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  • Kigali Institute of Health to partner with U.S varsities

    A partnership between Kigali Institute of Health and 16 top US universities through the Clinton Health Access Initiative seeks to improve comprehensive and innovative human resources in the country.

    Recently appointed health minister Agnes Binagwaho hailed the partnership adding that at the end of seven year training period the institution would have produced a good number of local professional health practitioners. The curriculum is intended to facilitate both physicians and nurses.

    In this respect, Vincent Rusanganwa who is in charge of training in the ministry of health was quick to ssupport the minister’s remarks adding that the program would add on the number of professionals since there only 113 physician, the program intends to produce 700 more in the next years, while the number of nurses is expected to increase from 457 to 5287.

    “The trainings are expected to boost the county’s vision 2020 and MDG’s target towards achieving better health services,” health minister remarked.

    Lessons will also be extended to relevant local institutions such as the nursing school in Nyagatare as well as medical faculties at the national university. The trainings will cover six core areas including internal medicine, pediatrics, obstetrics and gynecology, surgery, anesthesia, and family medicine.

    A student exchange program will also be part of program whereby US students will conduct their internship in the country and vice versa.

    At least 50 health managers are expected to be trained on management skills which would enable better management in each of the 44 district hospitals. Currently the few health professionals head referral hospitals.

    Ira Magaziner, the Chief Executive Officer and the Vice Chair of the Clinton Health Access Initiative said that the partnership was the first of kind in the region and Rwanda chosen the ideal country due to its progress towards health promotion especially in the rural.

  • Bank of Kigali might be cross-listed in Nairobi’s capital market

    The Nairobi Stock Exchange (NSE) is set to see the first ever cross-listing of a company from a neighbouring country, opening a new investment opportunity for investors keen on diversifying their portfolio beyond Kenya’s economy.

    The intended cross-listing of “at least two companies” from neighbouring countries is still at the discussion stage, but the NSE said at least one of the firms is expected to start trading before the end of this year.

    Mr Donald Ouma, the head of product development and research at the NSE, said the new stock is expected to be listed by way of an initial public offering (IPO).

    He, however, declined to reveal the identity of the firms citing client confidentiality, but said more details will be made public before the end of next month.

    “We have held discussions about a yet-to-be listed stock from the region, the company to be cross-listed would be by way of an initial public offer,” said Mr Ouma.

    Rwanda’s biggest State-owned lender Bank de Kigali’s is expected to be sold to the public later this year in an IPO, making it a prime candidate for the intended cross-listing.

    At least seven Kenyan companies are cross-listed in Uganda, Tanzania and Rwanda stock exchanges, but no company from the region has listed its shares at the Nairobi bourse.

    The cross-listed companies include Kenya Airways, KCB, Nation Media Group, Centum, Diamond Trust Bank, Jubilee Holdings and Equity Bank.

    Regional markets

    Safaricom, Stanbic Bank Uganda and Rwandese beer maker Bralirwa have floated cross-border IPOs, giving local investors a chance to diversify their investments even though they their exposure to neighbouring countries remains small mainly because the other regional capital markets are still at their infancy.

    In Rwanda for instance, the Kigali Stock Exchange was launched in January this year.

    It has only three listed companies, Bralirwa — the country’s biggest beer and soft drinks maker, Nation Media Group and KCB.

    The expected cross-listing will take the tally of listed firms at the NSE to 56 with at least five other local firms, among them British-American Investments Company and TransCentury expected to list at the bourse before the end of the year.

    In an interview last week, chairman of Dyer and Blair Investment Bank, Mr Jimnah Mbaru, predicted that the company most likely to be cross-listed at the local bourse would be Bank de Kigali, which is expected to sell 25 per cent of its shares to the public to raise additional capital to fund growth.

    “The only offering I expect to go public and cross-list at the NSE would be the Bank de Kigali,” said Mr Mbaru, whose firm was a joint transaction adviser in the listing of Bralirwa.

    He is betting on the capital requirements by both governments and corporations across the entire region to encourage fundraising activities beyond their jurisdictions- a key factor informing the ongoing push for the integrating of the regional capital markets.

    Mr Ouma added that the NSE was working with the other stock exchanges to introduce a trading platform that would integrate their operations aimed at minimising price differentials in the specific markets for cross-listed shares.

