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Friday, 15 January 2016

[haguruka.com] Erreur de France 3 sur "des images de massacre au Burundi"

 
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Posted by: Nzinink <nzinink@yahoo.com>
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-Ce dont jai le plus peur, cest des gens qui croient que, du jour  au lendemain, on peut prendre une société, lui tordre le cou et en faire une autre.
-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.
-The price good men pay for indifference to public affairs is to be ruled by evil men.
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[haguruka.com] Audio] Bad News' Chronicles: The Loss Of Press Freedom In Rwanda.

 

[Audio] Bad News' Chronicles: The Loss Of Press Freedom In Rwanda.
http://youtu.be/mx70sIdhuHc


###
"Hate Cannot Drive Out Hate. Only Love Can Do That", Dr. Martin Luther King.
###

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Posted by: Nzinink <nzinink@yahoo.com>
Reply via web post Reply to sender Reply to group Start a New Topic Messages in this topic (1)
___________________________________________________
-Ce dont jai le plus peur, cest des gens qui croient que, du jour  au lendemain, on peut prendre une société, lui tordre le cou et en faire une autre.
-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.
-The price good men pay for indifference to public affairs is to be ruled by evil men.
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=--=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-To post a message: haguruka@yahoogroups.com; .To join: haguruka-subscribe@yahoogroups.com; -To unsubscribe from this group,send an email to:
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Thursday, 14 January 2016

In Rwanda, progress and development scrub away an ethnic identity

In Rwanda, progress and development scrub away an ethnic identity

 

NYAGATARE DISTRICT, RWANDA — The hills that back up against this village in northeastern Rwanda are blanketed by a tight patchwork of farmland, neat slices of green and brown earth heavy with sweet potatoes, beans, and cassava.

For nearly two decades, 87-year-old Theresa Mukanwari has stepped out of her stocky mud-brick hut each morning to look on this idyllic view.

"We can see now that government has brought development there," she says jabbing a finger at the nearby farms. "But before, when I was younger, my people had more food."

Recommended:Think you know Africa? Take our geography quiz.

Dubbed the land of a thousand hills for its lush, undulating landscape, contemporary Rwanda is also a land of a thousand competing superlatives. It is the site of both the modern world's most efficient ethnic genocide and one of its most remarkable post-conflict recoveries – Africa's dark heart and its development darling.

Twenty-one years ago this month, crudely armed militias walked from village to village hacking their neighbors to death. When they were finished, more than 800,000 people were dead, the most civilians to be murdered in any three-month period in modern human history, including the Holocaust.

Today, Rwanda's economy is growing briskly – an average of 8 percent annually – while life expectancy has doubled since the genocide, and the number of people living in poverty has declined steeply. Rwanda is the only country in sub-Saharan Africa on track to complete all of its health-related Millennium Development Goals, the United Nations' global development benchmarks.

In-depth report: Amid growing prosperity, Rwanda's post-genocide generation comes of age 

That transformation has been about scrubbing Rwanda clean of the ethnic identities that once tore it apart. The laws and policies designed to eliminate ethnicity from the public sphere, however, have not benefited people like Ms. Mukanwari, a member of the indigenous ethnic minority, the Twa.

Alternately ignored and exploited over the past two centuries by colonialists, as well as by the two major ethnic groups – the Hutu and Tutsi – the Twa seem to tiptoe along the borders of post-genocide Rwandan society. Officially recognized as neither victims nor perpetrators of the genocide – though they were both – the Twa have been afforded few opportunities to participate in either the country's collective reconciliation or the material gains of its redevelopment – even when they take place only a hillside away. 

Making up a sliver of 1 percent of the total population (the exact figure is murky, since the country no longer tabulates ethnicity in its census), they have been systematically and unceremoniously expelled from the thick forests where they once lived as nomadic hunter-gatherers. Most eke out a meager living as day laborers or makers of simple clay pottery.

