Tag: MainSlideNews

  • You can’t ask the person who is offended whether he needs an apology or not -President Kagame

    Different reports indicate that France was aware of the plan of the 1994 Genocide against Tutsi, supplied arms to the government which planned and executed genocide, declined to rescue Bisesero residents and provided passage for fleeing genocide perpetrators among others.

    During a press conference yesterday, President Paul Kagame revealed that he has talked enough on the role of foreign countries in genocide.

    During the 20th commemoration of the 1994 Genocide against Tutsi, Kagame talked on the role of France, Belgium and Catholic Church in genocide and said “Les faits sont têtus.” A message he reproduced in English at the 25th commemoration on Sunday saying “The facts are stubborn.”

    Speaking to the media yesterday, President Kagame said it is not necessary to repeat the same thing over time.

    “Once you have stated the facts that live on as long as the problem lives on, does it makes sense that I have to keep repeating it? Because if I have said it more than once or twice, then you assume it was for the purpose of reminding people but you can’t just keep reminding people. Sometimes you give them room to think for themselves,” he noted.

    Commenting on people who have asked whether what Rwanda needs from France or anybody else has been an apology, Kagame said it is not true.

    “You can’t ask people to apologize or keep asking them to apologize or tell them how to apologize. That after all kills the whole meaning of an apology. For an apology to have meaning, it must come from somebody who is apologizing,” he said.

    “You can’t ask the person who is offended whether he needs an apology or not. What would be the meaning of an apology extracted by somebody who deserves an apology? If you put all these things together you will realize that it is up to anyone. It is up to France, individuals to write the wrong they think they would agree they have inflicted on other people. This has been our approach,” added Kagame.

    He, however, noted that it is not to deny the fact that the presence of Macron to the office because there has been very significant progress in terms of complicated environment of politics and all kinds of things.

    “We still make progress from things that you know that happened including the way archives have been treated, being treated because they contain truth that people can make interpretation of. Thinking about bringing up the truth even making one step, next day two, all the steps required is good progress and we have seen that happening,” highlighted Kagame.

    He also lauded the commission set up by Macron to investigate France role in the 1994 Genocide against Tutsi.

  • First Lady Jeannette Kagame launches Memorial Garden at Nyanza

    The ceremony which took place at Nyanza Genocide Memorial yesterday was attended by government officials, representatives of umbrella organizations of genocide survivors, representatives of international organizations and envoys to Rwanda.

    The garden is one of parts making Nyanza memorial where over 11,000 genocide victims are laid to rest.

    Nyanza is particularly known as the place where thousands of Tutsis were killed after they were abandoned by UN peacekeepers.

    They had sought refuge at the former ETO-Kicukiro, (currently IPRC-Kigali), which was protected by UNAMIR peacekeepers, until the Belgian contingent decided to leave the country, leaving them in hands of Interahamwe militia.

    Jeannette Kagame said the memorial was built to demonstrate a place where tragedies took place that “it is an unforgettable symbol reminding us that life went on.’

    She laid a foundation stone to the garden in 2000 six years after the genocide was stopped.
    “When we laid the foundation stone at this garden, it was few years after stopping the genocide which took lives of our beloved ones. It was too earlier that people didn’t think that life would be possible,” she noted.

    “As years passed, the hope for life improved and the country progressed. Then we thought that the garden should be part of the memory and hope for life,” added Jeannette Kagame.

    The memorial will portray truth on genocide, share testimonies of survivors and resilience with the aim of eliminating genocide ideology. It also reminds us of the task to preserve history, remembrance and promoting humanity.

    “We need a place like this in a garden helping us to come together and keep the memory of those who departed,” said the First Lady. were killed for innate personality.

    The architect Bruce Clarke, conceived the design of the garden after engaging with genocide survivors on creating other forms of keeping the memory and after visiting genocide memorials and historic sites.

    He closely worked with IBUKA, umbrella of genocide survivors during the project.
    Bruce Clarke said that the garden was sophisticatedly built and depicts hard times Tutsi passed through.

    “Each symbol in this garden represents sorrow, loss of hope and rebuilding of hope. It is not an achievement of one person,” he said.

    The president of IBUKA, Jean Pierre Dusingizemungu said that those visiting the garden will find the right place to reflect on what happened during the genocide. “We will be in conversations with ours in comfortable place having symbols of life. It will be a moment for everyone to understand that life exists and building hope for the future,” he observed.