  • Lake Kivu: Potential for energy or cataclysmic disaster for ages

    Imagine wandering into a village and everything motionless. Just a mound of lifeless bodies lying around, leaving you horrified. Such a terrible scene would qualify for horror movie but this is exactly what happened in the villages around Lake Nyos in Cameroon in 1986, where more than 1,700 people instantly died from asphyxiation after inhaling huge quantities of carbon dioxide emitted from the lake.

     Such terrible natural disasters are rare that only two have ever been recorded, once in 1984 from Lake Monoun and the other in Lake Nyos but now an even greater danger lies dormant. Lake Kivu, which is much bigger and shared by Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of Congo, and situated in a more densely populated region could potentially be the source of a devastating calamity.

    Lake Kivu is among three of rare water bodies in the world known as limnic lakes . Lakes such as these have the property of erupting massive amounts of carbon dioxide, a phenomenon known as a lake overturn. An event that could be triggered by various catalysts such as an eruption, or earthquake if the saturation of the carbon dioxide contained within the lake reaches critical levels of 100 percent. To illustrate this in layman terms, prior to a lake being saturated, it behaves like an unopened carbonated beverage (soft drink) : the carbon dioxide is dissolved in the water similarly to how it is dissolved in the lake. In both the lake and the soft drink, carbon dioxide dissolves much more at high pressure. When the drink is open, the pressure is released thus making the carbon dioxide come out of solution. If the lake reaches full saturation, the pressure exerted by the gases will be more than the pressure caused by the lake thus making it highly unstable and a trigger is all that is required to set off an eruption sending vast amounts of carbon dioxide to bubble out of the lake.

    Fortunately, the chances of such an event transpiring are not high. “The risks are a little bit above 50 percent given the saturation levels of the gas in the lake,” says Augusta Umutoni, Engineer in charge of environmental concern in the Lake Kivu project.

    “The pressure exerted by the gas contained in the lake needs to be more than the hydrostatic pressure of the water,” she adds. This is something that is not likely to occur due to the recent methane gas extraction that is being extracted. Umutoni says that CH4 (methane) has a big partial pressure, if extracted and this significantly reduces the overall pressure exerted by both gases. The extraction of methane gas not only acts as source of vast amounts of energy but it also increases the stability of the lake.

    “The lake produces more gas and recharges itself at a rate of 150 million cubic metres per year ; this would take about 100 years for it to reach critical saturation levels of 100 percent. Presently, we are still on 57 percent level of saturation, she says, adding that this diminish the danger.

    Umutoni points out that Lake Kivu is situated in a region of high seismic and volcanic activity. It is even close to Mount Nyiragongo , which erupted in 2002. The eruption caused lava to cover a big portion of Goma city and this streamed down to Lake Kivu. “At the time, there was fear that the lava would cause gas saturated waters to rise to the surface. Luckily, this did not happen,” she says.

    “After the explosion, the European Union sent an expedition of experts to investigate on this and it was discovered that the lava had sunk to a depth of around 100 meters beneath the lake, where the main gradient of the gas is at 260 metres. This indicates that a seismic wave that would only be able to make lava reach at that point and trigger a lake overturn would have to be one of monumental magnitude.” observes Augusta, something that is unlikely to occur.

    She says that this improbability should not be taken for granted, because there is another area of Lake Kivu , known as Kibuno Bay that contains 100 percent saturation levels of carbon dioxide. The discovery of this has prompted the establishment of a de-gasing plant to reduce the risks. However, she says that installation and implementation of this project is far from being underway.

    Umutoni observes that Lake Kivu seems to be as fascinating as much as it is potentially hazardous. “Nevertheless, it would be safe to assume that the dangers lying around the lake despite their great disastrous potential have low probability of occurrence. The methane gas project for now is an excellent way to avert this danger in the long term by not only providing greater socio-economic benefit but by also maintaining and perhaps increasing the stability of this great lake,” she recaps. 

  • Rwandan rebels waged war on mobiles

    How to spearhead a deadly militia in Congo, from Germany ? In modern times, one only needs a mobile-phone and a laptop to unleash a humanitarian catastrophe. German prosecutors are convinced that two Rwandans waged a brutal war some 6,000 kilometres away via telephone calls and emails.

    Judges in Stuttgart this week will continue hearing evidence against two Rwandan rebel leaders for war crimes and crimes against humanity carried out in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC).

    Known as the “The Doctor” for his PhD in economics, Ignace Murwanashyaka headed the Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR) in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo. With the help of his deputy Straton Musoni, he maintained the militia’s website, signed press releases and gave interviews about the group’s struggle against Rwanda.

