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Thursday, 1 May 2014

[RwandaLibre] USAID-Rwanda: Food Security Outlook

 

East Africa⁠ Rwanda⁠ Presence Country Food Security Outlook

Stressed food security outcomes observed during the peak of lean season

April 2014 to September 2014

The Eastern Congo-Nile Highland Subsistance Farming and the Eastern
Semi Arid and Eastern Agro-pastoral zones depleted their food stocks
one month earlier than normal due to around 50 percent below-average
season A harvests for maize and beans in January/February. In order to
cope, poor households in these areas will engage in irreversible
coping strategies and face Stressed (IPC Phase 2) food insecurity
until the next harvests in June, when household will be in Minimal
food insecurity (IPC Phase 1) through September.

The long rainy (March-April-May) season started normally in early
March, but poorly-distributed seasonal rainfall since mid-March has
led to deteriorating ground conditions in southern and eastern parts
of the country, threatening crop development. Normal Season B harvests
in June/July are expected to replenish household food stocks across
Rwanda, but areas of concern with proneness to dryspell and flooding
should continue to be monitored closely.

Food prices are atypically high during the current lean season, up 30
to 60 percent against the two-year average. This is due to a lack of
carryover stock from the below-average Season A harvest. Prices are
expected to continue to increase until the arrival of the harvest in
June. However, poor households in most areas are still accessing food
through normal livelihood strategies and are facing Minimal/None (IPC
Phase 1) food insecurity.

National overview

Current Situation



Figure 1. Seasonal Rainfall Forecast for the Horn of Africa, March to May 2014

Source: ICPAC, GHACOF 36

Seasonal calendar in a typical year

Household food stocks: Poor households across the country experienced
below-normal Season A harvests during December to February, which did
not replenish food stocks to normal levels. Eastern Congo-Nile
Highland Subsistance Farming Zone, as well as the Eastern Semi-Arid
Agro-Pastoral zone, were hit by crop disease (maize caterpillar) and
poor rainfall conditions last season, which caused crop damage and
resulted in 50 percent deficits compared to the five-year average.
Households in the affected areas depleted their food stocks by early
March, which is one month earlier than normal. Poor households outside
the areas of concern are currently employing typical coping strategies
such as petty trade, switching for less preferred foods, and casual
labor. In areas of concern where food consumption and non-food
expenditure has decreased households are employing atyipical coping
strategies of high animal sales and labor migration to obtain food and
income.

Progress of agricultural season B: Season B activities are underway
across the country due to the timely onset of the long rainy season in
late-February. Near-normal rainfall distribution was received in
March, followed by reduced rainfall since early April. As seasonal
rains have normalized in the third dekad (10-day period) of April, the
increase in moisture is likely to positively impact crop development
across livelihood zones. Cassava mosaic in the East Congo Nile
Highland Subsiste Farming zone is threating production of cassava.

Othe sources of income: Nevertheless, the ongoing agricultural season
is providing on-farm labor opportunities for weeding in highland areas
and planting sweet potatoes in marshland areas and cassava in the
hillsides. Agricultural labor wages of 500 RwF/day are 30 percent
lower they were during same time last year due to relatively high
supply of labor from assetless reintegrated returnees from Tanzania
into the communities, and to some extent refugees from the camps.
Moreover, during this time of the year many people seek labor
opportunities to help pay for school fees that are due after the
Easter holidays. Poor households can also generate income from petty
trade and government safety nets providing labor work relating to
Vision 2020 Umurenge, where wage rates are considerably good at
between 1,500 and 2,000 RwF/day.

Markets and prices: Bean and Irish potato prices are 30-48 percent
above the two-year average during the lean season, due to low market
supply following the poor Season A harvest (the reference markets are
Birambo in East Congo Nile Higland Farming Zone and Nyakarambi for
Eastern Semi-Arid Agro-Pastoral Zone, and current prices are for
March). Maize prices have decreased since last month, as supply from
Season 'A' harvests arrives later than other crops.

Livestock conditions: Current rains have replenished pasture and water
availability for livestock across the country, contributing to good
livestock body conditions. Due to improved pastures, milk production
has increased seasonally in April and prices are seasonally normal for
milk during the peak of the lean season. However, high supply of
animals to markets during April to May, as households raise cash for
market purchases and school fees, may seasonally reduce livestock
prices.

Assumptions

The most-likely scenario for April through September 2014 is based on
the following national‐level assumptions:

Rainfall: Seasonal weather forecasts for March- April-May issued by
Inter-Governmental Authority for Development Climate Prediction and
Application Centre, and customized for Rwanda conditions, are
predicting normal to above-normal rainfall across the country (Figure
1).

Agricultural labor: Between April and May, there will be atypically
high agricultural labor supply associated with migration to raise
income for household food and non-food expenditure. Wage rates will be
below average compared to the same time last year. Wages rates will
peak again during the harvest in June/July and with land preparation
activities in August/September.

Food stocks: Low carryover household food stocks from Season A is
forcing households to rely entirely on market purchases to meet their
food needs until June, when the new harvest will be ready. This
harvest will then replenish food stocks and enable households to
consume own crop production normally through September.

Price of staple commodities: Due to below-average supply of key staple
foods as a result of poor Season A performance, prices of beans,
maize, cooking banana, and Irish potato will continue to increase at a
faster rate than is seasonally normal until the next harvest in
June/July. Prices are expected to decline in June until August
following the Season B harvest, though prices will remain moderately
above previous year and two-year averages throughout the scenario
period. However, maize and bean imports from Tanzania to Rwanda are
expected to increase further due to sufficient supply, the imminent
start of the May to August (Msimu) harvest in the main producing
southern highlands, competitive export parity prices, and high demand
in Rwanda following below-average December 2013 to January 2014
production.