    The memorial garden is made of different sections including stones depicting victims killed during the genocide, how environment took part in rescuing hunted Tutsi, open holes representing where some genocide victims were thrown and rivers flowing through marshlands and the section of forest to remember among others.

    The memorial garden built on around three hectares is expected to be completed within a year at Rwf 700 million. Jeannette Kagame said the memorial was built to demonstrate a place where tragedies took place that 'it is an unforgettable symbol reminding us that life went on’First Lady, Jeannette Kagame has launched the first phase of a memorial garden at Nyanza Genocide Memorial in Kicukiro DistrictThe architect Bruce Clarke, conceived the design of the garden after engaging with genocide survivors on creating other forms of keeping the memory of the Pastphoto-33-d5f02.jpgThe memorial garden is made of different sections including stones depicting victims killed during the genocide

  • President Kagame lauds France efforts to probe its role in the 1994 Genocide against Tutsi

    President Kagame has lauded France’ efforts to probe its role in the 1994 Genocide against Tutsi

    (more…)

  • Those provoking Rwanda should be aware of the danger they face-Kagame

    He has revealed this Monday, during a press conference with local and international media covering the 25th commemoration of the 1994 Genocide against Tutsi.

    The press conference follows commemoration of the 1994 Genocide against Tutsi held on Sunday 7th April 2019 at Gisozi memorial where Rwanda was joined by friends and the international community, diplomats, different heads of states and government to pay homage to genocide victims.

    “We are not thinking of creating a war outside our borders. It is a warning to anyone who thinks about war and on our territory. If somebody has ideas that they want to bring war to Rwanda, they should also be aware of the danger they face if they do that,” said Kagame.

    Attackers have at different times raided regions in the neighborhood of Nyungwe National Park but repelled by Rwanda’s soldiers.

    Commenting on threats to Rwanda, President Kagame said that “In defense of the future children of Rwanda and our stability, we are prepared for that, as we fought many threats and challenges before, we are now better prepared for any threats that would come today.”

    President Kagame, however, said that war should not be an emergent thing noting that people should be watchful using the word. He highlighted that war should neither be the first, nor the second nor the third choice considering its disastrous impact.

    On the attacks in Nyungwe forest, President Kagame said that there are people behind it to provoke a war against Rwanda mistakenly pretending to benefit from it.

    “Those who are behind it have in mind to provoke a war from which they mistakenly think they will benefit. They are trying to hide problems of their own and create a scenario where when war happens, you look the same. We refused this provocation,” he said.

    President Kagame also assured everyone that Rwanda with its history of suffering has grown in all bounds including the strength, capacity to wage a war in defense of its stability and peace. 1-2465-f512a.jpg

  • 25th Commemoration Of The Genocide Against Tutsi | Remarks By President Kagame

    To you, the friends by our side on this heavy day, including the different leaders present, we say thank you. Many of you have been with us all along, and we cherish you for contributing to the healing and re-building of Rwanda.

    I also thank my fellow Rwandans, who joined hands to recreate this country. In 1994, there was no hope, only darkness. Today, light radiates from this place.

    How did it happen?

    Rwanda became a family, once again. The arms of our people, intertwined, constitute the pillars of our nation. We hold each other up. Our bodies and minds bear amputations and scars, but none of us is alone. Together, we have woven the tattered threads of our unity into a new tapestry.

    Sisters became mothers. Neighbours became uncles. Strangers became friends. Our culture naturally creates new bonds of solidarity, which both console and renew.

    Rwanda is a family. That is why we still exist, despite all we have gone through.

    There is no way to fully comprehend the loneliness and anger of survivors. And yet, over and over again, we have asked them to make the sacrifices necessary to give our nation new life. Emotions had to be put in a box.

    Someone once asked me why we keep burdening survivors with the responsibility for our healing. It was a painful question, but I realised the answer was obvious. Survivors are the only ones with something left to give: their forgiveness.

    Our people have carried an immense weight with little or no complaint. This has made us better and more united than ever before.

    At a memorial event some years ago, a girl brought us to tears with a poem. She said, “There is a saying that God spends the day elsewhere, but returns to sleep in Rwanda.”

    “Where was God on those dark nights of genocide?”, she asked.

