President Paul Kagame has registered his dissatisfaction over the big number universities in Rwanda that are not creating a tangible impact. The president who was at the launch of the 17th National Leadership Retreat that is taking place at the RDF Combat Training Centre in Gabiro, Gatsibo District, said that criteria for opening up a university must be followed to the dot.
The Prime Minister, Dr. Eduardo Ngirente also added a stinging comment thus; ”Something needs to be done otherwise in 15 years to come you may fail to find someone to appoint a mayor.”
Today, Rwanda has two public and 29 private universities. The president reflected on this in a panel discussion he shared with the Minister of Local Government Prof Shyaka Anastase, the Minister of ICT and Innovation Paula Ingabire, the Minister of Trade and Industry Soraya Hakuziyaremye, and Dr. Donald Kaberuka.
During the panel discussion, Dr. Kaberuka spoke of the vitality of education. He added that in developed countries, a small number of students attend university, citing Germany.
President Kagame based on that and spoke of the big number of universities present in Rwanda.
“I don’t know the number of universities we have in Rwanda. [Prof Nshuti] Manasseh owns one.”
“For a program to be approved as a university, there are criteria it must fulfill. Basing on our direction, these cannot be considered as real universities. Why do we let this happen yet we know well that the programs do not deserve being classified for universities?”
President Kagame said that he has talked to the current and former prime ministers, asking them about the big number of universities, up to a point when he asked them for a list of the universities during a cabinet meeting.
“They brought this list of universities, but they did not fulfill 10% of the criteria for being classified as a university. They showed that they are pressured by a lot of students, that this University of Kibungo is owned by priests. They based on that, instead of basing on education.”
He said that he always asks the prime minister to deliver a list of universities that need to be closed since they do not fulfill the requirements to be run as universities. He added that some of these universities play a part in slowing down the development of the country.
Donald Kaberuka said that education is so necessary that they need to verify the quality of what people learn from various institutions using scientific means.
Prime Minister Dr. Edouard Ngirente said that it is such a big issue since in 15 years to come you might try to find someone to be a mayor and fail to find one.
He said that they need to put enough effort into promoting technical schools, in reducing the number of simple universities and remain with only those that are very competitive.
In 2017, the ministry of education suspended 10 universities and university programs that were found lacking in delivering quality. Some were reopened after meeting the requirements.
Wednesday, February 19, 2020
Wednesday, February 5, 2020
Rwanda Cancer Centre Will Save the Country Money – Kagame
The
newly inaugurated Rwanda Cancer Centre (RCC) will save the country
millions of money which were being spent on treating cancer patients
abroad.
The observation was made by President Paul Kagame while presiding over the official opening of the cancer treatment centre which is located at Rwanda Military Hospital (RMH) in Kanombe on Tuesday.
“The Rwanda Cancer Centre is already saving lives with several hundred patients having been treated. We have been spending large sums of money to send a few patients abroad each year for cancer treatment,” President Kagame said.
“We don’t have a lot of money in the first place, but then large sums of money were being spent treating a few patients but we have many patients to treat. We need to take that into account and that is really the importance of the centre we have here and what we see in the near future as the extension of it to accommodate many other things,” he added.
Thanks to the centre, President Kagame said many more Rwandans will be able to get the care they need with their families close by.
#GodBlessRwanda #GovernmentOfRw anda
The observation was made by President Paul Kagame while presiding over the official opening of the cancer treatment centre which is located at Rwanda Military Hospital (RMH) in Kanombe on Tuesday.
“The Rwanda Cancer Centre is already saving lives with several hundred patients having been treated. We have been spending large sums of money to send a few patients abroad each year for cancer treatment,” President Kagame said.
“We don’t have a lot of money in the first place, but then large sums of money were being spent treating a few patients but we have many patients to treat. We need to take that into account and that is really the importance of the centre we have here and what we see in the near future as the extension of it to accommodate many other things,” he added.
