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mardi 19 juin 2012

Amahugurwa kuri Crowdsourcing Journalism ari gutangwa na INTERNEWS EUROPE ifite icyicaro cya yo mu Rwanda, mu karere ka Gasabo. Amahugurwa ari gukurikiranwa n'abanyamakuru 10 baturutse mu bitangazamakuru bitandukanye bikorera mu Rwanda, agatangwa n'impuguke mu by'itangazamakuru, Pastor Jean Pierre Uwimana, Arnold Wafula n'abandi bayatangira ku murongo wa Internet (Skype). Aya mahugurwa atanzwe ubwa mbere mu gihugu cy'u Rwanda, hagamijwe kureba niba uburyo bwa crowdsourcing bushobora guteza imbere itangazamakuru mu Rwanda mu buryo kugera ku makuru mu gihe gito kandi cyoroshye, abaturage na bo babigizemo uruhare. Abanyamakuru bahugurwa bakaba babyishimiye kandi bemeza ko bizabagirira akamaro. Aba bakaba bagiye kuzahugura abandi bakorana na bo mu bitangazamakuru byabo. Peace Hillary

vendredi 21 mai 2010


London 20 May 2010. BBC World News' latest edition of the monthly business programme, Africa Business Report, gives viewers a special focus on resilient Rwanda, to find out what the economy is now really like.



This episode is presented by the BBC's Komla Dumor and investigates everything from how the country can become an investment destination despite past troubles, to the young entrepreneur with a secret about the market. There will also be special features from Zambia and Nairobi.

The episode will air on 22 and 23 May*

Features from the May episode include:

Open for business?
Rwanda has been judged by the World Bank to be one of the top places in Africa in which to do business. But is that the experience on the ground? We get the verdict of one young entrepreneur - who's spotted a unique gap in the market. Egon Cosssou reports.

Show me the money
Can Rwanda reallly shake off its troubled recent past to become a major destination for foreign investment? Komla Dumor talks to the recently appointed COO of the main investment body chief, Clare Akamanzi - and finds out from a Middle East investor why he's pumping money into the country.

Red hot property
Kenya's property prices are soaring sky high. Boom or bubble? We'll find out from Kevin Mwachiro in Nairobi.

Farming matters
Zambia is ploughing lots of cash into beefing up its agricultural sector. Will these efforts bear fruit? Kennedy Gondwe reports.

Ends/

RWANDA SEEKS FOOD SECURITY



By Egon Cossou
Editor, Africa Business Report, BBC World, Kigali


Masaka Farms in the Rwandan capital Kigali is something of a rarity.

On the edge of the six-acre farm there is a dairy plant that receives the supply of milk from its herd.

Masaka Farms is one of the few companies making dairy products. The business is in its infancy and the brain child of budding entrepreneur Serge Ndekwe.Mr Ndekwe spotted a gap in the market - and it seems to be paying off.

As the country's economy takes off, so too does demand for yoghurt, cheese - in fact all kinds of dairy produce.

So after 18 months of operation, the company has just started making a profit.

Loan guarantee scheme

Rwanda prides itself on its business friendly climate.

You can set up a company in one day - at least in terms of paperwork. But for many budding entrepreneurs, access to capital can still be a problem.

Banks require a guarantee before they grant loans, Mr Ndekwe points out, and many people starting out are unable to provide one.

So Mr Ndekwe would like the government to think about starting a loan guarantee scheme for new businesses.

Tough repayments

But even if a startup is lucky enough to get a loan - repayment terms can be strict. Mr Ndekwe borrowed $100,000 to start Maska Farms.

Serge points out that banks require a guarantee before they grant loans - and that many people starting out can't provide one. So he wants the government to think about starting a loan guarantee scheme for new businesses.

But even if a startup is lucky enough to get a loan - repayment terms can be strict. Serge borrowed $100,000 to start Masaka Farms.

"I have had to pay it back in three years," he says.

"When you start a business like this and pay it back in three years it's hard. But we don't have too much choice. We are lucky to have the loan."

Information society

The government says its constantly looking at ways of improving things for people such as Mr Ndekwe.

Improving access to capital is a particular priority, but its also busy trying to boost the free flow of information.

It is doing that by putting special emphasis on making new technology available to ordinary people.

This could benefit local entrepreneurs too.

Many businesses here are based on farming and they are thirsty for up-to-date agricultural prices, but getting hold of them can be a problem because of poor communications infrastructure.

Transparent market

In Musaka market, one of the biggest in Rwanda, an electronic pricing system has changed the way traders operate.

The hot, bustling market, which is about an hour's drive outside the capital, attracts traders from all over the country who come here to sell agricultural produce.

Some of them are using the e-Soko scheme - whereby traders use their mobile phones to access a computer server giving live updates on agricultiural prices anywhere in the country.

"I'm now better able to anticipate the profits I'm going to make," says local trader Donata Mukampazimpaka.

"I know the best places to get goods at the cheapest price - and I come here and sell at a bigger margin".

International ambitions

It may work for Ms Mukampazimpaka, but take-up has been low.

Despite this, the government is planning to expand the scheme

"The next phase is to move across borders using the internet," says Arthur Byabagambi from e-Rwanda, the body behind the project.

"Farmers are going to be able to get in touch with foreign traders using telecentres," he says.

"They'll be able to post what they're selling and foreign buyers can come here and purchase what's being sold in our local markets.

National impact

Back in Kigali, dairy producer Serge is making plans for the future.

He intends to open an organic restaurant on his farm.