Cross-border trade: Maize grain and bean exports from Tanzania to
Rwanda are expected to increase further due to higher-than-normal
supply, the imminent start of the May-to-August (Msimu) harvest in the
main producing southern highlands, competitive export parity prices,
and high demand in Rwanda following below-average Season A 2014
production (50 percent below average). Supplies from Uganda to Rwanda
are also expected to increase further since exports to South Sudan are
expected to be atypically low.

Increases in supplies of maize grain, dry beans and rice from both
Uganda and Tanzania are expected to moderate increases in prices (but
will not significantly curve the trend downwards) in northeastern and
eastern Rwanda.

Season 'B' harvest: Harvests in June will be near average due to
expected near-normal rainfall levels.

Livestock conditions: Pasture and livestock conditions will be normal
from now through June due to the ongoing rainy season, but are
expected to deteriorate normally during the dry season from July
through September and then improve as the rains start in second week
of September.

Livestock prices: Livestock prices will remain slightly below average
until June due to above-average supply as households raise income for
food purchases and pay for childrens' school fees during end of April.

Off-farm income activities: These activities will increase with labor
migration mostly from western parts of the country to Kigali, where
construction labor is widely available.

Refugees and returnees: Due to continued civil insecurity, refugee
inflows from the DRC will continue at current levels (approx. 2,600
persons per month). According to UNHCR-Rwanda, this will cause the
total refugee population to reach a record 91,000 people this year.

Most Likely Food Security Outcomes

From April until the early green harvests in May, most poor households
throughout the country will rely on market purchases to meet
consumption needs. Average labor and livestock incomes, above-normal
food prices, and access to off-farm labor will enable most households
to meet their food and non-food needs normally until June. For some
households, market purchases will also be supplemented by milk from
their own livestock herds and their own production of perennial crops,
such as bananas and cassava. Due to a normal harvest in June that will
replenish household food stocks, households will rely on their own
crop production, as usual, between June and September. In most areas
of the country, households will be at Minimal/None (IPC Phase 1) food
insecurity during the entire outlook period. However, Stressed (IPC
Phase 2) outcomes will be observed between April and May in certain
areas of concern (the Eastern Congo-Nile Highland subsistence farming
zones, and the Eastern Semi Arid Agro-pastoral zones) because of
reduced food consumption patterns and atypical engagement in
irreversible coping strategies, like increased sales of animals and
elevated labor migration.

Areas of concern

ern semi-arid agro-pastoral zone



Figure 2. Bean Prices at Nyakarambi Market, RWF/kg

Source: FEWS NET

Figure 3. Banana Prices at Nyakarambi market, monthly average, RWF/kg

Source: FEWS NET


Figure 4. Cassava Flour Prices at Birambo Market, monthly average, RWF/kg

Source: FEWS NET

Figure 5. Bean Prices at Birambo Market, monthly average, RWF/kg

Current Situation

The Eastern Semi-Arid and Eastern Agro-pastoral zone was hit by a dry
spell during cropping season 'A', which caused 50 percent
below-average maize and bean harvests in December/January. As a
result, household food stocks in this zone depleted approximately one
month earlier than normal at the end of February, compared to the end
of March in a normal year. Households in this zone are currently
dependent on the market to meet food needs. Cropping season 'B' is
progressing across the livelihood zone, with crops already at the
flowering stage and weeding providing on-farm labor for the poor. Crop
conditions are progressing well following normal rains.

Weeding is the main labor opportunity available at this time of the
year, so it cannot sufficiently provide for the high supply of labor
which is exacerbated by the labor migrants from the West of the
country to the East. This has reduced wages rates to 500 RWF/day, 35
percent below the situation of last two months and 20 percent below
last year's level. People in this zone also receive income from Vision
2020 Umurenge, a government program to support the most vulnerable
households that pays 1500 RWF/day. Another source of income is the
Land Husbandry, Water Harvesting and Hillside (LWH) Irrigation project
in Nyagatare, Kayonza and Gatsibo and Dams construction in Kirehe
districts, where poor people are employed in terrace construction and
paid 1500 RWF/person/day.

Following the 50 percent below-average Season A harvest in this zone,
low market supply has triggered food price increases by 25 percent,
61.5 percent and 12 percent respectively for beans, cooking banana,
cassava flour at Nyakarambi market, compared to previous month
(February) prices. Prices for these commodities are also up 53, 183
and 29 percent respectively compared to last year's levels.

Households are meeting their food consumption through atypical coping
strategies, such as engaging in typical on-farm labor migration and
above-normal sale of animals to two to three goats/pigs compared to
the typical one per season. Animal body conditions are better and milk
availability is good. However, the high sale of livestock as a coping
strategy to reduce food gaps also lowers the price compared to normal
levels.

Assumptions

The most-likely scenario for April through September 2014 for the
Eastern Semi-Arid Agro-pastoral zone is based on the following
zone-level assumptions:

Household food stocks: From April to May, households will meet their
consumption needs through market purchases until the next harvests in
June. This harvest is expected to be near normal and will replenish
household food stocks until August. Households will then rely on the
market again for food in September, as is typical for this time of the
year.

Prices: Prices beans, cooking banana, and Irish potatoes are expected
to increase sharply during peak of lean season (April/May) due to
reduced market supply. Starting in the end of May, green consumption
from the Season B harvests will ease market demand and will cause
prices to decline. Due to fresh harvests in June, food prices will
decline in June and stay relatively stable, but moderately above last
year between July and August until household food stocks begin to
deplete again in early September.

Labor opportunities: Weeding activities generally require less labor
than other agricultural activities, such as harvesting, so labor
demand will be seasonally low until June. Above-normal labor supply as
households try to offset the effects of last season's poor harvests.
Labor opportunities will then increase seasonally in June as the
harvest begins in June and land preparation begins in August. Wages
will be normal between June and September.