Thanks to the centre, President Kagame said many more Rwandans will be able to get the care they need with their families close by.
#GodBlessRwanda #GovernmentOfRw
Tuesday, February 4, 2020
Journey of 25 years with President Paul Kagame
Main Transformations of Rwanda during President Paul Kagame Leadership
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| President Paul Kagame |
He has been voted African of the Year and Most Influential African more times than any of his contemporaries. What makes Rwanda’s President Paul Kagame tick? Anver Versi went to find out.
I set off, from Mombasa, Kenya, for my interview with Rwanda’s President Paul Kagame just after Christmas. The traffic was a noisy confusion of heavy trucks, matatas and tuk tuks.
Kigali, the Rwandan capital, was an astonishing study in contrast – not a pothole in sight, painted and beautifully tended verges and although traffic was heavy due to the holiday season, road discipline was immaculate.
The city was festooned in fairy lights to celebrate the festive season. It was a lovely welcome and told me immediately a great deal about what the people of this small nation think of themselves and their value systems.
My meeting with the president was scheduled for after the end of Umuganda. On the last Saturday of each month, all able-bodied Rwandans, including the head of state, set out to clean and improve their neighbourhoods from 8am to 11am.
Shops and business are closed during this period and traffic comes to a halt.
The result is a sparkling city, officially the cleanest in Africa and vying with Singapore as the cleanest in the world. Rwanda’s rise from the genocide of 1994 has indeed entered history as an example of a resilience that is nothing short of miraculous.
The economy has also risen from the ashes of that period to become one of the fastest growing in the world over the past two decades. The first factory to make smartphones from scratch in Africa was opened in October last year and given its reputation of zero corruption, there is a long line of investments in the pipeline.
While there is no doubt that the heroes and heroines of Rwanda’s extraordinary redemption are the Rwandese themselves, there can be no side-lining the figure who halted the genocide 25 years ago and has overseen the country’s remarkable transformation every step of the way: President Paul Kagame.
Over nearly four decades as editor of New African and African Business magazines, I have closely observed and followed the careers of a host of African leaders – many of them remarkable people – but Kagame seems to be cut from a totally different cloth.
He is a man of action rather than words; he believes in results rather than promises; he is pragmatic rather than idealistic; he eschews the trappings of power rather than cultivating them; he refuses to kow-tow to big powers and insists on being treated as an equal; he has been a fierce defender of not only Rwandan but also African rights and aspirations in international fora and he is proud to be an African and to celebrate the African genius in deeds and achievements rather than empty rhetoric.
The audience
Paul Kagame, dressed in simple civilian clothes, strides in briskly, has a firm handshake and gets down to business. He speaks softly, often pausing to emphasise a point.
He has a quiet but sharp sense of humour often slipping in an ironic twist. I start by asking him whether the former colonial systems of governance, which most African countries have adopted lock, stock and barrel, are fit for purpose in dealing with the realities of post-independence Africa.
“Given our history,” he says, “it’s really up to Africans to try and make sense of this legacy and find out what parts of it fit their purpose to be able to obtain the transformation that we all want.”
“Transformation, development don’t just happen,” he argues. They happen because first people want them to happen. Secondly it needs the understanding of the mechanics, the industrial set up to bring about this transformation.”
The laws, the rules and regulations and the ways of doing things during colonial times served a very different purpose and needed to change at independence.
“This is why I always find a problem in people being made to just swallow wholesale things that they are told to do. These are not what they think they should be doing, or are about the overall circumstances and context, but rather because somebody who used to be the master during the colonial period, thinks this is the right thing to do – therefore, it’s what you must do!”
Here, while Kagame reflects the thinking of large sections of Africa’s well-educated youth and intellectuals, he also hits a sore point. We are all well aware of African countries that rigidly toe the line from their former colonial masters and are terrified of deviating even by an inch.
African self-confidence
Why is it, I ask, that so many African countries toe the line with systems and practices even when they don’t work despite the fact that countries like Rwanda and others outside the continent like Singapore and Malaysia have followed their own line and succeeded?