But as he continues try to press ahead with his ambitions for his company, it is clear the fate of his business and thousands of others like it will shape the fate of this nation's economy.

mercredi 12 mai 2010

PRESS RELEASE / FREEDOM OF INFORMATION, RIGHT TO KNOW


On this day May 3, 2010, the Rwandan media fraternity marked the “World Press Freedom Day” .

The event, organized by the Catholic Institute of Kabgayi in conjunction with the Ministry of information, Media High Council, Maison de la Presse, Rwanda Editor’s Forum and the Rwanda Association of Journalists, took place at the Catholic Institute of Kabgayi.

Discussions were held under the universal theme: “Freedom of information: The right to know”, where several speakers made presentations on various challenges facing the development of media in Rwanda.

Participants expressed their appreciation on the progress the country had registered in the promotion and safeguarding of media freedom, illustrated by several policies and laws enacted to this effect.

The media fraternity recognized the fact that despite there being a conducive environment to strengthen media freedom, few practitioners fully took advantage of the status quo. They acknowledged the existence of shortcomings in the profession and called for more efforts in building the capacity of journalists

Among the current weaknesses cited were:


• Weak media houses that lack business orientation, especially in the print media
• Self-censorship as a result of limited confidence and competence
• Abuse of press freedom in disregard to existing regulations
• Lack of diversity in content
• Concentration of coverage in urban areas while sidelining the rural community


They welcomed the progress of the draft law on Access to information that will soon be tabled in Parliament. Not only will the law facilitate access to public information in a transparent and timely manner, it will also lead to public officials being more accountable.

Whereas members of the media in Rwanda recognise the role of international media watchdogs, strongly disagree with the recent report by Reporters Without Borders which maliciously and erroneously maligned Rwanda and its media freedom record.

The media fraternity would like to recall that the organization has made it a habit of treating Rwanda as a media punching bag for ulterior motives.

Therefore, members of the media would like to bring to the attention of RSF, that labelling President Paul Kagame as a “predator of the Press, has diabolic connotations, disregarding the fact no journalist has ever been mistreated or killed in their line of duties ever since he came to office unlike in other countries we know.

Reporters Without Borders should endeavour to set the record straight by basing its reports on reliable and scientific evidence, and members of the Rwandan media are ready and willing to participate.

mardi 11 mai 2010



Rwanda’s reforms boost progress on school enrolment

7 May 2010, Kigali, Rwanda — When the Rwandan Government drafted the first status report on the Millennium Development Goals in 2003, the main focus was economic stabilisation. Poverty and maternal mortality targets were completely off track.

Seven years later, it has recorded impressive results in the 2010 national MDG report, especially with women’s empowerment and universal primary education well on the way of meeting the targets.


Primary school enrolment in Rwanda has grown at an average annual rate of six per cent since 2000 and is currently at 92 per cent (photo by UNDP Rwanda).
“The government implemented courageous reforms to increase enrolment in primary schools”, said Christian Shingiro of UNDP in Kigali.

The education reform abolished school fees in 2003. In 2005, the government in Kigali began transferring resources directly to schools in different districts on the basis of number of students. Rwanda’s high level of parental participation in Parent-Teacher Associations enabled households to have a voice in how school capitation grants (a form of conditional cash transfer) were utilised. Classroom construction was scaled up, and double-shift classes were mandated in order to ease overcrowding.

This helped primary school enrolment to grow at an average annual rate of six per cent since 2000. National statistics show that the rate is currently at 92 per cent, with higher enrolment rates for girls (they also perform better than boys). The expansion has resulted in greater access to primary education for the poor.

For Rwanda, a landlocked country of few natural resources and a rapidly growing population — and perpetually vulnerable to external shocks — the strides towards the Millennium Development Goals have been a matter of national commitment. Coming out of the conflicts of the 1990s that dramatically reversed the country’s development indicators, the Rwandan Government, armed with a fierce sense of urgency and ownership, was more than willing to meet the challenges.

UNDP has supported this effort at different levels. It has provided technical and financial assistance to draft MDG reports as well as national poverty reduction strategies, which put forward school reforms. Both sets of reports constitute the central part of the government’s long-term and more ambitious “Vision 2020”, which goes beyond the 2015 MDG deadline.

UNDP has also helped to tailor the MDGs to the local context and track progress. It has given policy advice and brought together donors, civil society and the private sector to work towards a common objective. In fact, the national poverty reduction strategies are results of an inclusive and participatory effort by all development partners in the country.

Shingiro believes the most important aspect of UNDP’s support is neutrality. With no political agenda of its own, UNDP has been a trusted partner to the Rwandan Government since the early 1970s to give support when and where it is needed.

“There are many agencies that can give much more financial assistance than UNDP ever could”, he said, “but how many of them could put forward MDG-friendly policy advice and help build capacity like UNDP can”?

As for the expansion of access to primary education, schools are now trying to absorb the “access shock” and increase the quality of education through improvements to textbooks and teacher training. Last year, the government introduced a mandatory nine-year cycle of basic education to counter dropout rates that remain problematic.

The long-term challenge for Rwanda, development experts agree, is financing. As one of the pilot countries of the Gleaneagles Scenario Initiative, in which most African states showed they were capable of absorbing scaled-up resources for MDG-consistent programmes, Rwanda has come to rely on aid as a major source of finance.

To wean from that dependence, Shingiro said, especially in the current global recession that has brought a sharp decline in export demands, tourism and overseas remittance, would once again require “going all the way”.

FROM UNDP