Migration: Migration will peak seasonally in April-May during the lean
season. Household members who have migrated to other zones, such as
Southeastern Plateau Banana zone, will return in late June when green
harvests are available.
Livestock: Despite normal body conditions, livestock prices will
remain below average between April and May as households sell
atypically high levels of livestock during the lean season. Once
harvests begin in June, livestock supply will decline back to normal
levels and prices are expected to be similar to an average year
between June and September.

Cross-border trade: Imports of staple food commodities from Tanzania
and Uganda will not significantly change food prices in this
livelihood zone, as most of them will be directed towards Kigali City.

Most Likely Food Security Outcomes

Due to below-average Season 'A' 2014 harvests, household food stocks
depleted one month earlier than normal this year and households are
currently relying on market purchases to access food. Atypically high
food prices have caused households to currently have difficulties
meeting basic food needs without employing irreversible coping
strategies, such as above normal sales of animals and increased labor
migration. Poor households in this zone are therefore classified as
Stressed (IPC Phase 2) between April and then next harvests in June.

Due to expected average Season B harvests, household food stocks are
expected to be replenished to normal levels in June. These normal
harvests, along with normal cash incomes from agricultural labor
activities, livestock sales, and milk sales will enable households to
access food normally and be at Minimal/None (IPC Phase 1) food
insecurity between June and September.

Eastern Congo-Nile Highland Subsistence Farming Zone

Current Situation

This zone is characterized by steeply-sloped mountains with degraded
lands, low fertility, and old soils that are vulnerable to erosion.
Cash crops, food crops, livestock and casual labor are the main
livelihood activities in this zone.

In the East Congo-Nile Highland Subsistance Farming Zone, Season A
harvests of beans and maize were 50 percent below average due to crop
diseases and soil erosion as a result of heavy rains, and crop
diseases. In addition, flooding and landslides damaged crops to worsen
the seasonal production performance. The government-run terracing
activities in the zone also reduced the quantity of land that was put
under cultivation, further contributing to last season's below-average
harvests. As a result, household food stocks in this zone depleted one
month earlier than normal (in early March compared to the early April
in a normal year) and households are currently relying on market
purchases to access food.

Similar to the rest of the country, the long rainy season is currently
underway in this zone with normal cumulative rainfall levels and no
major hazard resulting in crop losses have been reported.

Poor households' dependence entirely on market purchases during April
and May in this zone has increased market demand and has exacerbated
already above-normal food prices. Current food prices (March) are
higher compared to the previous month by 6 percent, 61 percent, 28
percent and 18 percent for beans, cooking bananas, Irish potato and
cassava flour, respectively, at Birambo market.

Currently, high labor migration to the Eastern part of the country has
been observed for households seeking off-farm and on-farm labor
opportunities. The rate at which they migrate is above normal
according to reports from area of destination (Nyagatare and Gatsibo
districts). Planting activities have ended and land husbandry
activities for the poor are completed in Karongi, Nyanza, Huye and
Ngororero. The households normally access labor in tea and or coffee
plantations where they are employed and paid monthly. This income
source however, does not reach many poor households since the number
of people seeking this employment is above average.

The zone is home to about 67,212 refugees from DRC. These refugees
have put additional pressure on this zone as they compete with the
local community for labor work, such as at local tea plantations,
increasing supply and causing wages to fall. For example, in these
areas, the current wage is 500 RWF/day, which compares to 700 RWF/day
during a normal year at this time. Refugees are also present at local
markets, such as Birambo market in the Karongi district and Kabacuzi
market in the Nyamagabe district, selling items such as food, oil,
blanket, etc. to earn cash to purchase substitute foods and clothing.
Another camp was established in Mugombwa Sector of Gisagara District
to host refugees from Nkamira Transit Camp, this has increased market
demand of certain market items and driving prices upward.

Assumptions

The most-likely scenario for April through September 2014 for the East
Congo-Nile Highland farming zone is based on the following zone-level
assumptions:

Food sources: Households have currently depleted their own food stocks
one month earlier than normal and will rely on market purchases until
the June harvests. After these harvests, households will depend on
their own production through September 2014.

Prices: Staple commodity prices will remain above normal throughout
the first half of the outlook period and will be stable, but
moderately above last year's post-June harvests. This means that until
the first harvests in June, prices will be unseasonally high due to
low market supply during the lean season. Prices will then decline
slightly in July through August, before increasing again in September
when market demand from households increases.

Livestock: Livestock prices will behave normally during the scenario
period. Improved pasture availability during the rainy season between
April and June will continuously improve body conditions and milk
availability until August.

Labor opportunities: Labor availability will increase during the June
to July period as harvesting and land preparation for August begins.
Labor opportunities from tea plantations are expected to remain stable
throughout the outlook period.

Remittances: Remittances are expected to remain stable during the
scenario period.

Cross-border trade: Imports of staple food commodities from Tanzania
and Uganda will not significantly impact food prices in this
livelihood zone, as most imports will be destined for towards Kigali
City.

Most Likely Food Security Outcomes

Households in this zone will entirely rely on market purchases to meet
their basic food needs until June, due to the continuing impacts of
Season A's 50 percent below-average. From June until August,
households will consume their own-produced foods. In addition,
above-average labor availability has caused wages in the zone to
decline and reduce their purchasing power. To cope, households will
employ consumption-based coping strategies, including skipping meals,
engage in reduced non-food expenditure and using irreversible coping
strategies, like higher-than-normal labor migration and will be in
Stressed (IPC Phase 2) acute food insecurity. Once the harvests start
in June, households will rely on their own crop production, including
beans, banana plantains, peas, sweet potatoes, and fresh and dry
cassava, and will be able to meet both essential food and non-food
needs without engaging in any atypical coping strategies. Therefore,
between June and September, households will face minimal to no food
insecurity (IPC Phase 1).

Events that might change the outlook

Table 1: Possible events over the next six months that could change
the most-likely scenario.

Area

Event

Impact on food security outcomes

National

Food stocks in Tanzania are not as good as we assume.