    Looking at Rwanda today, it is clear that God has come back home to stay.

    To survivors, I say thank you. Your resilience and bravery represent the triumph of the Rwandan character in its purest form.

    Joining us today are families from other countries, whose husbands, fathers, sisters, and aunts were claimed by the same deadly ideology.

    The Belgian peacekeepers, murdered twenty-five years ago this morning.

    Captain Mbaye Diagne from Senegal, who saved so many lives.

    Tonia Locatelli, killed in 1992 for telling the truth of what was to come.

    The only comfort we can offer is the commonality of sorrow, and the respect owed to those who had the courage to do the right thing.

    Other people around the world also stood up and made a difference.

    Ambassador Karel Kovanda from the Czech Republic joined colleagues from New Zealand and Nigeria to call for action to stop the Genocide, despite the indifference of more powerful states.

    And my brother, Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed, knows where Rwanda is coming from, having served in an Ethiopian peacekeeping contingent after the Genocide, together with troops from elsewhere in Africa and beyond.

    Thank you all for your presence.

    Those among us who perpetrated the Genocide, or stood by passively, are also part of our nation. The willingness, in a number of cases, to tell the truth, pay the price, and re-join the community, is an important contribution.

    The witness of perpetrators is irrefutable proof, if any was still needed, that genocide happened.

    Genocide hibernates as denial.

    Both before the killing and after, there is a long chain of events which are interconnected. Revisionism is not merely demeaning, but profoundly dangerous.

    The genocide did not begin on one specific day. It has a history.

    Why were refugees Rwanda’s biggest export, for decades? Why were the same people repeatedly targeted for persecution and massacre, from the late 1950s to the 1990s? Why were bodies dumped into rivers, to send them back up the Nile, where they supposedly came from? Why did some parents even kill their own children, who looked a certain way?

    None of that started with a plane crash. So where did it come from?

    Through it all, we had guardians of virtue, Abarinzi b’Igihango, and other righteous citizens. Our rebirth was seeded by their actions.

    The young girl, portrayed in the play we just saw, who took it upon herself to care for a baby survivor despite the objections of her family. That is a true story and today both women are home and fine.

    The Nyange students who refused to be separated into Hutu on one side, Tutsi on the other. They never betrayed each other. Six were killed. Forty were wounded. All are heroes.

    These are examples of the Rwandans who kept us from losing everything.

    But most of us are neither survivors nor perpetrators. Three-quarters of Rwandans are under age thirty. Almost 60 per cent were born after the Genocide.

    Our children enjoy the innocence of peace. They know trauma and violence only from stories. Our aspirations rest in this new generation.

    Mature trees can no longer be moulded, but seeds contain endless possibility. Rwanda’s young people have everything needed to transform our country. They have the responsibility to take charge more and more, and participate fully in securing the Rwanda we want and deserve.

    We are far better Rwandans than we were. But we can be even better still.

    We are the last people in the world who should succumb to complacency. The suffering we have endured should be enough to keep our fighting spirit alive.

    Our country cannot afford to live by twists of fate. We must be deliberate and decisive, guided by humility and the content of our hearts. Rwanda has to stay one step ahead. Otherwise, we are insignificant.

    The facts are stubborn, but so are we. We really have to be.

    Our nation has turned a corner. Fear and anger have been replaced by the energy and purpose that drives us forward, young and old.

    Rwanda is a very good friend to its friends. We seek peace, we turn the page. But no adversary should underestimate what a formidable force Rwandans have become, as a result of our circumstances.

    Nothing has the power to turn Rwandans against each other, ever again. This history will not repeat. That is our firm commitment.

    Nothing is required from those who wronged us, except an open mind. Every day we learn to forgive. But we do not want to forget. After all, before asking others to repent, we first have to forgive ourselves.

    As for the dishonourable who remain impervious to regret, it is not our problem. It does not stop Rwanda from making progress, even for one moment.

    The decimation of Rwanda was more absolute than any known weapon of mass destruction. Not only bodies were destroyed, but the very idea of Rwanda itself. That shows the ferocious power of human sentiments and designs.

    Our prayer is for no other people to ever endure the same tribulations, especially our brothers and sisters in Africa.

    Never accept it. Confront the apostles of division and hatred who masquerade as saviours and democrats. Our commonalities are always infinitely greater than our differences. No society is above any other, much less immune to fragility.

