Kigali Rwanda Tour JUNE 2019// 9 INTERESTING FACTS ABOUT NYAMIRAMBO/NYARUGENGE
This is Nyamirambo, my second favourite place to hang out in Kigali.
9 facts about Nyamirambo/Nyarugenge
1. The highest population density in Rwanda
2. First to use Tap&GO
3. The Muslim quarter of Kigali
4. Local Nyamirambo walking tours
5. Club Rafiki is more than a playground
6. Nyamirambo nightlife
7. Building affordable housing
8. Nyamirambo stadiums
9. Kuryanyuma
Music:
First song: YP4C -Yezu twiherewe n'ijuru
Second song: YP4C - Twe abayoboke ba Yezu
Third song: YP4C - Roho w' Imana manuka
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Masjid Al-Fatah (Green Mosque) Kigali 23.11.2016
Muslim Quarter/Masjid Alfatah (Victory Mosque)
Masjid Alfatah is the largest and oldest mosque of Rwanda, located in suburban area of Nyamirambo (commonly known as Nyamijos) about 7 kilometers south west of Kigali city center. It is nicknamed and better known as “Green Mosque” because of its green and white minarets. It was founded in late 1930s when Muslims merchants first came to Rwanda and started settling in the suburbs of Kigali. It soon became an important center for learning Islamic teachings and holy book Quran. The mosque also houses an Islamic Research Center on a small scale.
The Green Mosque is considered a symbol of peace. It proved to be a safe haven for many Rwandans during the worst genocide perpetrated by extremist Hutus against Tutsis and moderate Hutus. Nyamirambo escaped some of the worst atrocities of the 1990s, largely due to its Muslim population. The homes and mosques of Muslims provided shelter to Tutsis. Their acts of righteousness, along with a loss of faith in Catholic and Protestant leaders, resulted in high conversion rates and Rwanda’s Muslim community has doubled since the genocide of 1994.
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Please watch: Farhat Abbas Shah, Dubai Mushaera 1996
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Top 14 things to do in KIGALI - Rwanda
Are you going or already in Kigali and wondering what to do? Here are 14 amazing things you can do while in Kigali
--
SUMMARY
1. Eat Akabenzi. Yummy, this is a big ol’ plate of pork and it’s tasty. Awesome
2. Nyamirambo's streets are almost always bustling with people. It houses loads of lively bars that seem to be open and busy any time or day. It's awesome
3. There's a bar at the top of the steep part, you can stop in for a well-deserved cold beer before continuing on along the top of the mountain.
4. Some of the most enjoyable moments in Kigali come on the back of a moto or boda-boda just before the sun sets at around 5:30pm to 6pm.
5. Meat on a stick ! You can’t really go wrong and Rwanda does it well. Just look for any bar with ‘Primus’ or ‘Mutzig’ painted on the walls, there you are !
6. Kimironko market is one of the best and the biggest in Kigali. Second-hand clothing, fruit and vegetables, fish, fabric, and baskets...
7. Go and enjoy football match between Rayon Sports and APR FC. Games are a reliably rowdy, loud, and fun affair
8. Nyamirambo, Kigali’s Muslim quarter, is one of the city’s most vibrant areas for bars, restaurants, and general merriment.
9. A visit to the memorial is unforgettable, as the attached and informative museum teaches visitors about the events before, during, and after the genocide.
10. Rwanda produces some of the best coffee in the world. Available everywhere from Costco to Starbucks, trying coffee while in the actual country is an absolute must.
11. You cannot miss this one. Attend a church service on sunday, you will enjoy, for sure you will go again.
12. People in Kigali forget about cars on that day. Join them in a mass sport, jogging and much more
13. Community work, it takes place on the last Saturday of each month from 8a.m. and lasts for at least three hours
14. At night, it is lit in moving lines that look like they are circling the beehive looking building. It is attached to the newly opened Radisson Blu Hotel.
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Biggest baptism in the world ...Rwanda for Christ
More than 100,000 people baptised after two weeks of evangelism in the country of Rwanda. Total Member Involvement #RwandaTMI #TMI
Rwanda's religious leaders decry state closure of churches, mosques
Rwandan religious leaders say the government's decision to close thousands of churches and hundreds of mosques across the country violates freedom of worship and expression. The government says it's trying to bring order to religious institutions -- many of which have failed to comply with building regulations and noise pollution. Beryl Ooro has more.