There will be insufficient supply from Tanzania to the Rwanda market
and therefore prices will remain high and erode the purchasing power
of the buyers

A change in the political situation in the DRC allows refugees in
Rwanda to return home

The return of refugees to the DRC would reduce labor competition and
cause wages to return to normal levels.

Eastern Congo Nile Highlands subsistence farming zone

Refugee influx from DRC is likely to happen due to planned MONUSCO
disarmament of Rwandan FDRL rebels based in DRC

Increase labor supply, competition in available resources with host
population like markets.

About this report
To project food security outcomes over a six-month period, FEWS NET
develops a set of assumptions about likely events, their effects, and
the probable responses of various actors. FEWS NET analyzes those
assumptions in the context of current conditions and local livelihoods
to develop scenarios estimating food security outcomes. Typically,
FEWS NET reports the most likely scenario.

The information provided on this Web site is not official U.S.
Government information and does not represent the views or positions
of the U.S. Agency for International Development or the U.S.
Government.

http://www.fews.net/east-africa/ruanda/food-security-outlook/wed-2014-04-30?utm_source=FEWS+NET+Daily+Digest&utm_campaign=999d5b5f1a-RSS_EMAIL_CAMPAIGN&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_02ee344349-999d5b5f1a-84428741

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SIBOMANA Jean Bosco
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http://www.youtube.com/user/sibomanaxyz999
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[RwandaLibre] Wall Street Journal: Award Stirs Spat Between Rwanda, France

 

Award Stirs Spat Between Rwanda, France

President Kagame Claims Think Tank Wavered on Decision to Honor Him
After He Implicated France in 1994 Genocide


Neanda Salvaterra
Updated May 1, 2014 5:46 p.m. ET

Rwandan President Paul Kagame this week claimed that a French think
tank wavered in its decision to present him with an award for
political reasons, adding a new twist to a row with France over
allegations of its involvement in the 1994 Rwandan genocide.

The Lyon-based World Entrepreneurship Forum, which isn't part of the
French government, denies the award was ever withdrawn.

Mr. Kagame revived the diplomatic dispute with [...]

http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052702304677904579535940715065628?mod=WSJ_LatestHeadlines&mg=reno64-wsj&url=http%3A%2F%2Fonline.wsj.com%2Farticle%2FSB10001424052702304677904579535940715065628.html%3Fmod%3DWSJ_LatestHeadlines

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SIBOMANA Jean Bosco
Google+: https://plus.google.com/110493390983174363421/posts
YouTube Channel: http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL9B4024D0AE764F3D
http://www.youtube.com/user/sibomanaxyz999
***Online Time:15H30-20H30, heure de Montréal.***Fuseau horaire
domestique: heure normale de la côte Est des Etats-Unis et Canada
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[RwandaLibre] The Rwanda Enigma

 