But the Twa play an outsize role in demonstrating the potential complications of a postethnic Rwanda – their struggle for recognition an abrupt reminder of the identities that the country chose to submerge in order to outpace its murky past.

'Almost no one seems to notice' the Twa

"There is this idea in Rwanda that you can create a country where Hutu and Tutsi are unified and the ethnic hatred of the past is forgotten," says Bennett Collins, a researcher on the rights of indigenous peoples at the University of St Andrews who works with Twa communities in the Great Lakes region of Africa. "But here's the problem: There's another group of people in Rwanda – the Twa – and almost no one seems to notice they're there."

Not so long ago, the Twa courted that invisibility. Before the 19th century, they lived as nomads in the region's heavy forests, drawing on encyclopedic knowledge of the land to hunt elephants and forage for edible plants. But as farms and cattle grazing land slowly gnawed into their territory, many Twa reluctantly joined the society of the conquerers.

"Because they are the aboriginal people, the Twa had a pivotal role in the mythology of the land, and were always seen as having great power over it," says Jerome Lewis, an anthropologist at University College London who has written extensively on the Twa. "If you wanted your crops to grow, you'd chop a finger off a Twa person and plant it in your field. And every royal lineage depended on having a Twa presence in its courts to bless the earth."

In 1904 an American named Samuel Phillips Verner duped a small group of Twa and other Pygmies – a blanket term for indigenous central African forest peoples – into accompanying him to the St. Louis World's Fair, where they were put on display and visited daily by throngs of tourists.

Two years later, one of the men, a Congolese named Ota Benga, was briefly exhibited in the monkey house at the Bronx Zoo in New York behind a plaque detailing his height (4 ft., 11 in.), weight (103 pounds), and age (23).

He "has a great influence with the beasts," squawked one local newspaper, "even with the larger kind, including the orang-outang [sic] with whom he plays as though one of them, rolling around the floor of the cages in wild wrestling matches and chattering to them in his own guttural tongue, which they seem to understand."

This brand of racist Western pseudoscience was nothing unique across colonial Africa in the early 20th century. But its role in Rwanda was especially insidious.

Here, colonial authorities attempted to read the complicated ethnic hierarchies they observed through the lens of Western race categories. Armed with scales, rulers, and calipers, they dutifully measured the skull radius, nose length, and bodily proportions of Rwandans and concluded that the minority Tutsis, with their lean, sharp "European" features, were the country's natural rulers. Next came the more "bestial" Hutus, and finally, most primitive of all, the Twa.

By the 1930s, Belgian authorities had successfully flattened centuries of complex ethnic politics into simple labels, gifting every Rwandan with a mandatory ID book that billed him or her as either Hutu (85 percent), Tutsi (14 percent), or Twa (1 percent), and lining up preferential access to schools, jobs, and other resources for the privileged Tutsi minority.

As once-fluid ethnic hierarchies calcified, their meanings in people's lives became more absolute. Until they became worth killing for.

Caught up in the violence

Modern Rwandan history folds neatly in half – before 1994 and after. In the center, in the dark groove, stands what is perhaps the modern world's best-orchestrated mass killing.

Between April and July 1994, close to 1 million people – Tutsis, moderate Hutus, and Twa – were slaughtered by extremist Hutu militias known as theinterahamwe.

"The genocide is officially called a Tutsi genocide, but I'm confident that the Twa suffered inordinately in the killings compared to any other group of Rwandans," says Mr. Lewis, the anthropologist. "They had no allies. They were hit from every side."

The stories Twa tell of the genocide depend largely on where you find them. Many who lived alongside Tutsis were murdered alongside Tutsis. In fact, more than a third of all Twa living in Rwanda died in the killings, according to Lewis's research, which involved interviews with hundreds of Twa survivors. Official statistics do not exist.