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Rwanda genocide victims found in mass graves underneath homes
The remains of nearly 85,000 people murdered in Rwanda's genocide were laid to rest Saturday in a sombre ceremony in Kigali, a quarter of a century after the slaughter.
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RWANDA: Emizannyo gy'amasomero egy'obuvanjuba bwa Africa.
Abayizi abasukka mu 3000 bavuganya mu mizannyo egy'enjawulo.
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RWANDA V.S. LIFE CHURCH SOCCER MATCH!
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Sudanese minister says financial problems being tackled
(13 Jan 2019) A Sudanese minister insisted authorities were tackling the country's financial problems through its own economic policies, as violent anti-government protests enter their fourth week.
The demonstrations were initially sparked by price rises and shortages.
The government acknowledges these problems, we know about them. We have started to find solutions for them through various economic policies. One of the pillars of these policies is achieving economic stability, directly improving economic indicators as well as reducing expenditure, said Maamoun Hassan, Minister of State for Information.
Sudan appears headed toward political paralysis, with drawn-out unrest across much of the country and a fractured opposition without a clear idea of what to do if the country's leader of 29 years loses power.
Sudan's economy has stagnated for most of Omar al-Bashir's rule.
He has also failed to unite or keep the peace in the religiously and ethnically diverse nation, losing three quarters of Sudan's oil wealth when the mainly animist and Christian south seceded in 2011 following a referendum.
Al-Bashir is among the longest serving leaders in the region.
In a bid to placate popular anger over his economic policies, he has promised higher wages, continuing state subsidies on basic goods and more benefits for pensioners.
His promises have been dismissed by critics as untenable.
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Would you buy this MADE IN RWANDA motorcycle? - VisualPolitik EN
Until the 2000s, Africa seemed completely doomed. But since the beginning of the new century, Africans have tripled their income. Countries like Ethiopia are growing at a 10% growth rate year after year. We are starting to see how African companies are expanding internationally. For example, Ethiopian airlines or M-PESA, a mobile phone payment platform.
Nevertheless Africa is far from being a prosperous region. They need to take the next step. And what is that? Well, that would be industrialization. In this context is where the African Continental Free Trade Area has been signed. This is a free trade area that includes most of the African nations.
We’re talking about 52 countries who have signed it. In fact, only Benin, Nigeria and Eritrea have refused to enter the so called AfCFTA or just CFTA.
So now the question is… Can this treaty change things… or is it just a bunch of nice words? Can a free trade agreement really improve lives in Africa? And, why doesn’t Nigeria, the country with the largest African economy, want to sign it? Today we are going to answer all of these questions.
*Script written by Javier Angulo
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Images of genocide memorial sites in Rwanda
On 7 April, Rwanda will commemorate the 25th anniversary of the 1994 genocide. The trauma it caused is still far from being erased despite all the progress made in a quarter of a century by this small country. Like every year, Rwandan President Paul Kagame will open a 100-day national mourning period on that day, lighting a flame of remembrance at the Gisozi Memorial in Kigali, before attending a ceremony at Amahoro Stadium.
Арсений Голомидо. Специфика демократического развития в независимых африканских государствах
Abantu b'e Kyankwanzi balaze Kabaka essanyu
Ssaabasajja Kabaka Ronald Muwenda Mutebi II olwaleero asiimye nalabikako mu ssaza ly’eSingo mu bitundu bye Kyankwanzi . ono alambudde olusiisira lw’ebyobulamu olukubiddwa e Ntweetwe Health center III era nga aliko nabaana bagemye . Kabaka akubirizza abantu be okuweerera abaana saako okwenyigira mu kulwanyisa mukenenya
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How Did the Rwandan Genocide Happen? | The History of Hate
Rwanda experienced one of the worst atrocities in human history in 1994. Here's what happened.