The Rwanda Enigma

For analysts and advocates trying to assess risks of future mass atrocities in hopes of preventing them, Rwanda presents an unusual puzzle. Most of the time, specialists in this field readily agree on which countries are especially susceptible to genocide or mass killing, either because those countries are either already experiencing large-scale civil conflict or because they are widely considered susceptible to it. Meanwhile, countries that sustain long episodes of peace and steadily grow their economies are generally presumed to have reduced their risk and eventually to have escaped this trap for good.
Contemporary Rwanda is puzzling because it provokes a polarized reaction. Many observers laud Rwanda as one of Africa's greatest developmental successes, but others warn that it remains dangerously prone to mass atrocities. In a recent essay for African Arguments on how the Rwandan genocide changed the world, Omar McDoom nicely encapsulates this unusual duality:
What has changed inside Rwanda itself since the genocide? The country has enjoyed a remarkable period of social stability. There has not been a serious incident of ethnic violence in Rwanda for nearly two decades. Donors have praised the country's astonishing development.  Economic growth has averaged over 6% per year, poverty and inequality have declined, child and maternal mortality have improved, and primary education is now universal and free. Rwanda has shown, in defiance of expectations, that an African state can deliver security, public services, and rising prosperity.
Yet, politically, there is some troubling continuity with pre-genocide Rwanda. Power remains concentrated in the hands of a small, powerful ethnic elite led by a charismatic individual with authoritarian tendencies. In form, current president Paul Kagame and his ruling party, the RPF, the heroes who ended the genocide, appear to exercise power in a manner similar to former president Juvenal Habyarimana and his ruling MRND party, the actors closely-tied to those who planned the slaughter. The genocide is testament to what unconstrained power over Rwanda's unusually efficient state machinery can enable.
That duality also emerges from a comparison of two recent quantitative rankings. On the one hand, The World Bank now ranks Rwanda 32nd on the latest edition of its "ease of doing business" index—not 32nd in Africa, but 32nd of 189 countries worldwide. On the other hand, statistical assessments of the risk of an onset of state-led mass killing identify Rwanda as one of the 25 countries worldwide currently most vulnerable to this kind of catastrophe.
How can both of these things be true? To answer that question, we need to have a clearer sense of where that statistical risk assessment comes from. The number that ranks Rwanda among the 25 countries most susceptible to state-led mass killing is actually an average of forecasts from three models representing a few different ideas about the origins of mass atrocities, all applied to publicly available data from widely used sources.
  • Drawing on work by Barbara Harff and the Political Instability Task Force, the first model emphasizes features of countries' national politics that hint at a predilection to commit genocide or "politicide," especially in the context of political instability. Key risk factors in Harff's model include authoritarian rule, the political salience of elite ethnicity, evidence of an exclusionary elite ideology, and international isolation as measured by trade openness.
  • The second model takes a more instrumental view of mass killing. It uses statistical forecasts of future coup attempts and new civil wars as proxy measures of things that could either spur incumbent rulers to lash out against threats to their power or usher in an insecure new regime that might do the same.
  • The third model is really not a model but a machine-learning process called Random Forests applied to the risk factors identified by the other two. The resulting algorithm is an amalgamation of theory and induction that takes experts' beliefs about the origins of mass killing as its jumping-off point but also leaves more room for inductive discovery of contingent effects.
All of these models are estimated from historical data that compares cases where state-led mass killings occurred to ones where they didn't. In essence, we look to the past to identify patterns that will help us spot cases at high risk of mass killing now and in the future. To get our single-best risk assessment—the number that puts Rwanda in the top (or bottom) 25 worldwide—we simply average the forecasts from these three models. We prefer the average to a single model's output because we know from work in many fields—including meteorology and elections forecasting—that this "ensemble" approach generally produces more accurate assessments than we could expect to get from any one model alone. By combining forecasts, we learn from all three perspectives and hedge against the biases of any one of them.
Rwanda lands in the top 25 worldwide because all three models identify it as a relatively high-risk case. It ranks 15th on the PITF/Harff model, 28th on the "elite threat" model, and 30th on the Random Forest. The PITF/Harff model sees a relatively low risk in Rwanda of the kinds of political instability that typically trigger onsets of genocide or politicide, but it also pegs Rwanda as the kind of regime most likely to resort to mass atrocities if instability were to occur—namely, an autocracy in which elites' ethnicity is politically salient in a country with a recent history of genocide. Rwanda also scores fairly high on the "elite threat" model because, according to our models of these things, it is at relatively high risk of a new insurgency and moderate risk of a coup attempt. Finally, the Random Forest sees a very low probability of mass killing onset in Rwanda but still pegs it as a riskier case than most.
Our identification of Rwanda as a relatively high-risk case is echoed by some, but not all, of the other occasional global assessments of countries' susceptibility to mass atrocities. In her own applications of her genocide/politicide model for the task of early warning, Barbara Harff pegged Rwanda as one of the world's riskiest cases in 2011 but not in 2013. Similarly, the last update of Genocide Watch's Countries at Risk Report, in 2012, lists Rwanda as one of more than a dozen countries at stage five of seven on the path to genocide, putting it among the 35 countries worldwide at greatest risk. By contrast, the Global Centre for the Responsibility to Protect has not identified Rwanda as a situation of concern in any of its R2P Monitor reports to date, and the Sentinel Project for Genocide Prevention does not list Rwanda among its situations of concern, either. Meanwhile, recent reporting on Rwanda from Human Rights Watch has focused mostly on the pursuit of justice for the 1994 genocide and other kinds of human-rights violations in contemporary Rwanda.
To see what our own pool of experts makes of our statistical risk assessment and to track changes in their views over time, we plan to add a question to our "wisdom of (expert) crowds" forecasting system asking about the prospect of a new state-led mass killing in Rwanda before 2015. If one does not happen, as we hope and expect will be the case, we plan to re-launch the question at the start of next year and will continue to do so as long as our statistical models keep identifying it as a case of concern.
In the meantime, I thought it would be useful to ask a few country experts what they make of this assessment and how a return to mass killing in Rwanda might come about. Some were reluctant to speak on the record, and understandably so. The present government of Rwanda has a history of intimidating individuals it perceives as its critics. As Michaela Wrong describes in a recent piece for Foreign Policy,
A U.S. State Department spokesperson said in mid-January, "We are troubled by the succession of what appear to be politically motivated murders of prominent Rwandan exiles. President Kagame's recent statements about, quote, 'consequences' for those who betray Rwanda are of deep concern to us."
It is a pattern that suggests the Rwandan government may have come to see the violent silencing of critics—irrespective of geographical location and host country—as a beleaguered country's prerogative.
Despite these constraints, the impression I get from talking to some experts and reading the work of others is that our risk assessment strikes nearly all of them as plausible. None said that he or she expects an episode of state-led mass killing to begin soon in Rwanda. Consistent with the thinking behind our statistical models, though, many seem to believe that another mass killing could occur in Rwanda, and if one did, it would almost certainly come in reaction to some other rupture in that country's political stability.
Filip Reyntjens, a professor at the University of Antwerpen who wrote a book on Rwandan politics since the 1994 genocide, was both the most forthright and the most pessimistic in his assessment. Via email, he described Rwanda as
A volcano waiting to erupt. Nearly all field research during the last 15 years points at pervasive structural violence that may, as we know, become physical, acute violence following a trigger. I don't know what that trigger will be, but I think a palace revolution or a coup d'etat is the most likely scenario. That may create a situation difficult to control.
In a recent essay for Juncture that was adapted for the Huffington Post (here), Phil Clark sounds more optimistic than Reyntjens, but he is not entirely sanguine, either. Clark sees the structure and culture of the country's ruling party, the Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF), as the seminal feature of Rwandan politics since the genocide and describes it as a double-edged sword. On the one hand, the RPF's cohesiveness and dedication to purpose has enabled it, with help from an international community with a guilty conscience, to make "enormous" developmental gains. On the other hand,
The RPF's desire for internal cohesion has made it suspicious of critical voices within and outside of the party—a feature compounded by Rwanda's fraught experience of multi-party democracy in the early 1990s, which saw the rise of ethnically driven extremist parties and helped to create an environment conducive to genocide. The RPF's singular focus on rebuilding the nation and facilitating the return of refugees means it has often viewed dissent as an unaffordable distraction. The disastrous dalliance with multipartyism before the genocide has only added to the deep suspicion of policy based on the open contestation of ideas.
Looking ahead, Clark wonders what happens when that intolerance for dissent bumps up against popular frustrations, as it probably will at some point:
For the moment, there are few signs of large-scale popular discontent with the closed political space. However, any substantial decline in socio-economic conditions in the countryside will challenge this. The RPF's gamble appears to be that the population will tolerate a lack of national political contestation provided domestic stability and basic living standards are maintained. For now, the RPF seems to have rightly judged the popular mood but that situation may not hold.
Journalist Kris Berwouts portrays similarly ambiguous terrain in a recent piece for the Dutch magazine Mo that also appeared on the blog African Arguments (here). Berwouts quotes David Himbara, a former Rwandan regime insider who left the country in 2010 and has vocally criticized the Kagame government ever since, as telling him that "all society has vanished from Rwanda, mistrust is complete. It has turned Rwanda into a time bomb." But Berwouts juxtaposes that dire assessment with the cautiously optimistic view of Belgian journalist Marc Hoogsteyns, who has worked in the region for years and has family ties by marriage to its Tutsi community. According to Hoogsteyns,
Rwanda is a beautiful country with many strengths and opportunities, but at the same time it is some kind of African version of Brave New World. People are afraid to talk. But they live more comfortably and safely than ever before, they enjoy high quality education and health care. They are very happy with that. The Tutsi community stands almost entirely behind Kagame and also most Hutu can live with it. They obviously don't like the fact that they do not count on the political scene, but they can do what they want in all other spheres of live. They can study and do business etcetera. They can deal with the level of repression, because they know that countries such as Burundi, Congo or Kenya are not the slightest bit more democratic. Honestly, if we would have known twenty years ago, just after the genocide, that Rwanda would achieve this in two decades, we would have signed for it immediately.
As people of a certain age in places like Sarajevo or Bamako might testify, though, stability is a funny thing. It's there until it isn't, and when it goes, it sometimes goes quickly. In this sense, the political crises that sometimes produce mass killings are more like earthquakes than elections. We can spot the vulnerable structures fairly accurately, but we're still not very good at anticipating the timing and dynamics of ruptures in them.
In the spirit of that last point, it's important to acknowledge that the statistical assessment of Rwanda's risk to mass killing is a blunt piece of information. Although it does specifically indicate a susceptibility to atrocities perpetrated by state security forces or groups acting at their behest, it does not necessarily implicate the RPF as the likely perpetrators. The qualitative assessments discussed above suggest that some experts find that scenario plausible, but it isn't the only one consistent with our statistical finding. A new regime brought to power by coup or revolution could also become the agent of a new wave of mass atrocities in Rwanda, and the statistical forecast would be just as accurate.
Egypt's recent past offers a case in point. Our statistical assessments of susceptibility to state-led mass killing in early 2013 identified Egypt as a relatively high-risk case, like Rwanda now. At the time, Mohammed Morsi was president, and one plausible interpretation of that risk assessment might have centered on the threat the Muslim Brotherhood's supporters posed to Egypt's Coptic Christians. Fast forward to July 2013, and the mass killing we ended up seeing in Egypt came at the hands of an army and police who snatched power away from Morsi and the Brotherhood and then proceeded to kill hundreds of their unarmed sympathizers. That outcome doesn't imply that Coptic Christians weren't at grave risk before the coup, but it should remind us to consider a variety of ways these systemic risks might become manifest.
Still, after conversations with a convenience sample of regional experts, I am left with the impression that the risk our statistical models identify of a new state-led mass killing in Rwanda is real, and that it is possible to imagine the ruling RPF as the agents of such violence.
No one seems to expect the regime to engage in mass violence without provocation, but the possibility of a new Hutu insurgency, and the state's likely reaction to it, emerged from those conversations as perhaps the most likely scenario. According to some of the experts with whom I spoke, many Rwandan Hutus are growing increasingly frustrated with the RPF regime, and some radical elements of the Hutu diaspora appear to be looking for ways to take up that mantle. The presence of an insurgency is the single most-powerful predictor of state-led mass killing, and it does not seem far fetched to imagine the RPF regime using "scorched earth" tactics in response to the threat or occurrence of attacks on its soldiers and Tutsi citizens. After all, this is the same regime whose soldiers pursued Hutu refugees into Zaire in the mid-1990s and, according to a 2010 U.N. report, participated in the killings of tens of thousands of civilians in war crimes that were arguably genocidal.
Last but not least, we can observe that Rwanda has suffered episodes of mass killing roughly once per generation since independence—in the early 1960s, in 1974, and again in the early 1990s, culminating in the genocide of 1994 and the reprisal killings that followed. History certainly isn't destiny, but our statistical models confirm that in the case of mass atrocities, it often rhymes.
It saddens me to write this piece about a country that just marked the twentieth anniversary of one of the most lethal genocides since the Holocaust, but the point of our statistical modeling is to see what the data say that our mental models and emotional assessments might overlook. A reprisal of mass killing in Rwanda would be horribly tragic. As Free Africa Foundation president George Ayittey wrote in a recent letter of the Wall Street Journal, however, "The real tragedy of Rwanda is that Mr. Kagame is so consumed by the 1994 genocide that, in his attempt to prevent another one, he is creating the very conditions that led to it."