He puts it down to a lack of confidence, which means people talk but often come back to old habits and old models.
It is no secret that Kagame has modelled Rwanda’s development very much along the lines of Singapore; in fact, Surbana Jurong, Singapore’s award-winning urban planning company produced the masterplan for Kigali’s redevelopment as a high-class global city.
He says he finds it difficult to account for why transformation has taken place in other places while many African countries have remained stagnant.
Yet, in speeches made by many countries, “we tell anybody, our own people, others who ask us any time, every week, every month, every year, things that show we understand what is at stake, we understand what needs to be done.
“Yet, year in, year out we find we are back to where we have been. There is some good progress here and there but then we slip back. We keep going around. So, you are absolutely right it’s something that we need to re-examine about ourselves.”
He reminds me that those Asian countries that the world is now singing the praises for were also subjected to different pressures from different quarters but “they endured, they rallied; and it doesn’t mean they didn’t have differences among themselves but when it came to the stake that is theirs, they came together. They were able to put their differences aside. So why can’t it be the same with Africa?”
While Kagame has his admirers across the world for his leadership of a country in the most trying of circumstances, he also has his detractors who criticise him for some perceived deviation from the standard “textbook” handed down to developing countries.
“Even after the genocide and the remarkable turnaround in the country, there were those with vested interests who continued to criticise the new government. We still believe we have a bad name because we brought changes to our country that were intended to put us in a better place.
“We are not there yet. We still have a lot of work to do but I think that one can see the pathway to where we want to be, Even the young people who were born 20 years ago, 25 years ago when this country was just emerging from this tragedy, have a sense of where we are going.”
He articulates the thoughts and feelings of millions across the continent when he says: “It’s frustrating in the sense that Africa has almost everything: the people, the resources, but the resources remain buried somewhere for others to add value, to benefit more from and for African owners to remain stranded and begging, being beaten up for this, for that and screaming… and the story goes on and on.”
He is clearly referring to the resource wars in parts of Africa, the repressive regimes and the treatment of migrants as they flee the continent for what they believe are greener pastures abroad.
“We put ourselves there – we shouldn’t do that. It doesn’t make sense. And yet we know we can overcome this but I don’t know why we don’t do it as fast as we should.”
Fourth term?
During a forum in Doha, Qatar, Kagame responding to a question, said that when his current term expired in 2024, he was unlikely to seek a fourth. Was this statement set in stone, I ask, or would his decision be dictated by circumstances?
“The trouble with answering such questions is that we are dealing with a very complicated situation because it’s not one plus one equals two, nor is it black or white and that’s it,” he replies. “However, the moment you are asked such a question, if you don’t answer it, it is even worse.”
He goes on to explain that whatever response one gave about something in the future, circumstances could change – “the ground shifts, whether it’s your own making or not.” But that does not stop people expressing their thoughts or their wishes, “so I was expressing my thoughts, I’m expressing my wish”.
Kagame’s extended tenure, which could see him remaining in office until 2034, has sharply divided opinions both in Africa as well as abroad.
There are those who insist he should have stepped down when his second term expired in 2017 and those who say that the last thing Rwanda needs now is divisive politics and a no-holds barred grab for power.
They point to Lee Kwan Yew’s three decades in power in Singapore during which he set the foundations for his country’s success.
When it comes to Kagame, even his strongest critics admit that he is immensely popular and that his track record, everything considered, shines very brightly in modern history.
Perhaps, like Lee Kwan Yew, he is a one-off – the right man at the right time in the right situation. Time will tell and in any case, he has left the option open.
Regional tensions
The last year for the country was marred by a fraught relationship with its neighbours, Uganda and DRC.
Yoweri Museveni, Uganda’s president, had been Kagame’s comrade in arms when both fought for the liberation of their countries and they were fast friends before the falling out between the two countries.
At the time of going to press, the border between them had been closed, affecting thousands of petty traders.