    In the end, the only conclusion to draw from Rwanda’s story is profound hope for our world. No community is beyond repair, and the dignity of a people is never fully extinguished.

    Twenty-five years later, here we are. All of us. Wounded and heartbroken, yes. But unvanquished.

    We Rwandans have granted ourselves a new beginning. We exist in a state of permanent commemoration, every day, in all that we do, in order to remain faithful to that choice.

    I thank you and wish you strength and peace.

  • President Kagame and First Lady participate in a walk and night to remember

    Present during the walk to remember was Belgium Prime Minister Charles Michel; Ethiopian Prime Minister, Dr. Abiy Ahmed; African Union Chairperson, Moussa Faki Mahamat; and the Secretary-General of La Francophonie Louise Mushikiwabo.

    The walk to remember started at the parliamentary buildings in Kimihurura around 4 pm heading for Amahoro Stadium where the night to remember was held yesterday.

    Over 25,000 Rwandans of whom the majority is the youth were present at the event.

    The Minister of Justice and State Attorney, Johnston Busingye hailed all who joined Rwanda in commemoration activities.

    He explained that paying homage to a deceased is part of Rwandan culture rituals designed to keep solidarity with the bereaved family.

    “We remember the heinous crime committed by neighbors where people killed fellow workers, colleagues, killed fathers and mothers in law, killed intimate friends supported of the government to exterminate targeted people,” he said.

    “We got the luck that Rwandan children stood to stop genocide. We will always be grateful for their bravery and paying homage to those who sacrificed themselves to save targeted people,” added Busingye.

    The president of Ibuka, Prof Jean Pierre Dusingizemungu commended commitment and perseverance of genocide survivors over the 25 years.

    He explained that through the journey; they identified where about killed relatives were thrown to be accorded decent burial, arose unity and reconciliation while genocide perpetrators were sued.

    “We experienced day to day life hardships. Genocide left orphans and widows. Perpetrators robbed properties and destroyed the rest. They destroyed houses, and trust among people. They offended Tutsi whose souls and bodies were killed. However; His Excellency President Paul Kagame paved the way that enabled genocide survivors to rebuild strength and chose life amidst the dark past,” said Dusingizemungu.

    He called on international community to take to court errand perpetrators and warned neighboring countries collaborating with perpetrators to destabilize Rwanda’s security.

    Pictorial of the Walk and Night To Remember

    1-111.jpg3-97.jpg4-85.jpg5-63.jpg7-50.jpg6-60.jpg9-31.jpg8-47.jpg10-35.jpg15-18.jpgimg-20190407-wa0061-c4b1e.jpg16-15.jpg17-12.jpg18-13.jpg19-12.jpg20-9.jpg21-9.jpg22-35.jpg23-10.jpg26-4.jpg27-2.jpg28-4.jpg29-4.jpg30-3.jpg19-12.jpg31-3.jpg34-4.jpg33-26.jpg32-6.jpg

  • Kwibuka25: Nothing has the power to turn Rwandans against each other, ever again, President Kagame

    Present at the event were, Rwandans and friends of Rwanda all over the world, heads of states and governments among other diplomats who observed a moment of silence to honor victims of the 1994 Genocide against Tutsi.

    The flame of remembrance will burn for 100 days marking three-month-long mourning of the victims of the 1994 genocide against Tutsi until July 4 when the genocide was stopped by the Rwanda Patriotic Army (RPA) now Rwanda Defence Forces (RDF).

    Delivering his remarks at the opening of the 100 days mourning; President Paul Kagame thanked guests for joining Rwanda to pay homage to genocide victims and their contribution to healing and rebuilding of the country. He also thanked Rwandans, who joined hands to recreate the country from the dark past observing that genocide won’t happen again.

    “To you, the friends by our side on this heavy day, including the different leaders present, we say thank you. Many of you have been with us all along, and we cherish you for contributing to the healing and re-building of Rwanda. I also thank my fellow Rwandans, who joined hands to recreate this country. In 1994, there was no hope, only darkness. Today, light radiates from this place,” he said.

    “In 1994, there was no hope, only darkness. Nothing has the power to turn Rwandans against each other, ever again. This history will not repeat. That is our firm commitment,” revealed Kagame.