    But prosecutors in Stuttgart argue that Murwanashyaka and Musoni also directly ordered the burning of Congolese villages, the murder of 200 civilians, large numbers of rapes, recruitment of child soldiers and the use of human shields. Both men face a sentence of life in prison.

    Handcuffed
    They were brought to court last Wednesday, handcuffed but looking confident with six lawyers at their side. The prosecutor read out a total of 55 counts of crimes against humanity and war crimes including mass killings and rapes as part of “terror campaign” in eastern DR Congo from 2008 until their arrest in 2009. 

    They allegedly led a terrorist organisation from their sitting rooms. “We are talking about the full range of atrocities that one can imagine in a civil war,” federal prosecutor Christian Ritscher told a panel of six judges in opening arguments. The defence, however, demanded a dismissal of the proceedings saying the trial is purely politically motivated.

    The trial poses a huge challenge for judges in Stuttgart. It is too dangerous for them to visit the crime scenes so it requires some imagination to picture what happened in small jungle villages thousands of kilometres away. Besides, they will also have to familiarise themselves with the history of the region, the type of crimes and the cultural context.

    Numbering between 3,500 and 5,000 fighters, the FDLR is notorious for using rape as a weapon of war. It consists of former Rwandan Hutu government soldiers and militias who carried out the 1994 genocide. Since they fled Rwanda that year, the former génocidaires tried to topple the Tutsi-dominated government in Rwanda, without success. Although its European leadership is behind bars, the group continue its brutalities in the dense forests of Eastern Congo, where they control gold mines and collaborate with other fighting forces to sell mineral products.

    Impunity
    The FDLR leadership enjoyed considerable impunity in Europe. While some of them already had a suspicious past in Rwanda, they were never seriously investigated. Murwanashyaka – who has been living in Germany since 1989 and presided the FDLR since 2001- had been arrested earlier in 2006. He was released because of lack of witnesses. But after new inquiries Murwanashyaka was arrested again in November 2009, this time alongside Musoni.

    Despite the many challenges, Human Rights Watch says the trial is groundbreaking. It is “a powerful statement that courts – even thousands of miles away from where the atrocities occurred – can play a decisive role in combating impunity,” says the organisation’s International Justice Advocacy Director Geraldine Mattioli-Zeltner.”The German authorities took an important step in carrying out their legal obligation to prosecute these horrific crimes.”

    She says that Germany is “joining the expanding club of states that are willing” to fight impunity for international crimes. Although a local court in Frankfurt is dealing with a case against Rwandan genocide suspect Onesphore Rwabukombe since January, the FDLR trial will be an important test-case for Germany’s Code of Crimes Against International Law. Adopted in 2002 it allows prosecution of foreigners for war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide. It is “extremely far-reaching” as it does not require any link to Germany says Mattioli-Zeltner.

    Universal jurisdicition
    Over the past two decades a dozen of countries adopted the principle of universal jurisdiction. They have allowed national courts to investigate and prosecute grave international crimes committed elsewhere. Most universal jurisdiction cases concerned Rwandans, allegedly implicated in the country’s mass-killings. Genocide suspects were recently arrested in Norway, Belgium and France, while a court in the US started a trial against a Rwandan last month and a Dutch appeals court is to deliver a judgement at the end of June.

    The case in Stuttgart will be closely monitored by the International Criminal Court (ICC) in The Hague, where Callixte Mbarushimana awaits his possible trial. After Murwanashyaka and Musoni were arrested, Mbarushimana worked as the executive secretary of the FDLR from Paris, where he was arrested last year.

    Meanwhile, the trial in Stuttgart is scheduled to run until at least July while observers say it may even take up to one year.

    (This story was first published by [Radio Netherlands International)->http://www.rnw.nl/]

  • EAC to study regional oil pipeline

    The
    East African Community is set to undertake a feasibility study on the
    construction of an oil product pipeline from Uganda to Rwanda, easing fuel
    supplies in the landlocked countries of Rwanda and Burundi, the EAC secretariat
    said early this week.

    The regional
    body has obtained a grant of at least $600,000 for the study from the African
    Development Bank, which will look at the viability of linking the two countries
    to a pipeline project running from the Kenyan coast to Uganda, the EAC cited
    Patrick Nyoike, the permanent secretary of Kenya’s Ministry of Energy, as
    saying.

    “The
    plan is to link Kigali [in Rwanda] by a pipeline from Kampala [Uganda], which
    will allow petroleum products to be accessed from the planned refinery in
    Uganda, as well as the existing refinery in Mombasa [on the Kenyan coast] and
    international markets,” Nyoike was quoted as saying.