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[RwandaLibre] English mandated official language, @very little supportive material.

 

Grant School Student Council Facilitates Picture Book Tile Wall Project

Mary Louise Hyman
Thursday, May 1, 2014 - 4:00am

Photo: Far left top: Diana Polack, Creator of "Walls That Unite";
Nancy Uslan, Creator of "Books and Beyond"; Sharon Reuter, Elks
Organization, Mrs. Ellen Decker-Lorys, Grant School Principal; Bill
Reuter, Elks Organization; Student Council Members, Far Right Top:
Mrs. Julie Flasser, Student Council Supervisor; Mrs. Megan Basile,
Student Council Supervisor

SOUTH PLAINFIELD, NJ - In 2008, English was mandated as the official
language in Rwanda, however they had very little supportive material.
Rwanda's Kabwende Elementary School had zero books. The Rwanda
National Library has only about 10,000 books.

Recently, a "Books and Beyond Project" was founded by Nancy Uslan, a
resident of Cedar Grove, whereby students from Indiana University work
together with students from Newark, New Jersey's TEAM Charter School
to create a critical thinking/storybook, "The World Is Our Home." In
addition to working on the newest (sixth) volume of the book this past
winter, the Newark students were introduced to another project by
Nancy Uslan i.e. a literacy tile wall, which will be installed this
summer as a permanent picture book on a large wall at the Kabwende
School in Rwanda.