Some Twa also took up arms for the interahamwe – willingly or under coercion. And thousands more simply fled the country alongside Hutus, landing in the militia-controlled refugee camps huddled along the border between Rwanda and eastern Congo.

"Others were running, so we ran, too," says Apollo Saasita, mirroring a sentiment expressed by many Twa who survived the genocide. The violence was not about them, they said, but they couldn't avoid its reach. Along with those in his village in western Rwanda, Mr. Saasita fled across the border into Congo, where he stayed for nearly three years.

In-depth report: Rwanda, the world's swiftest genocide

But dispossession was nothing new to Saasita and his family. Just a decade earlier, Saasita, who grew up among a nomadic band of Twa in the foothills of the jagged Virunga volcanoes, had been evicted from his home to make way for conservation projects in the area. Today, those roaming the land he grew up on are mostly khaki-clad tourists in search of the region's famed mountain gorillas.

Saasita, meanwhile, stays with three generations of his family in a sour-smelling three-room mud hut on the park's fringes. He spends his days waiting for nearby farmers to call for day laborers or visiting tourists for whom villagers perform improvised dances for tips.

"It would be better if we had land," he says.

Not all Twa, however, feel completely left behind by genocide recovery. In the years that followed, Rwanda's government faced the nearly impossible task of transforming the paper-thin category of "Rwandan" into an identity that could mean something to both those who committed genocide and their victims.

They built "reeducation" camps to teach returnees about the new Rwanda and banned the ethnic labels "Hutu" and "Tutsi." A slate of new laws made "ethnic divisionism" and "genocide ideology" serious crimes, while local courts, called gacacas, were established to bring justice to communities torn apart by murder.

For at least some younger Twa, that meant a new start in which they might outrun the overt discrimination that had confined previous generations to the fringes of Rwandan society.

In 2014 Richard Ntakirutimana became the first person from his village to graduate from university on a government scholarship earmarked for Rwandans from "historically marginalized" backgrounds. He now uses his law degree to manage a nonprofit group in Kigali, the capital and largest city in Rwanda, that teaches Twa communities farming skills and money management.

"The way it is in Rwanda now means that those of us who advocate for the Twa are advocating for a group that, officially, does not exist," he says.

But Lewis says the silence around ethnicity in Rwanda today has not so much eliminated ethnic tension as driven it underground. Some activists working with Twa communities would not speak on the record for fear of government reprisal.

More generally, the Rwandan government's wide application of "ethnic divisionism" and "genocide ideology" laws against its detractors has raised international alarms that the laws have become more a tool of repression than development.

"Space for criticism of the country's human rights record by civil society was almost nonexistent," reported Amnesty International in its 2014 report on Rwanda. "The human rights community remained weakened, with individuals taking a pro-government position in their work or employing self-censorship to avoid harassment by the authorities."

And for the vast majority of the Twa, the idea of being absorbed into a wider Rwandan society remains little more than a pipe dream. 

Like many Twa, Maria Theresa Mukaburasiyo has spent her life working as a potter, expertly sculpting cooking pots from the gray clay she gathers from a swamp two hours from her village south of Kigali.

It's an occupation, she says, that's increasingly being written out of history – both by cheap metal cookware and government regulations that make it difficult to gather clay from the swamplands.

But, speaking in the sideways manner many here use to discuss ethnicity, Ms. Mukaburasiyo says she would never be able to shed the ethnic identity that comes with making pots, even when there is no one left to make them for.

"Some here [in Rwanda] are herders," she says, referring to the historical occupation of the Tutsi. "Some are farmers" – like the Hutu – "and some like us make pots.

"We will be potters even if we stop making pots – do you understand?" she says. "That is what we are. We will always be."

The reporting of this story was made possible by a fellowship from the International Women's Media Foundation (IWMF).