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For whatever dark reason in our reptile brains, hate is a common thread throughout our story. This series delves into this horrific part of the human experience:
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I Am a Man Who Will Fight for Your Honor by Chris Zabriskie is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution licence (
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Yanagizawa-Drott, David. Propaganda and Conflict: Evidence from the Rwandan Genocide *. The Quarterly Journal of Economics 129, no. 4 (2014): 1947-994. doi:10.1093/qje/qju020.
The Rwandan Genocide By Zoe Lowery, Frank Spalding
The Media and the Rwanda Genocide By Kofi Atta Annan
Rwandan Genocide: The Essential Reference Guide edited by Alexis Herr
Conspiracy to Murder: The Rwandan Genocide By Linda Melvern
#history #rwanda
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Please watch: Margaret Thatcher: A Response to PragerU and Niall Ferguson
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25 years after Rwanda genocide, survivors forgive killers
25 years after Rwanda genocide, survivors forgive killers MBYO, Rwanda – Twenty-five years ago, Tasian Nkundiye murdered his neighbor with a machete. The 43-year-old Hutu and a few other men from his Rwandan village chopped the Tutsi man to pieces — one horrific slaying during a 100-day genocide that killed an estimated 800,000 ethnic Tutsis and the Hutus who tried to protect them. Nkundiye was convicted of the killing and other crimes and spent eight years in prison. Today he lives nearby the widow of the man he killed. And somehow they are friends — their children and grandchildren play and share lunch together, their cows graze in the same field. I am very grateful to her, Nkundiye, now 68, said of the widow, 58-year-old Laurencia Mukalemera. Ever since I apologized to her after prison life, confessing to my crimes and asking her for forgiveness, she has accepted me. I even leave my children with her when I am away. A quarter century after the 1994 genocide that killed 75% of the country's ethnic Tutsis, Rwanda has six reconciliation villages like Mbyo, where genocide survivors and perpetrators live alongside each other. Convicted killers re-integrate into society by publicly apologizing for their crimes. Survivors profess forgiveness. The villages are showpieces of President Paul Kagame's policy of ethnic reconciliation, although some critics say the communities are forced and the reconciliation is artificial. About 3,000 victims and perpetrators live in the villages established by Prison Fellowship Rwanda, a Christian organization, and funded by the U.S. government, the United Nations and other donors to promote healing in Rwanda from the gaping wounds left by the genocide. Those in the villages also get help with housing and school fees. Rwanda's genocide was ignited on April 6, 1994, when a plane carrying President Juvénal Habyarimana was shot down and crashed in the capital, Kigali, killing the Rwandan leader, a Hutu. Rwanda's Tutsi minority was blamed for the crash, igniting a killing spree of revenge attacks targeting Tutsis across the country of 12 million people. Jannette Mukabyagaju remembers the words of her father when the family heard the news that the president's plane had been shot down. We are now finished, he said. That is the last time I saw my father. He died with the rest of the family members the following days, Mukabyagaju, a Tutsi survivor, who is now 42, told The Associated Press. In the family of eight children, only Mukabyagaju, one sister and a brother survived. Shrill broadcasts in the government media incited the killings, portraying Tutsis as dangerous, bent on dominating Hutus. During the genocide, political and military leaders also encouraged rape to further destroy the Tutsi ethnic group, which today makes up just 14% of the population. Mukabyagaju's family lived in Muhanga, a village near a military barracks attached to the president's office in the capital, Kigali. The presidential guards from the military zone descended on the village, accusing all Tutsis, including children, of being behind the death of their president, she recalls. It was useless to tell militiamen the children didn't have any idea about the president's death, said Mukabyagaju, who was 17 at the time. But as you know, during the genocide, all sense had gone. Disguising herself, Mukabyagaju managed to escape to a church in the nearby village of Kabgayi that gave refuge to thousands seeking protection. The Tutsis working at the church helped us with food, but soon they, too, were killed by the militia, she said. For two months she hid in and around the church until the Rwanda Patriotic Front, a rebel group headed by Kagame, seized power, forcing out the Hutu extremists and bringing an end to the genocide. Mukabyagaju said she asks herself why she survived. I believe it was God's mercy that I didn't die, she said. I have decided to let anger go and forgive all people, including those who killed my family. Today Mukabyagaju lives in Mbyo, where 54 families of genocide survivors and perpetrators live side by side among the village's green fields. Rwanda's dark past is contradicted by the peals of laughter of children descended from both sides of the killing, playing and going to school together. We are grateful by the fact that Rwandans are united today, said Frederick Kazigwemu, another convict released after serving nine years in prison for genocide crimes, including murdering a neighboring family. Seeking forgiveness from a family where you killed relatives is an act of courage. But after turning your heart to God, this was possible, said Kazigwemu, who today is Mbyo's village leader. Not all Rwandans think reconciliation has succeeded. Sam Nshimirimana, a Rwandan genocide expert and survivor, said forgiveness would be more meaningful if it were initiated by the survivors and perpetrators themselves and not promoted by the government or charitable organizations. The g
TAHAJJUD PRAYER IN NATIONAL ASSEMBLY QUARTERS CENTRAL MOSQUE ABUJA By Qaari:- Abdul-Malik
Tahajjud in Assunah Annabaweya Masjid. First Prayer.