I ask President Kagame the reason behind the current animosity.
“We have a lot to build on to make us successful, both of us. But for some reason this hasn’t turned out to be the case. That’s where it gets lost and I don’t find clear answers. If I have the means to make a good contribution towards resolving that, I’m happy to do that,” he says.
As a background to the troubles, he says that for a while, Rwandans who had gone to Uganda (where many have kith and kin), were arrested.
Some of them were tortured, many lost their properties and had their trading goods confiscated; some were imprisoned in unknown locations and were not tried in a court of law. Some of them have been kept in prisons without charge for up to two years.
Many of them, who were then dumped across the border, had harrowing tales to tell. When the matter was raised at diplomatic level, the Ugandans, according to Kagame, said the people had been spies, they were on their way to Lebanon as spies.
Kagame looks incredulous. “We are talking hundreds of people, not five or ten. For Rwanda to be sending hundreds of spies to Uganda would be a very expensive exercise indeed!”
And, none, he adds, is ever brought to a court of law.
But what seems to really irk the Rwandan leader is the belief that Uganda is harbouring and entertaining criminals, including some ministers caught up in corruption charges, who have fled Rwanda and set themselves up in opposition.
He says he does not understand why Uganda should involve itself in internal Rwandese politics.
He says he has even travelled to Uganda to raise these matters. “When we have met in conferences, we have talked about it. But it keeps going round and round.”
The development should be looked at from the broader security situation in the sub-region. The defeated Interahamwe, the far-right Hutu paramilitary organisation that was largely responsible for the genocide, has based itself in parts of DRC and Uganda where they are seen as a highly dangerous, disruptive influence.
Both countries would like to expel them, but as long as the RPF continues to rule in Rwanda, they cannot find a way back.
This partially explains the rather bizarre statement of the former premier of DRC, Adolphe Muzito, urging his government to wage war on Rwanda and even occupy and annex part of the country.
Saying that, he insists that the relationship with the DRC and President Tshisekedi, who has visited Rwanda at least three times since he was elected President, are the best they’ve been in twenty years.
Getting heard
So where does Africa stand within the current global environment, including with regards climate change and the drift to authoritarian, right wing governments; what would his priorities be if there was such a position as president of Africa and he were it?
“I am not looking to be and I don’t want to be presumptuous on that. The first thing is to try as much as possible to bring Africa together.
“Because Africa remains fragmented, therefore that means there is no voice that can be called an African voice: it’s Rwanda, it’s South Africa, it’s Nigeria, it’s Senegal, it’s Ethiopia, it’s Kenya, Tanzania, separately. What that means is even the biggest countries of our continent, alone they are small.
“The bigger entity we can be by coming together, the better we can represent ourselves as Africans and stop playing in the hands these people who divide us, and they divide us for a reason, because they want us to remain small.
It is like if you want to eat something, you chop it into pieces. We need to create that thing that cannot be swallowed by anyone.
“Knowing how difficult it is, we cannot expect all the countries to come together into one bloc all of a sudden, but we can use different approaches and tactics, like the sub regional blocs. Even if three countries decide to say ‘please listen’ you are still increasing your chance of making an impact on the global scene and avoid being trampled by the heavyweights.
“We are not only seeking survival, we are also seeking partnership and this is how we are going to develop and put to good use the resources we have, to build and transform our countries. That would be my preoccupation.”
As our interview comes to a close, I ask him about Rwanda’s sponsorship of the English Premier League (EPL) team Arsenal’s kit with the logo: Visit Rwanda. It has caused a considerable stir because this kind of bold advertising strategy is rarely associated with African countries.
Nevertheless, since EPL matches are televised worldwide and Arsenal has tens of millions of fans globally, Rwanda has thrust itself right to the forefront of possible destinations to visit: has the investment been worth it?
“Critics are very lucky, they are not accountable” he says with a smile. “I am accountable and the investment we made with Arsenal has produced good results. We are seeing an increase in numbers of visits. I think we probably gained not less than five times what we were spending, absolutely.”