 

http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Africa/2015/0414/In-Rwanda-progress-and-development-scrub-away-an-ethnic-identity

Offres d’emploi » Stage Assistant(e) partenariats « Campagne ODD »

Offres d’emploi » Stage Assistant(e) partenariats « Campagne ODD »

Link to EMPLOI ONG

Offres d’emploi » Stage Assistant(e) partenariats « Campagne ODD »

Posted: 13 Jan 2016 12:32 PM PST

Description Organisme recruteur Crée en 1976, le GERES – Groupe Energies Renouvelables, Environnement et Solidarités – est une association à but non lucratif, dont les actions visent à améliorer les conditions de vie des populations les plus pauvres par la mise en œuvre de projets qui réduisent la précarité énergétique, préservent l'environnement et limitent les […]

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Offres d’emploi » Chargé(e) de mission Animation et appui à la vie associative et développement des projets

Posted: 13 Jan 2016 12:25 PM PST

Description CONTEXTE Peuples Solidaires Bagnols est une association loi 1901, créée en 1985. Elle a rejoint la Fédération Peuples Solidaires en 1992 et est classée Centre Ritimo depuis 2010. En France, l'association mène des campagnes de sensibilisation et développe des actions d'éducation au développement et à la citoyenneté internationale (animations scolaires, expositions, rencontres…). Chaque année […]

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Offres d’emploi » Coordinateur d’équipes et de projets Urgence Réfugiés (h/f) à PARIS en CDD

Posted: 13 Jan 2016 12:18 PM PST

Description Notre association, créée en 1994, a participé activement à la reconnaissance et à la mise en place du service civique en France. Notre ambition est de proposer à des jeunes de 16 à 25 ans, de toutes origines sociales et culturelles et de tous niveaux d'études, la possibilité de s'engager à temps plein, et […]

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Offres d’emploi » Chargé(e) animation d’un réseau de bénévoles

Posted: 13 Jan 2016 12:11 PM PST

Description de l'organisme Fondée en 1991, Enfants d'Asie est une ONG reconnue d'utilité publique. Elle a pour but d'aider les enfants défavorisés à construire leur avenir. Son action est strictement humanitaire, apolitique et non confessionnelle. Enfants d'Asie intervient dans 4 pays d'Asie du Sud-Est : Cambodge, Laos, Vietnam et Philippines. Elle accompagne 10.000 enfants dont […]

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Offres d’emploi » Chef de Base Matam

Posted: 13 Jan 2016 12:08 PM PST

Description ACF est une organisation humanitaire internationale, non-gouvernementale, privée, non-politique, non-confessionnelle et à but non lucratif. ACF a été fondée en 1979 pour intervenir dans le monde entier. Sa mission est de lutter contre la faim, la misère et contre les situations dangereuses menaçant les hommes, les femmes et les enfants. Actuellement, 500 collaborateurs et […]

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Offres d’emploi » Responsable de programme Education

Posted: 13 Jan 2016 11:51 AM PST

Description CONTEXTE L'association ATIA intervient en Inde, à Madagascar et aux Philippines pour améliorer l'accès des familles vulnérables à l'emploi, à la formation professionnelle, à la santé, à l'éducation et aux services sociaux existants. Dans le domaine de l'Education, ATIA collabore avec les associations locales KOZAMA et KOLOAINA à Antananarivo, et coréalise avec elles les […]

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[haguruka.com] Re: Le Burundi en proie à des violences extrêmes.

 

Ces images ne sont pas du Burundi. Ce ne sont que des fabrications à caractère propagandistes qui ne visent que la conquête du pouvoir en prenant pour béquilles la ligue des jeunes du parti présidentiel . Ces accusations sont sans aucun fondement.

1. Un certain Bah Ebou ( https://www.facebook.com/baba.ja.7?ref=ts&fref=ts ) a été le premier à les poster sur sa page facebook en décembre 2015.

2.Nous avons pu nous procurer de ces images sans voix d'un commentateur. La langue que les exécutants utilisaient n'est sûrement pas le kirundi. C'est du Haussa, langue utilisée en Afrique de l'Ouest. 