Allahu Akbar
Invest in Africa
Invest in Africa
By ProfitableInvestingTips.com
Is it wise for the average person to invest in Africa? The continent has oil, diamonds, a plethora of minerals and a huge pool of cheap labor. Africa also has Al-Qaida linked terrorists in the sub-Sahara, terrorists kidnapping and selling school girls in Nigeria and a military government set upon eradicating an Islamic group in Egypt. South Africa produces diamonds and gold and is one of the BRICS nations. But this set of aspiring nations aspiring to reach first rank status has continuing problems due to the 2008 recession. Big oil can invest in Africa because they have the money and the clout. But, how can an individual invest in Africa. What are the opportunities? What are the pitfalls? And what sort of information is needed for sound fundamental analysis of investments in the continent that was the cradle of humanity? Let us start by taking a step back and looking at offshore investment in general and then deal with the specifics of how to invest in Africa.
Investing Offshore
There are many good reasons to invest offshore. As the US dollar depreciates over the years investing offshore can put your business and your retained earnings in a rising currency. Many offshore markets are just starting to develop. Much of the earnings of the US stock market in the 20th century were tied to the development of American infrastructure. When investing offshore one can take advantage of the same process. A strong argument for investing in the BRICS nations is that they have economies that are growing faster than the USA, Europe or Japan. Little countries like Panama essentially avoided the worst recession in three quarters of a century and kept growing. And there are true tax havens where foreign nations provide huge incentives, tax and otherwise, to invest offshore. As with all investing, successful offshore investing requires a clear idea of the investment, how it will make money, and what the risks are and backup plans for expansion of the investment or a hasty exit.
Invest in Africa
Where are the opportunities if you want to invest in Africa? South Africa has investment opportunities and you can invest via American Depository Receipts, ADRs. AngloGold Ashanti, DRLGOLD, Gold Fields, Harmony Gold, MiX Telematics, Sasol and Sibanye Gold all trade as ADRs on the New York Stock Exchange. There are 85 other South African stocks that trade as ADRs in the over the counter market. The ADRs listed on the NYSE will provide you with the sort of investing information you are used to with US stocks as you invest in Africa. The largest economy in Africa is Nigeria. There is also a lot of unrest in Nigeria so, again, ADRs may be your best bet instead of direct investment in the country. Access Bank, Afriland Properties and Diamond Bank are Nigerian companies available as ADRs in the USA. Egypt offers five ADRs for US investors, Commercial International Bank, GB Auto, Lecico Egypt, Orascom Construction and Remco Tourism Villages. If you want to invest in Africa as a private investor one of these may be the way to go. As always do your own home work, check out tips very thoroughly and do no investing if you do not understand just how a company makes money and what your exit strategy will be if the investment goes sour.
APR BBC vs UR Huye 07 /Feb/ 2016 FERWABA NATIONAL LEAGUE 2016
Network Africa: Egypt, Senegal, Others Elected Unopposed To UN Security Council -- 16/10/15
Egypt and Senegal elected unopposed to the UN Security Council, replacing outgoing African countries including Nigeria.
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