    Uganda is
    planning to build a 150,000 barrel-a-day refinery in its oil-rich Albertine
    Rift basin following the discovery of at least a billion barrels of oil in the
    past couple of years.

    In March,
    U.K.-based Tullow Oil PLC agreed on a joint-venture deal with France oil major
    Total SA and China’s CNOOC Ltd. for the development of the oil fields in the
    basin, which is expected to cost at least $10 billion.

    EAC member
    states are also planning to diversify energy sources within the region in order
    to enhance security of energy supply, Nyoike was cited as saying.

    The
    regional body has finalized studies on the proposed natural gas pipeline from
    the Tanzanian port of Dar es Salaam to Kenya’s Mombasa in order to end
    overreliance on limited forms of energy. In February, Tanzania said that its
    gas reserves had more than doubled to 7.5 trillion cubic feet following a
    number of discoveries off the Tanzanian coast.

    It is
    expected that the project will contribute to the reduction of energy costs and
    shield power generation from variability of weather and international crude oil
    prices, Nyoike was cited as saying.

    The EAC
    member states are Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, Rwanda and Burundi.

  • Minibus crash kills 16

    A minibus crash on the Kigali-Gitarama highway left 16 passengers dead on Saturday evening.

    The public transport minibus was crushed by a cargo truck as it tried to overtake it on an exit route out of the city at a area popularly known as Kugiti Cyinyoni.

    The police and rescue teams made up of senior government officials, the Commissioner General of Police, Emmanuel Gasana and Kigali City mayor , Fidele Ndayisaba, locals and journalists including those from IGIHE.com, were quick to report to the scene

    “The accident happened at about 18:30 outside Kigali, on the road towards Gitarama,” police spokesperson Theos Badege told the media.

    “The minibus carrying 19 passengers tried to overtake the truck but found itself facing an oncoming vehicle. On returning to the middle of the road it hit the truck.

    “The minibus was dragged to the side of the road by the truck and flattened,” he said.

    “Of the 19 passengers, 16 were killed. The three others were taken to hospital. The two people travelling in the truck were not hurt.”

    Due the severity of the accident, the first victim was pulled out after a protracted four hour effort. The injured three were immediately rushed to hospital for intensive care. Those present in the truck were unhurt.

    The rescue mission lasted approximately six hours at 12.45 am. 

  • Africa can make more money from tourism, says report

    The Africa Competitiveness Report 2011, produced by the World Economic Forum, the African Development Bank and the World Bank, states that the continent has many advantages on which to build its tourism industry, including price competitiveness, a strong affinity for tourism and rich natural resources supported by efforts towards environmental sustainability.

    “One out of every twenty jobs in Africa is in the tourism and travel industry ; worldwide it is one out of every ten. That shows you the potential that we have if we can get the travel and industry up to the level of the global average,” said Shantayanan Devarajan, the World Bank’s chief economist for the Africa region, during the launch of the report in Cape Town at the World Economic Forum on Africa.

    According to a study by the Natural Resources Consultative Forum, a US$250,000 investment in the tourism sector generates an average of 182 full-time jobs.

    Devarajan singled out Rwanda as a country that has made the most of its tourism potential by creating a thriving industry around its mountain gorilla population. “Rwanda was coming off the genocide in the mid-1990s and they needed a source of foreign exchange. They’ve got these beautiful gorillas . . . and they decided to promote an ecologically friendly, highly targeted tourism industry around the gorillas,” he noted.

    Rwanda has also involved the local communities in the gorilla industry. This creates employment and insures that villagers have a direct interest in the conservation of the gorillas’ natural habitat.

    The report notes that a number of challenges remain to advance the continent’s competitiveness in the tourism sector. These include improving safety and security, upgrading health and hygiene levels, developing numerous forms of infrastructure, and fostering the region’s human capital.

    In addition to harnessing Africa’s tourism potential, the report found that to improve the continent’s competitiveness, governments should focus on stronger integration into international trade and finance, improved educational systems, as well as enhanced entrepreneurial opportunities for women.

  • Nyabihu landslide victims interred

    A subdued mood hang on to Gakoro cell, Rugera Sector, Nyabihu District yesterday, as the 14 victims of Friday’s mudslide tragedy were buried.