The deal has been so good, Kagame tells me, that a similar one is being finalised with Paris Saint-Germain, probably the most famous football club in France. Rwanda expected somewhere near 17m visitors this year and the numbers should go up when the new airport, in which Qatar Airways has taken a 60% stake, is completed.
And did he have any advice to the new manager? “The players have to change, they have got to bring in new players. The owners also have to be looked at, because they are stuck in the past. I still love Arsenal, they have DNA of the good game, but in the end you are not just playing for the sake of playing you are playing also to win.”
It is this winning mentality that Kagame seems to have engendered throughout Rwanda.
Monday, February 3, 2020
Miss Rwanda Contestants Asked to Join the Smart Phone Access Campaign
All 54 girls contesting for Miss Rwanda 2020 crown today converged at Kigali Arena to pick numbers which will characterize each contestant during the course of the Miss Rwanda 2020 beauty pageant competition.
The event, held at Kigali Arena, came with a task of all the contestants urged to take on the promotion of the Connect Rwanda initiative.
Connect Rwanda is a national initiative, started December 2019, with the objective to mobilise abled Rwandans to contribute smartphones to Rwandans who cannot afford them.
The national initiative has a target of having all Rwandans with smartphones by end of this year. And by this January more than 31,000 smartphones had been pledged and some already distributed to beneficiaries.
For instance this last week Rwanda Development Board (RDB) delivered a pledge to all its 700 park rangers in Akagera national park, with each getting a brand new Mara smart phone customized with a ranger’s name.
“All of us have a contribution in the Connect Rwanda cause. Any contribution is welcome. As Miss Rwanda encourages creating influence, the contestants have been tasked to drive the Connect Rwanda campaign,” the event organisers said on twitter.
For a good work done by any of the 54 contestants, there will be a special prize for whom will drive the most pledges in Connect Rwanda drive.
“The reward will be an upgrade of her current smartphone to the latest version bundled with data of 10GB per month for life,” Miss Rwanda organisers revealed.
Out of the 54 contestants, only twenty of them are supposed to go to the final contest this February but the process of selecting the ones who will make it through the pre-selection has been opened.
According to Dieudonne Ishimwe, the contest manager, there will be SMS and Online voting ahead of MissRwanda2020 Pre-selection and public voting on both phone and online will be open since tomorrow at 12 o’clock.
What is in Miss Rwanda prize bag?
The top 20 contestants will head to the boot camp slated for February 9 to get trained in culture, national values and how to hit the red carpet before facing judges in the grand finale on February 22, where their brains will count more than beauty.
The winner will walk away with a brand-new Suzuki Swift, courtesy of Rwanda Motor, a monthly salary of Rwf800, 000 from Africa Improved Food (AIF), and additional bonus and goodies from Miss Rwanda’s partners.
The first runner-up will get Rwf1, 200, 000 from Multi Design Group, which will also provide a free air ticket to Miss Rwanda to spend her post-contest vacation in Dubai, United Arab Emirates (UAE).
Miss Popularity 2020 will net Rwf1, 500, 000, courtesy of MTN Rwanda and will be the latter’s brand ambassador this year.
The event, held at Kigali Arena, came with a task of all the contestants urged to take on the promotion of the Connect Rwanda initiative.
Connect Rwanda is a national initiative, started December 2019, with the objective to mobilise abled Rwandans to contribute smartphones to Rwandans who cannot afford them.
The national initiative has a target of having all Rwandans with smartphones by end of this year. And by this January more than 31,000 smartphones had been pledged and some already distributed to beneficiaries.
For instance this last week Rwanda Development Board (RDB) delivered a pledge to all its 700 park rangers in Akagera national park, with each getting a brand new Mara smart phone customized with a ranger’s name.
“All of us have a contribution in the Connect Rwanda cause. Any contribution is welcome. As Miss Rwanda encourages creating influence, the contestants have been tasked to drive the Connect Rwanda campaign,” the event organisers said on twitter.