    Full speech: Remarks by President Kagame at the beginning of the 25th commemoration of the 1994 Genocide against Tutsi

    I begin by thanking you. On a day like this, when language fails, the first words that come, are words of gratitude.

    To you, the friends by our side on this heavy day, including the different leaders present, we say thank you. Many of you have been with us all along, and we cherish you for contributing to the healing and re-building of Rwanda.

    I also thank my fellow Rwandans, who joined hands to recreate this country. In 1994, there was no hope, only darkness. Today, light radiates from this place.

    How did it happen?

    Rwanda became a family, once again. The arms of our people, intertwined, constitute the pillars of our nation. We hold each other up. Our bodies and minds bear amputations and scars, but none of us is alone. Together, we have woven the tattered threads of our unity into a new tapestry.

    Sisters became mothers. Neighbors became uncles. Strangers became friends. Our culture naturally creates new bonds of solidarity, which both console and renew.
    Rwanda is a family. That is why we still exist, despite all we have gone through.

    There is no way to fully comprehend the loneliness and anger of survivors. And yet, over and over again, we have asked them to make the sacrifices necessary to give our nation a new life. Emotions had to be put in a box.

    Someone once asked me why we keep burdening survivors with the responsibility for our healing. It was a painful question, but I realized the answer was obvious. Survivors are the only ones with something left to give: their forgiveness.

    Our people have carried an immense weight with little or no complaint. This has made us better and more united than ever before.

    At a memorial event some years ago, a girl brought us to tears with a poem. She said, “There is a saying that God spends the day elsewhere, but returns to sleep in Rwanda.”
    “Where was God on those dark nights of genocide?”, she asked.

    Looking at Rwanda today, it is clear that God has come back home to stay.

    To survivors, I say thank you. Your resilience and bravery represent the triumph of the Rwandan character in its purest form.

    Joining us today are families from other countries, whose husbands, fathers, sisters, and aunts were claimed by the same deadly ideology.

    The Belgian peacekeepers, murdered twenty-five years ago this morning.

    Captain Mbaye Diagne from Senegal, who saved so many lives.

    Tonia Locatelli, killed in 1992 for telling the truth of what was to come.

    The only comfort we can offer is the commonality of sorrow, and the respect owed to those who had the courage to do the right thing.

    Other people around the world also stood up and made a difference.

    Ambassador Karel Kovanda from the Czech Republic joined colleagues from New Zealand and Nigeria to call for action to stop the Genocide, despite the indifference of more powerful states.

    And my brother, Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed, knows where Rwanda is coming from, having served in an Ethiopian peacekeeping contingent after the Genocide, together with troops from elsewhere in Africa and beyond.

    Thank you all for your presence.

    Those among us who perpetrated the Genocide, or stood by passively, are also part of our nation. The willingness, in a number of cases, to tell the truth, pay the price, and re-join the community, is an important contribution.

    The witness of perpetrators is irrefutable proof if any was still needed, that genocide happened.

    Genocide hibernates as denial.

    Both before the killing and after, there is a long chain of events which are interconnected. Revisionism is not merely demeaning, but profoundly dangerous.

    The genocide did not begin on one specific day. It has a history.

    Why were refugees Rwanda’s biggest export, for decades? Why were the same people repeatedly targeted for persecution and massacre, from the late 1950s to the 1990s? Why were bodies dumped into rivers, to send them back up the Nile, where they supposedly came from? Why did some parents even kill their own children, who looked a certain way?

    None of that started with a plane crash. So where did it come from?

    Through it all, we had guardians of virtue, Abarinzi b’Igihango, and other righteous citizens. Our rebirth was seeded by their actions.

    The young girl, portrayed in the play we just saw, who took it upon herself to care for a baby survivor despite the objections of her family. That is a true story and today both women are home and fine.

    The Nyange students who refused to be separated into Hutu on one side, Tutsi on the other. They never betrayed each other. Six were killed. Forty were wounded. All are heroes.

    These are examples of the Rwandans who kept us from losing everything.

    But most of us are neither survivors nor perpetrators. Three-quarters of Rwandans are under age thirty. Almost 60 percent were born after the Genocide.

    Our children enjoy the innocence of peace. They know trauma and violence only from stories. Our aspirations rest in this new generation.

    Mature trees can no longer be molded, but seeds contain endless possibility. Rwanda’s young people have everything needed to transform our country. They have the responsibility to take charge more and more and participate fully in securing the Rwanda we want and deserve.