    Top government officials including Senators, Members of parliament and Ministers James Kabarebe and Gen Marcel Gatsinzi joined friends and relatives joined thousands to to remember the victims who died when a collapsing hillside engulfed the homes of one family who were asleep in the wee hours of Friday morning.

    Shortly after laying wreaths at the mass grave in which the victims were laid to rest, Disaster management minister Gatsinzi thanked the residents for their quick response and extended the government’s sympathy to the bereaved family.

    “We greatly regret the death of these people and extend our heartfelt condolences to the people of Nyabihu,” Gatsinzi said.

    He noted that local residents should ensure they find safer places to settle to avoid such accidents in future. The landslide was triggered by a heavy downpour.

    Those who died included 39 year-old Jean Damascene Nzamuhabwanimana, his 11 children and three wives identified as Alphonsine Ntibarikure, Gorette Nyirahabyarimana and Esperance Akingeneye.

    During the funeral service, mourners were shocked with the extent of damage .

    The district’s Mayor, Emmanuel Nsengiyumva, said that environmental hazards were a major problem in the district.

    “Given the topography of this region, more measures should be taken in order to avoid the risk of further landslides,” Nsengiyumva said.

  • Immigration trial for Kobagaya replays horrors of genocide in courtroom

    The horrors of the 1994 Rwandan genocide are being replayed in a federal courtroom in Wichita as the second week of testimony begins Monday. The case involves a Rwandan man resident in Kansas, Wichita in the United States accused of inciting atrocities and then lying about his role to U.S. immigration authorities.

    Lazare Kobagaya was indicted two years ago on charges of unlawfully obtaining U.S. citizenship in 2006 with fraud and misuse of an alien registration card. Prosecutors have said it is the first case in the United States requiring proof of genocide.

    The 84-year-old Topeka man says he is innocent.

    Prosecutors say they expect to wrap up their case either this coming week or early the following one.

    Several genocide witnesses and U.S. immigration officials are still left to testify for the government.

  • Leaders meet on progress for poorest countries

    • Fourth U.N. Conference on Least Developed Countries convenes next week in Istanbul, Turkey.
    • Two-thirds of developing countries are on track to meet Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) ; for others, challenges remain.
    • Despite setbacks due to conflict, Nepal, Solomon Islands and Rwanda have made progress on issues such as primary education, reducing maternal mortality.

    Bahadur Magar once had to borrow to put food on the table. Then, with seed money and training from a World Bank-backed program, he started a vegetable business, earning enough money to feed his family year-round and send his eight children to school.

    “Instead of collecting money, the man I used to borrow from comes over to buy vegetables,” says the farmer from a remote district in eastern Nepal.

    Stories of new-found prosperity like Magar’s have become more commonplace in the last 10 years, as millions of people have emerged from poverty.

    But as heads of state and representatives from United Nations member countries meet next week in Istanbul for the 4th [U.N. Conference on Least Developed Countries (LDCs)->http://www.un.org/wcm/content/site/ldc/home], millions more don’t have enough nutritious food to eat, adequate access to health care, clean water or a toilet.

    The conference, attended by governments, international organizations, civil society organizations, academia and the private sector, will assess development results over the last decade, and identify challenges and opportunities for helping low-income countries overcome remaining hurdles in the next 10 years.

    Despite Crises, Countries Closer to Goals

    Several low-income countries are closer to meeting development goals despite strains on budgets from consecutive food, fuel and financial crises. Scaling up agriculture, along with other successful programs and strategies, could accelerate progress on human development goals and help more countries become economically self-sustaining, says World Bank Managing Director Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala.

    “It’s vital to build on the achievements of LDCs to date and to recognize that poor countries have been playing their part to contribute to the global economy,” she said. “Clearly today, these countries still face significant risks from high and volatile food prices, climate change and conflict. While these uncertainties loom large, out of crises comes opportunity to realize a new decade of growth.”

    Already, two-thirds of developing countries are on track –or close—to meeting [Millennium Development Goals->http://www.worldbank.org/mdgs] (MDGs) such as sending equal numbers of boys and girls to school, or reducing child mortality.

    “Many lagging countries can still reach several of the MDGs by 2015—or soon after—if their policies improve and their growth accelerates,” blogged Delfin Go, lead economist in the World Bank’s Development Prospects Group and the main author of the 2011 Global Monitoring Report, released April 15.

    Donors pledged nearly $50 billion last December to the World Bank’s International Development Association (IDA) – a fund for the poorest countries that pools assistance from multiple donors. IDA is a major form of support for government budgets, medicine, food security, and other needs, in low-income countries like Nepal, the Solomon Islands, and Rwanda.