The Grant School Student Council President, Brody Donovan proposed
that this literacy tile wall project, titled "Walls That Unite" by
founder, Diana Polack be adopted by the Grant School Student Council
this year. Polack, the founder of 'Walls That Unite' partnered with
Nancy Uslan and her 'Books and Beyond Project', facilitating her first
global initiative last summer in Nepal. This exciting project was
accepted by Grant School Principal, Mrs. Ellen Decker-Lorys. Along
with Mrs. Decker-Lorys, the Acting Assistant Principal, Mr. John
Orfan, Student Council Teacher Supervisors, Mrs. Megan Basile and Mrs.
Julie Flasser, Brody Donovan, the Executive Student Council Board and
the Student Council Members worked together to facilitate the project,
which will create a beautiful 'artistic literacy wall' for this
elementary school in Rwanda. Colorful picture tiles will be shared
with the students of the Kabwende School from the 5th/ 6th grade
students of Grant School in South Plainfield, NJ. The artistic
educational dialogue between Jennifer Gil, the art teacher at Grant
School and the students was invaluable in establishing a creative
mindset within each student. It set the stage, as the students worked
with their Student Council Supervisors, Mrs. Basile and Mrs. Flasser
to create the beautiful square images. The students' artwork will be
digitally transposed onto tiles that will be cemented to the walls at
the Kabwende School for future generations to enjoy.

The Student Council reached out to the South Plainfield Elks
Organization for support with their fundraising efforts for the
'Picture Book Tile Wall Project' and are extremely thankful to Sharon
& Bill Reuter and the entire Elks membership for the generous
sponsorship, which they received toward this international endeavor.

Pictures of the literacy tile wall in Rwanda will be sent back to
Grant School with photos of the children at the Kabwende School. Grant
School students will see their artwork permanently embedded into a
school wall in Rwanda and their hard work turned into a reality. This
project has helped the students to realize that making a difference in
the lives of those less fortunate, even on the other side of the world
is so rewarding!

Ms. Polack plans on bringing 500 tiles to Rwanda from schools around
the metropolitan area. It is a wonderful project because it will
provide every student with a sense of self-worth and an understanding
of the part they can play in our world as global citizens.

http://www.google.ca/gwt/x?gl=CA&source=s&u=http://thealternativepress.com/articles/grant-school-student-council-facilitates-picture&hl=en-CA&ei=nLNiU9K1HcX_sgfr74HoDQ&wsc=yh&ct=np&whp=363

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[RwandaLibre] Southafrican soldiers wounded in DRC

 

SA soldiers wounded in DRC

Eyewitness News | Today, 15:28

JOHANNESBURG - The United Nation's mission in the Democratic Republic
of Congo has launched a counter attack after three South African
soldiers were wounded in the east of the country.

The South African National Defence Force (SANDF) says an armed group
launched an early morning attack on its members on Wednesday.

Of the three wounded, one solider is in a serious condition and is now
recovering in a hospital in Goma.

The outcome of the UN's intervention is not yet known.

SANDF's Jaco Theunissen says, "An armed group of rebels attacked one
of the South African army operating bases in the eastern Democratic
Republic of Congo yesterday morning. The details of the attack are
still unknown. However, three of our soldiers have been wounded."

In 2013, several SANDF members were killed in the Central African
Republic during clashes with rebels.

Government defended the deployment of troops to that country.

http://www.google.ca/gwt/x?gl=CA&hl=en-CA&u=http://ewn.co.za/2014/05/01/SA-soldiers-wounded-in-DRC&source=s&q=SA+soldiers+wounded+in+DRC

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[RwandaLibre] "Tanzania is not quarrelling with Rwanda": President Jakaya Kikwete.

 

Stop misleading public on Dar-Kigali relations, media urged


Details Published on Thursday, 01 May 2014 03:29 Written by ASHERY MKAMA


A veteran politician, Dr Chrisant Mzindakaya.

MEDIA in the country have been advised to stop publishing information
misleading the public that the absence of Rwandan President Paul
Kagame during celebrations to mark the 50th anniversary of the Union
between Tanganyika and Zanzibar, meant that bilateral relations
between the two countries were still poor.

A veteran politician, Dr Chrisant Mzindakaya, said that at the
colourful celebrations held last week, President Kagame was
represented by Prime Minister Pierre Habumuremyi, showing that the
relationship between the two countries is good and much appreciated.

"Rwanda was represented by a high-powered delegation, indicating that
there are no political differences between the two countries," Dr
Mzindakaya told the 'Daily News' in an exclusive interview.

Speaking during the 50th anniversary of the Union between Tanganyika
and Zanzibar, President Jakaya Kikwete told the mammoth crowd that
included Heads of State and government from various countries that
Tanzania is not quarrelling with Rwanda and they live together in
brotherly love.

Dr Mzindakaya has denied reports by some sections of the media
claiming that the president was intimidating the public through
showcasing various military equipments.

He explained that showing the fast moving jet fighters, children
gymnastic shows, commandos' displays among others was aimed at showing
the country's success for the past 50 years of the Union, adding those
saying the contrary are bent at reversing the Union gains.

The veteran politician hailed President Kikwete, Zanzibar President,
Dr Ali Mohamed Shein and various government officials who facilitated
the Union celebrations, before urging Tanzanians to focus their minds
on strengthening the existing Union between Tanganyika and Zanzibar
especially through the two-tier government.

http://www.google.ca/gwt/x?gl=CA&hl=en-CA&u=http://www.dailynews.co.tz/index.php/local-news/30920-stop-misleading-public-on-dar-kigali-relations-media-urged&source=s&q=Stop+misleading+public+on+Dar-Kigali+relations,+media+urged

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[RwandaLibre] Hunger in Rwanda and in the U.S. appear quite different...