    We are far better Rwandans than we were. But we can be even better still.

    We are the last people in the world who should succumb to complacency. The suffering we have endured should be enough to keep our fighting spirit alive.

    Our country cannot afford to live by twists of fate. We must be deliberate and decisive, guided by humility and the content of our hearts. Rwanda has to stay one step ahead. Otherwise, we are insignificant.

    The facts are stubborn, but so are we. We really have to be.

    Our nation has turned a corner. Fear and anger have been replaced by the energy and purpose that drives us forward, young and old.

    Rwanda is a very good friend to its friends. We seek peace, we turn the page. But no adversary should underestimate what a formidable force Rwandans have become, as a result of our circumstances.

    Nothing has the power to turn Rwandans against each other, ever again. This history will not repeat. That is our firm commitment.

    Nothing is required from those who wronged us, except an open mind. Every day we learn to forgive. But we do not want to forget. After all, before asking others to repent, we first have to forgive ourselves.

    As for the dishonorable who remain impervious to regret, it is not our problem. It does not stop Rwanda from making progress, even for one moment.

    The decimation of Rwanda was more absolute than any known weapon of mass destruction. Not only bodies were destroyed, but the very idea of Rwanda itself. That shows the ferocious power of human sentiments and designs.

    Our prayer is for no other people to ever endure the same tribulations, especially our brothers and sisters in Africa.

    Never accept it. Confront the apostles of division and hatred who masquerade as saviors and Democrats. Our commonalities are always infinitely greater than our differences. No society is above any other, much less immune to fragility.

    In the end, the only conclusion to draw from Rwanda’s story is a profound hope for our world. No community is beyond repair, and the dignity of a people is never fully extinguished.

    Twenty-five years later, here we are. All of us. Wounded and heartbroken, yes. But unvanquished.

    We Rwandans have granted ourselves a new beginning. We exist in a state of permanent commemoration, every day, in all that we do, in order to remain faithful to that choice.

    I thank you and wish you strength and peace.

    President Paul Kagame has warned against those who would wish to mess with RwandaDelivering his remarks at the opening of the 100 days mourning; President Paul Kagame thanked Rwandans, who joined hands to recreate the country from the dark past observing that genocide won’t happen again

  • France journalist reveals how Habyarimana neglected warnings on Kangura’s hatred publications

    France journalist, Jean-François Dupaquier has revealed how Habyarimana neglected warnings on Kangura’s hatred publications

    (more…)

  • Canadian Governor General arrives in Kigali for 25th Commemoration of 1994 Genocide against Tutsis

    Julie Payette, Governor General of Canada, arrived this Friday, at the Kigali International Airport from Ottawa accompanied by a delegation of prominent Canadians. She was greeted by Rwandan officials and received by an Honour Guard.

    “The visit to Rwanda demonstrates Canada’s commitment to preventing genocide and mass atrocities as well as its support for reconciliation processes,” reads the official statement from the Canadian High Commission.

    During her stay, the Governor General will lay a wreath to honor the victims of the 1994 Genocide against Tutsis. She will also visit the African Institute for Mathematical Sciences (AIMS-Rwanda) facilities, where she will deliver brief remarks and take part in a Q&A session with students on the importance of education and science.

    The discussion highlights Canada’s interest in promoting the inclusion of youth as well as the importance of science and technology.

    The Governor General and members of the delegation will also engage with Rwandan youth during an activity with participants of Right to Play.

    RTP is a global organization that protects, educates and empowers children to rise above adversity using play. By harnessing play, one of the most powerful and fundamental forces in a child’s life, RTP helps 1.9 million children each week to stay in school and out of work, to prevent life-threatening diseases like HIV and malaria and to stay safe from exploitation and abuse.

    The visit which will strengthen the long-standing co-operation between Canada and Rwanda.The Right Honourable Julie Payette, Governor General of Canada, at her arrival at the Kigali International AirportJulie Payette was greeted by Rwandan officials and received by an Honour Guardd3aan8bxkaaj_nr-7f223.jpgarrival_4.jpgThe Governor General of Canada, will partake in activities that will mark the 25th commemoration of the 1994 Genocide against the TutsiShe also held discussions with the Minister of Information and communications technology and Innovation, Paula Ingabire