3.La topographie du terrain – dans ces images en circulation- n'est pas de Karuzi encore moins dans les localités du siège provincial du cndd-fdd à Karuzi. Il faut être aveugle et naïf pour croire en cette machination.
http://burundi-24.com/burundi/la-ligue-des-jeunes-du-cndd-fdd-d%C3%A9ment-les-fausses-accusations-du-belge-bernard-maingain


###
"Hate Cannot Drive Out Hate. Only Love Can Do That", Dr. Martin Luther King.
###

On Jan 14, 2016, at 5:23 AM, agnesmurebwayire@yahoo.fr [Democracy_Human_Rights] <Democracy_Human_Rights@yahoogroupes.fr> wrote:

 

Mon Dieu! J'a peur que le genocide que certains appellent de tous leurs vœux aura finalement lieu.



francetvinfo.be


Ces images très dures, provenant de Me Maingain, unavocat belge qui défend l'opposition au président, témoignent des exactions perpétrées dans ce pays.



L'horreur absolue : trois jeunes opposants assassinés, égorgés et émasculés par des bourreaux enthousiastes. Des scènes filmées lundi 11 janvier à Karuzi, au nord-est de la capitale Bujumbura, sur un terrain appartenant au parti du président burundais. Ces images ont été fournies par des informateurs au coeur du régime. 



"Ce sont en fait des gens à l'intérieur de l'appareil militaire et policier qui sont parvenus à entrer en possession de ce document et qui l'ont fait parvenir à un membre de leur famille en Europe et c'est une personne que je connais de longue date", explique au micro de France 3 l'avocat belge Bernard Maingain.


L'ONU va-t-elle réagir ?


Celui-ci, spécialiste du Burundi, a immédiatement envoyé ce document aux Nations unies pour vérifier leur authenticité. Selon sa source, ce sont des instructeurs congolais venus former des milices burundaises. Objectif : en faire des tueurs professionnels. "Chaque jour dans tout le pays, on enlève des jeunes, on les torture, on les tue, on les mutile. Cela est fait par des miliciens ou la garde présidentielle", d'après l'historien burundais David Gakunzi. C'est contre le 3e mandat du président Nkurunziza que la contestation a commencé il y dix mois. En vain. Des centaines d'opposants ont été retrouvés morts depuis sa réélection en juillet. Le régime a toujours nié son implication. L'ONU craint un génocide au Burundi.


http://www.francetvinfo.fr/monde/afrique/burundi/le-burundi-en-proie-a-des-violences-extremes_1268499.html



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Posted by: Nzinink <nzinink@yahoo.com>
Reply via web post Reply to sender Reply to group Start a New Topic Messages in this topic (1)
___________________________________________________
-Ce dont jai le plus peur, cest des gens qui croient que, du jour  au lendemain, on peut prendre une société, lui tordre le cou et en faire une autre.
-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.
-The price good men pay for indifference to public affairs is to be ruled by evil men.
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[haguruka.com] Rwanda : Sale of Banque Populaire du Rwanda (BPR) to Atlas Mara Ltd and merger with BRD Commercial Bank finalized.

 


Atlas Mara's equity stake in BPR and BRD commercial to 'boost financial inclusion'

photo

John F. Vitalo, Atlas Mara chief executive (L), chats with Minister Gatete in Kigali yesterday. (Timothy Kisambira)

The sale of Banque Populaire du Rwanda (BPR) equity stake to Atlas Mara Ltd and merger with BRD Commercial will boost financial inclusion and enhance stability in the banking sector, the Minister for Finance and Economic Planning, Claver Gatete, has said.

Atlas Mara has invested more than $20.4 million (about Rwf15.3 billion) in BPR and merged it with BRD Commercial Bank Ltd, part of Development Bank of Rwanda (BRD), acquired by sub-Saharan financial services, Mara Group in 2014.