For a good work done by any of the 54 contestants, there will be a special prize for whom will drive the most pledges in Connect Rwanda drive.
“The reward will be an upgrade of her current smartphone to the latest version bundled with data of 10GB per month for life,” Miss Rwanda organisers revealed.
Out of the 54 contestants, only twenty of them are supposed to go to the final contest this February but the process of selecting the ones who will make it through the pre-selection has been opened.
According to Dieudonne Ishimwe, the contest manager, there will be SMS and Online voting ahead of MissRwanda2020 Pre-selection and public voting on both phone and online will be open since tomorrow at 12 o’clock.
What is in Miss Rwanda prize bag?
The top 20 contestants will head to the boot camp slated for February 9 to get trained in culture, national values and how to hit the red carpet before facing judges in the grand finale on February 22, where their brains will count more than beauty.
The winner will walk away with a brand-new Suzuki Swift, courtesy of Rwanda Motor, a monthly salary of Rwf800, 000 from Africa Improved Food (AIF), and additional bonus and goodies from Miss Rwanda’s partners.
The first runner-up will get Rwf1, 200, 000 from Multi Design Group, which will also provide a free air ticket to Miss Rwanda to spend her post-contest vacation in Dubai, United Arab Emirates (UAE).
Miss Popularity 2020 will net Rwf1, 500, 000, courtesy of MTN Rwanda and will be the latter’s brand ambassador this year.
Sunday, February 2, 2020
Rwandan Companies Dominate 2019 Business Excellence Awards
Rwanda Development Board (RDB) has awarded the best and emerging business at the seventh edition of the annual Rwanda Business Excellence Awards 2019.
The colorful ceremony, held in Kigali yesterday, and highlighted Rwanda’s private sector investment growth, did not recognize any winner in the customer care sector but growth made by local companies and women in business.
“This category didn’t meet the requirements of the competition and judges decided not to award this category,” said the RDB CEO, Clare Akamanzi. Eleven companies received medals and cash prizes which were scooped by local companies.
At the awards ceremony, Master Steel Rwanda emerged as the overall Investor of the Year, replacing the 6th edition winner-I&M Bank, from the previous year.
Volkswagen (VW) Mobility Solutions, which has an assembling plant in Kigali netted the Emerging investor of the Year award while Awesomity Labs-a Rwandan company of four youth who developed a mobility application for VW car (Move App) also snatched the Young entrepreneur of the Year award.
Young entrepreneur of the Year award was highly contested with equally promising youth-led companies like Carl group- which makes bread out of sweet potatoes from over 200 farmers, and MS computer Ltd- which had Rwf4 billion revenue turnover in 2019. From a single staff, the company’s employees grew to 40 employees.
Africa Improved Foods (AIF) retained its award of the Exporter of the Year, which they scooped from two serious competitor BGM Bakresa Azam who were beaten in volumes of locally made products exported out of Rwanda.
This category also saw a Rwandan company Multisector Investment Group (MIG) recognized as Emerging Exporter of the Year, who were recognized for exporting made in Rwanda products to the furthest corners of the world.
All the way from Musanze town in Northern Rwanda, EasyHatch Ltd, a poultry supply firm started by young Rwandan farmers, emerged as the SME of the Year.
Little known Epiphanie Mukashyaka who founded Bufcoffee Ltd, emerged as Woman entrepreneur of the Year, walking away with Rwf2 million and training opportunity for her staff courtesy of Trade Mark East Africa for encouraging other women to join the coffee business.
Rwanda’s sole cement producers-Cimerwa was knocked out in the Made in Rwanda Enterprise of the Year award by Agropy Ltd- a non- chemical pesticide company which has branches all over the country.
In the fashion industry, Moshions Rwanda, who dressed most of the guests at the award ceremony which had “strictly made in Rwanda’ dress code, was declared Emerging Made In Rwanda Enterprise of the Year- an announcement that sent participants into a loud applause.