 

Op-Ed: Think You Know the Face of Hunger? It Looks Like Your Neighbor Too

Hunger in Rwanda and in the U.S. appear quite different on the
surface, but the root causes are strikingly similar.

(Photo: Betta/Getty Images)
May 01, 2014 By Michaela Kupfer


Michaela Kupfer is the Monitoring & Evaluation Fellow with Gardens for
Health International, an organization that partners with families in
Rwanda to provide lasting agricultural solutions to chronic
malnutrition. She has a BA in Anthropology from Washington University
and currently serves as a Global Health Corps fellow.

full bio
We need to reimagine how we think about hunger.

For many people living in the United States, the term evokes the image
of an emaciated African child—flies buzzing around his face, eyes
staring up helplessly. Hunger is something that happens to people over
there, people who have no agency or means to feed their children.

To an extent, this image reflects reality as hunger in sub-Saharan
Africa continues to be a pervasive and stubborn issue. Where I work in
Rwanda, with Gardens for Health International, 44 percent of children
under the age of five are stunted. This means that their physical and
cognitive growth has been irreversibly limited because of chronic
hunger.

But the image of the starving African child is myopic, as it fails to
recognize the millions of Americans living in hunger. Every single
day, one out of every four children in the U.S. goes hungry. Because
of a dearth of healthy food options, this food insecurity contributes
to higher rates of childhood obesity. Seventeen percent of children
between the ages of two and 19 are now overweight.

Hunger in Rwanda and in the U.S. appear quite different on the
surface. But the root causes—lack of knowledge and access to a
nutritious diet—are strikingly similar.

Movies like A Place at the Table have begun the process of painting a
new picture of hunger, one that includes the United States. This
reimagination has the potential to shift national discourse
surrounding the issue—particularly as supporters of the recent SNAP
cuts regularly characterize beneficiaries as lazy and irresponsible.
Their representation excludes devoted mothers like Barbie Izquierdo,
whose struggle to find a well-paying job, work toward college, and
feed her children was featured in A Place at the Table.

Our short-sightedness has a ripple effect. "I always thought food
insecurity and hunger were just things that happened in these poor
African places," says Naomi Musabyimana, a health educator at Gardens
for Health International, where she trains mothers on how they can
improve the health of their children. Her views have changed since
watching A Place at the Table.

Just a few years ago, however, Musabyimana's own children were
suffering from malnutrition in Rwanda, where they live. Like
Izquierdo, Musabyimana at times would find herself crying because her
children were hungry and she had nothing to feed them. At some points,
she lost the hope that she would escape the situation she was living
in.

Then in 2010, Musabyimana was connected to Gardens for Health. Through
the education and support that Musabyimana received, she regained a
sense of hope and was able to lift her children out of hunger. She
became a trainer with Gardens for Health, teaching other mothers what
she had learned. Gardens for Health was founded based on the belief
that growing and eating healthy food can—and must—be a part of the
long-term solution to malnutrition. The core program works in
partnership with health clinics in Rwanda to provide the families of
malnourished children with the knowledge, seeds, and support to impact
long-term health.


The danger of the image of the helpless, emaciated African child is
that we underestimate the role parents must have in responding to
malnutrition. What Musabyimana and Izquierdo have in common is more
than a history of hunger: They share the courage to better the lives
of their children despite tremendous challenges. If mothers and other
caregivers are empowered with the tools to address malnutrition, they
can and will do it.

We need to have education on nutrition and other crucial health
issues. At Gardens for Health, the families we work with are enrolled
in an intensive course of trainings, with topics ranging from how to
appropriately wean a child to gender-based violence and its effect on
a family's nutrition.

But empowerment also requires having the resources to put that
knowledge into practice. That means having access to healthy foods.

In the U.S., many people live in food deserts—areas where access to
fresh produce or low-fat meat products is severely limited. Izquierdo
knows that feeding her children canned pasta every night is not
nutritious, but taking multiple buses to a fully stocked grocery store
is not always feasible.

Here in Rwanda, the challenges to accessing a healthy diet are
different. The most prevalent, most affordable food options are
carbohydrates such as potatoes and maize, which don't provide children
with the nutrients they need to be healthy. That is why Gardens for
Health works with families for a year to provide them with the skills,
inputs, and support to maintain home gardens that enable them to
diversify their diets and be their own source of a balanced,
nutritious diet.

When we fail to equip families with the knowledge and resources to
ensure that their children have healthy food, we disrupt children's
potential to thrive. That is something that no family wants and that
no country can afford. It is time for us to set forth a new vision of
who goes hungry and what role we all have to play in confronting
hunger.

To learn more about Gardens for Health International, visit our website.

To meet Naomi Musabyimana and other members of our Rwandan team in New
York City, attend our event on May 1.

http://www.takepart.com/article/2014/05/01/op-ed-gardens-health

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“Uwigize agatebo ayora ivi”. Ubutegetsi bukugira agatebo ukariyora uko bukeye n’uko bwije.

"Ce dont j’ai le plus peur, c’est des gens qui croient que, du jour au lendemain, on peut prendre une société, lui tordre le cou et en faire une autre."

“The price good men pay for indifference to public affairs is to be ruled by evil men.”

“The hate of men will pass, and dictators die, and the power they took from the people will return to the people. And so long as men die, liberty will never perish.”

“I have loved justice and hated iniquity: therefore I die in exile."

KOMEZA USOME AMAKURU N'IBITEKEREZO BYA VUBA BYAGUCITSE:

RECOMMENCE

RECOMMENCE

1.Kumenya Amakuru n’amateka atabogamye ndetse n’Ibishobora Kukugiraho Ingaruka ni Uburenganzira Bwawe.

2.Kwisanzura mu Gutanga Ibitekerezo, Kurwanya Ubusumbane, Akarengane n’Ibindi Byose Bikubangamiye ni Uburenganzira Bwawe.