1452197903gatete
Anand (L), with Minister Gatete at the event in Kigali yesterday.  Timothy Kisambira. 

The integration was officially launched yesterday in Kigali.

According to minister Gatete, this makes BPR the second largest financial service bank in the country, and is expected to add value to the country's financial sector.

Speaking at the official launch of the integration exercise in Kigali, yesterday, Gatete urged financial market players to improve service delivery and invest more resources to help boost financial inclusion and drive the country towards a cashless based economy.

1452197726rwa1
Ben Christiaanse( L) chats with John Rwangombwa at the event in Kigali yesterday.

John Rwangombwa, the Governor of the National Bank of Rwanda (BNR), said the merger brings with it new innovative technologies critical for the stability of the financial sector.

"The country's financial sector is already doing well with growth rate of more than 14 per cent and 42 per cent in terms of profitability; therefore, we are confident that this merger will only improve the numbers," Rwangombwa re-assured.

John Vitalo, the chief executive officer, Atlas Mara, said the merger is in line with the Group's vision of building Africa and specifically, Rwanda's financial sector to help fast track economic development.

1452197775rw2
Guests chat after a group photo at the event in Kigali yesterday.

"The overall objective is to support Rwanda's ieffort to become a hub for financial services in East Africa," Vitalo noted.

Atlas Mara is expected to invest some $21 million (about Rwf15 billion) into the bank and hold a majority stake in the financial institution of about 62 per cent.

Vitalo added that the Group is confident the deal makes it possible for customers to greatly benefit from enhanced capital base, enlarge distribution network and expanded capabilities of the institution.

1452197802rw3
Guests pose for the camera at the event in Kigali yesterday. (All photos by Timothy Kisambira)

New CEO appointed

Meanwhile, Sanjeev Anand, the former I$M Bank boss, was appointed the CEO of the institution.

He replaces Ephraim Turahirwa, who has been BPR's chief executive officer for the past three years.

About Atlas Mara

The banking group has so far invested more than $700 million in more than seven countries in Africa.

The bank was listed on the main market of the London Stock Exchange in December 2013.

It also seeks to create a sub- Saharan Africa premier financial services institution through a combination of its experience and access to capital, liquidity and funding, it says.

On October 2015, Atlas Mara acquired 100 per cent of the voting shares of BRD's commercial operations forming what is known today as BRD Commercial Bank.

editorial@newtimes.co.rw


###
"Hate Cannot Drive Out Hate. Only Love Can Do That", Dr. Martin Luther King.
###

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Posted by: Nzinink <nzinink@yahoo.com>
Reply via web post Reply to sender Reply to group Start a New Topic Messages in this topic (1)
___________________________________________________
-Ce dont jai le plus peur, cest des gens qui croient que, du jour  au lendemain, on peut prendre une société, lui tordre le cou et en faire une autre.
-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.
-The price good men pay for indifference to public affairs is to be ruled by evil men.
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[haguruka.com] Kagame to speak at CERAWeek Energy Conference in Houston, TX, U.S.A.

 


Speakers • CERAWeek 2016 Energy Conference

###
"Hate Cannot Drive Out Hate. Only Love Can Do That", Dr. Martin Luther King.
###

__._,_.___

Posted by: Nzinink <nzinink@yahoo.com>
Reply via web post Reply to sender Reply to group Start a New Topic Messages in this topic (1)
___________________________________________________
-Ce dont jai le plus peur, cest des gens qui croient que, du jour  au lendemain, on peut prendre une société, lui tordre le cou et en faire une autre.
-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.
-The price good men pay for indifference to public affairs is to be ruled by evil men.
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=--=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
-To post a message: haguruka@yahoogroups.com; .To join: haguruka-subscribe@yahoogroups.com; -To unsubscribe from this group,send an email to:
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https://www.facebook.com/haguruka

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http://www.musabe.com/
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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.