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Qualities of the Best Car Rental Company

Qualities of the Best Car Rental Company.

We have become the most searched car agency as it has become a trend and is higher in demand than any other services. In fact, renting a car has become an very common among the  locals in Rwanda and those…

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Information Technology Super-charging Rwanda's Economy

Information Technology Super-charging Rwanda’s Economy

There is a surge in the number of start-ups that have been established with Information Technology Super-charging Rwanda's Economy. Rwandans undergoing training on an "ICT bus": The growth of Rwanda's information and communications technology sector is stimulating innovation across the…

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Rwandans rearing cows and drinking milk in Bars

The truth behind Rwandans rearing cows and drinking milk in Bars.

The truth behind Rwandans rearing cows and drinking milk in bars. Unique to Rwanda, milk bars reflect a little-known truth about how intrinsic cows and milk are to Rwandan culture.

In recent years, there’s been a lot of debate about whether drinking the milk of other animals is good for us. But how do the arguments for and against drinking dairy milk stack up? Is it better to drink cow’s milk or a dairy-free alternative? See below;

It was 10:00 in the Rwandan capital of Kigali, and an unmarked bar in the central Nyarugenge district was already packed. A line of motorcycles was parked out front, and as I pushed through a white curtain separating the dusty, dirt road from the crowd of boisterous regulars inside, the spectacled owner, Yusuf Gatikabisi smiled widely at me and said, “Mwaramutse!” – good morning in Kinyarwanda.

At the bar’s four communal tables, young bikers mingled with singles and parents clutching young toddlers. Some were eating beans and unleavened chapatti bread. Others were feasting on cakes or doughnuts. But interestingly, everyone was drinking the same thing, and it wasn’t beer or wine. You see, at Kuruhimbi and hundreds of similar bars across Rwanda, there’s only one thing on tap, and it’s milk.

Unique and distinct to Rwanda, milk bars bind many of our communities together. They are places to meet for breakfast or lunch, to socialize with people of different backgrounds, and to throw back a frothy glass of cold ikivuguto (fermented milk) poured from a vast metal drum and topped with honey or sugar or a hot mug of inshyushyu (raw milk that’s boiled and served hot). While these local watering holes may seem like a kitschy haunt to the uninitiated, they reflect a little-known truth about how intrinsic cows and milk are to Rwandan culture.

With around 70% of Rwanda’s population engaged in the agricultural sector, cows are an economic asset as well as a symbol of wealth and social status in rural areas.

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France’s Macron heads to Rwanda to reset relations

France’s Macron heads to Rwanda to reset relations. President’s visit to Kigali aimed at turning page from decades of diplomatic friction over France’s role in the 1994 genocide.

Rwandan President Paul Kagame receives French President Emmanuel Macron at the Presidential Palace in Kigali.

French President Emmanuel Macron has travelled to Rwanda for a highly symbolic visit aimed at repairing relations between the two countries after decades of Rwandan accusations that France was complicit in the 1994 genocide.

Macron arrived in the capital, Kigali, early on Thursday and is due to hold talks with Rwandan President Paul Kagame. But the most anticipated part of his speech will come when Macron gives a speech at the Kigali Genocide Memorial, where some 250,000 victims of the mass killings are buried.

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Rwandan court drops charges against opposition politician Rwigara

Rwandan court drops charges against opposition politician Rwigara. Court rules Rwigara’s criticism of the government was an exercise of freedom of expression [Reuters].

Judges clear dissident politician Diane Rwigara on charges of inciting insurrection and document forgery.

A Rwandan court acquitted Diane Rwigara, a critic of veteran President Paul Kagame, on charges that included inciting insurrection and the forgery of documents.

Rwigara, 37, was arrested in September 2017 after her attempt to run in Rwanda’s presidential election was denied on grounds she allegedly forged the signatures of supporters for her bid. 

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