    Those three countries – in South Asia, East Asia and Africa – were all set back by conflict or civil war ; none currently look like they will attain the Millennium Development Goal of halving poverty by 2015. And in each the challenges are similar, yet different.

    Nepal : Community-driven development

    Nepal, a landlocked country of 28 million, has one of the lowest per capita incomes in the world. Political turmoil from 1996 to 2006 greatly hampered growth. Low economic development, landlessness and poverty are widespread, especially in rural areas where many marginalized social groups live. The country is vulnerable to food insecurity, climate change and disasters such as earthquakes.

    et, life expectancy, maternal health, under-5 and infant mortality and poverty levels have all improved dramatically since 1970. In 2010, Nepal won the MDG Millennium Award for reducing maternal mortality. Nepal has achieved the goal on access to safe water, and is on track to meet the goals on gender parity in primary and secondary education and on reducing under-5 mortality.

    One explanation for the country’s progress is that the public sector apparatus continued to function amid turmoil, says World Bank Nepal country director Susan Goldmark.

    Community-driven development (CDD) programs incorporating citizen voice and decision-making, and often aided by the work of non-governmental organizations, successfully delivered services in remote communities.

    About 60% of Bank funding goes to CDD programs such as the Poverty Alleviation Fund (PAF), which assume that “the poor themselves are best positioned to manage their own needs and resources,” says Goldmark.

    PAF so far has supported more than 400,000 households across Nepal, helping communities to improve infrastructure and individuals to boost incomes by purchasing livestock, growing vegetables and other activities. Incomes increased 15%, and more than 15,000 households gained access to roads for the first time ; 32,000 households now have access to water supply, bridges and sanitation through the program.

    Solomon Islands : MDG challenge

    In the Solomon Islands, “communication, transportation, and governance challenges are formidable,” says World Bank Country Manager Edith Bowles. “In addition, the distances to market and a narrow economic base means the country is highly vulnerable to economic shocks.”

    The country is still recovering from a period of civil conflict between 1998 and 2003, as well as the effects of the financial crisis.

    The group of about 1,000 islands also has one of the lowest population densities in the world, making services difficult and expensive to deliver. Only 16% of households have access to electricity, for instance.

    While the country is on track to achieve gender parity in primary education by 2015, greater economic growth is crucial to achieving other goals, says Bowles. Growth dropped to 1% in 2009, after the financial crisis. While growth has recovered in 2010 and 2011, the economic future with the imminent decline in logging—the largest economic activity of the last 20 years, she says.

    The Bank is working with other donors to support rural development, [energy->http://go.worldbank.org/OF3H91OVT0], and telecommunications. It’s also supporting a rapid-response [employment project->http://go.worldbank.org/7BO7HM16G0] to give young people and women jobs. As of March, the project had employed about 2,800 people for an average of 14 days each.

    Rwanda : Recovery and growth

    Rwanda’s recovery from the 1994 genocide and civil war is nothing short of remarkable, says World Bank Rwanda Country Manager Omowunmi Ladipo. It’s now one of the most stable countries in Africa, with plans to transform itself from a subsistence agricultural economy to a knowledge-based economy by 2020.

    Reforms aimed at changing outside perceptions of the country as a risky place to do business earned Rwanda the Doing Business top reformer of the year title in 2010. The country has achieved gender parity in access to primary education and is on track to achieve universal education, access to sanitation, gender equality, and the HIV/AIDS MDG.

    In the post-civil war period, large budget allocations to social sectors, including increased financing for primary schools and rehabilitation of health facilities, together with new legal reforms to promote gender equality, helped Rwanda recover, says Bank Senior Economist Birgit Hansl.

    “The will to move ahead with innovative solutions, as was done in health and education, contributed to dramatic changes in key social indicators,” she says.

    But challenges remain. The most recent survey (2006) found that about 57% of the population still lives below the poverty line. Some 37% of Rwandans cannot afford minimum food requirements, an estimated 52% of households are food insecure or vulnerable, and maternal and child mortality rates are still among the highest in Africa.

    “The government is fully aware that strong growth, led by private sector investment, is key to improving living conditions,” says Ladipo.

    To that end, the World Bank Group is supporting 11 projects with net commitments of $237 million, targeting agriculture, energy, the private sector and public financial management. Other goals include reforming basic services to help ensure the most vulnerable Rwandans also benefit from growth, and child and maternal mortality is reduced.