MTN Rwanda undoubtedly walked away with the Innovator of the Year award for starting the #ConnectRwanda challenge which seeks to avail smart phones to all Rwandans by the end of 2020.
KCB Bank Rwanda, beat other foreign companies like Ignite Power to scoop the Skills Development Promoter of the year award for creating 500 jobs locally in staff and agents.
All the awards, according to RDB, indicated the growing Rwandan economy spurred by the private sector investments and joint investment ventures between local and foreign investors.
The Guest of Honor, Prime Minister Dr Édouard Ngirente, said more collaboration with the private sector is needed to attain sustainable development by 2024 and middle income status by 2035.
“I call upon the business community to engage more in joint ventures (local and foreign) and explore markets through various partnerships to expand their businesses. This will help us to reach the upper middle income and upper income status,” Ngirente said.
The colorful ceremony, held in Kigali yesterday, and highlighted Rwanda’s private sector investment growth, did not recognize any winner in the customer care sector but growth made by local companies and women in business.
“This category didn’t meet the requirements of the competition and judges decided not to award this category,” said the RDB CEO, Clare Akamanzi. Eleven companies received medals and cash prizes which were scooped by local companies.
At the awards ceremony, Master Steel Rwanda emerged as the overall Investor of the Year, replacing the 6th edition winner-I&M Bank, from the previous year.
Volkswagen (VW) Mobility Solutions, which has an assembling plant in Kigali netted the Emerging investor of the Year award while Awesomity Labs-a Rwandan company of four youth who developed a mobility application for VW car (Move App) also snatched the Young entrepreneur of the Year award.
Young entrepreneur of the Year award was highly contested with equally promising youth-led companies like Carl group- which makes bread out of sweet potatoes from over 200 farmers, and MS computer Ltd- which had Rwf4 billion revenue turnover in 2019. From a single staff, the company’s employees grew to 40 employees.
Africa Improved Foods (AIF) retained its award of the Exporter of the Year, which they scooped from two serious competitor BGM Bakresa Azam who were beaten in volumes of locally made products exported out of Rwanda.
This category also saw a Rwandan company Multisector Investment Group (MIG) recognized as Emerging Exporter of the Year, who were recognized for exporting made in Rwanda products to the furthest corners of the world.
All the way from Musanze town in Northern Rwanda, EasyHatch Ltd, a poultry supply firm started by young Rwandan farmers, emerged as the SME of the Year.
Little known Epiphanie Mukashyaka who founded Bufcoffee Ltd, emerged as Woman entrepreneur of the Year, walking away with Rwf2 million and training opportunity for her staff courtesy of Trade Mark East Africa for encouraging other women to join the coffee business.
Rwanda’s sole cement producers-Cimerwa was knocked out in the Made in Rwanda Enterprise of the Year award by Agropy Ltd- a non- chemical pesticide company which has branches all over the country.
In the fashion industry, Moshions Rwanda, who dressed most of the guests at the award ceremony which had “strictly made in Rwanda’ dress code, was declared Emerging Made In Rwanda Enterprise of the Year- an announcement that sent participants into a loud applause.
MTN Rwanda undoubtedly walked away with the Innovator of the Year award for starting the #ConnectRwanda challenge which seeks to avail smart phones to all Rwandans by the end of 2020.
KCB Bank Rwanda, beat other foreign companies like Ignite Power to scoop the Skills Development Promoter of the year award for creating 500 jobs locally in staff and agents.
All the awards, according to RDB, indicated the growing Rwandan economy spurred by the private sector investments and joint investment ventures between local and foreign investors.
The Guest of Honor, Prime Minister Dr Édouard Ngirente, said more collaboration with the private sector is needed to attain sustainable development by 2024 and middle income status by 2035.
“I call upon the business community to engage more in joint ventures (local and foreign) and explore markets through various partnerships to expand their businesses. This will help us to reach the upper middle income and upper income status,” Ngirente said.
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