineza, the leader of Democratic Green Party of Rwanda (DGPR) won a democracy award which is unmerited for the leader, despite his so-called conservation ideas that have never yield tangible results in the country.

    The leader, who is believed to have played his cards well, is the first individual in the region to receive the award, which risks loosing its credibility if dished out to individuals who do not deserve it.

    Habineza whose party has not yet full filled requirements to be legally registered as a political party in the country, bald-facedly said that he was proud of the award, adding that he would continue to advocate for democracy through peaceful means.

    The Green Party representative in Sweden insisted that members would not give up in persuading the Rwandan political forum to approve their party to operate in the country. Such remarks are deemed as duplicitous since the political forum has on several occasions advised the greens on the requirements.

    On 28 December last year, the Green party leader mae a key decision when he distanced his party from an opposition forum known as (Permanent Consultative Council of Opposition Parties in Rwanda) PCC.

    It is believed that Habineza’s decision was influenced by Dr. Papa Meisa Dieng, the head of political parties under the African Green Federation, who might have advised him to distance himself from two other opposition leaders whose political manifestos were full of ethnic incitements.

    Among the leaders Habineza departed from were Victoire Ingabire, who leads FDU-Inkingi and PS Imberakuri’s Bernard Ntaganda. The two are currently detained at a Kigali prison on political violations and public incitement charges especially based on genocide ideology.

  • Up, close and personal with former minister Joe Habineza

    Dressed in casual clothes, already enjoying a comfortable evening after a long session of tennis, he gets up with a calm but still eager manner ready to reveal his story.

    A tale of his life, an account that has defined him and consequently made him who he is, a story that has now led him to a new chapter awaiting to be unraveled. An avid sportsman , Joe Habineza, strikes is a loving father, with a unique personality, not just as a politician but one of the most influential figures in our society. He is also a man whose passion, drive and live-wire personality has made a difference and whose success made him an easy target of outrageous controversy. In his own view, he is the perfect bull’s eye towards tarnishing the image of the state through a spiteful political motive.

    Born in Kayenzi now known as Kamonyi District, his mother always used to tell him as a young boy that he would grow up to be a leader. “I was always calling the shots, from being the school head-boy to being the captain of the sports team,” the former minister of Sports and culture nostalgically recalls. Such was his remarkable display of leadership since he was very young, a characteristic that would continue to mark his long and successful career path.

    After graduating with an information Communication Technology degree in Rwanda , he continued to embark on that particular career course, for the next 15 years, working as the ICT manager of the alcoholic beverages manufacturer, Heineken. It was a long journey full of twists and turns that eventually led him to work in other African states. When I ask him if he initially planned to pursue a career in politics, he mentions that he never envisioned that career path but was still influenced by it especially during the liberation of the country through his support and admiration of the Rwanda Patriotic Front ideology and cause.

    He is a man whose experience transcends the geographical bounds of our nation. When asked about Rwanda’s development relative to those other countries, he says, “We possess the work ethic and dedication that is superior to that displayed in some of the other nations, for instance, in the DR Congo, where I once worked. Nevertheless, we still have to take it one step further with more entrepreneurship and risk taking as we are still lagging behind in those. ”

    His extensive and thriving career in the private sector eventually led him to venture into the world of politics. Appointed to the post of Minister of Sports, Youth and Culture in 2004, he admits to have been first surprised, but embraced his new role with the gusto and vigour that have always been the hallmark of his character. Such are the traits that have undoubtedly wrought the underpinning to his incredible passion and exuberance that he ceaselessly implements in his line of duty.

    “I embraced my new found role and undertook it with a lot of passion,” says Joe.

    “I always strive to do things at 120 percent ; it is always that passion that will take you that extra mile. ”

    About the key to success and ability to reaching out to so many and bringing about a positive influence, he says. “It is all about teamwork, knowing those you are accountable to and respecting them while at the same time, being an example to your subordinates and reaching out to them as opposed to being ruthless. ”

    “But most importantly, it is integrating that strong spirit of never giving up, which is essential to attaining success or establishing a successful institution and sustaining it,” Habineza reveals.

    Despite his eventful reign as a cabinet minister, he was recently subject to a scandal through malicious publications on the Internet. He maintains that was an event initiated with malevolent purposes that go beyond blemishing the reputation of one man.

    “Those publications had very negative and dangerous intentions. They were all about negation, aimed at tarnishing the image of the government with the purpose of inciting the people to be pulled in by all the false information and rubbish that was published,” he observes, adding that it was a plot that was set up, with much bigger and far more dangerous implications.

    “I was at the centre of it all and as a responsible person at the service of my country, I had to resign in order not to associate the government with such kind of things,” he laments. 

    On his vision and future plans, he says that he still plans on servicing his nation at whatever level, be it the private or the public sector.

    He certainly depicts the image of a resolute person with a strong and powerful vision for himself and his country as well.