Archive

Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Gicumbi rally – record turnout for Kagame

August 3, 2010 Leave a comment

THE RPF Inkotanyi yesterday stepped up its political drive in the final week of the presidential campaigns with a massive rally in the northern province of Gicumbi district.

Gicumbi is quite historical to the RPF, having established its tactical base there at the start of and during the liberation struggle, in the early 1990s.

The rally, held at Kabeza in Nyamiyaga sector of Gicumbi district, is so far the party’s biggest audience since the campaigns started two weeks ago. Organizers estimated it at over 150,000 people. Elections are due next week (Monday).

Paul Kagame, the party candidate, told the mammoth gathering that he appreciated the role residents played during the struggle and for voting him in the last elections of 2003.

He said the forthcoming elections are yet another struggle, only this time for democracy and development for Rwanda. He urged them to vote for him unreservedly.

The incumbent President said voting for the RPF would be a win for democracy and development for the country.

“If you chose the RPF and its candidate for another seven years, you will have given this country hope for a brighter future with many opportunities,” he said to wild applause and cheering.

Unlike the previous two weeks, where he has addressed between two to three rallies in a day, Kagame addressed only one rally.

“We will work together to multiply what we have achieved so far several times. We have achieved so much but we need to accomplish much more. The best of times lie ahead,” the candidate explained.

He enumerated his party’s major area of focus for his next term as agriculture, using modern tools and methods of farming; justice and fighting prejudice, unity of all citizens, development of infrastructure, education, promoting good living standards, tourism and environmental protection.

Addressing previous rallies, Kagame has specifically promised to extend electricity to all households, increase free basic education from the current nine to 12 years as well as to multiply current achievements by sevenfold.

Kagame said he was pleased with the turn-up and asked them to translate it into action on election day. He repeated an earlier assertion that the RPF has never and would never abandon Rwandans.

He mocked critics who he accused of writing to tarnish his image and that of the country in the international media, saying the RPF support would disprove them.

“When people chose what they want freely, when they chose what they want and the leaders they want, that is (the definition) of democracy,” he said

“We need to speak with one voice. Whoever is not comfortable with that (democratic) arrangement can go and hung,” he added, to the wild cheering of the crowds.

Earlier, Kagame arrived to animated dances by various supporter groups, who called him intore izirusha intambwe (a hero above the rest). One of the supporters said elections should come earlier “so we sort out that argument for good.”

The RPF campaign has largely been shaped up by economic benefits and services to the electorate, such as education, Girinka (one cow per household) and ubudehe (a community program to empower locals out of poverty).

Various residents have given testimonies of how their lives have changed since the RPF came to power, saying they had lost hope for life.

Categories: Uncategorized

Over 200,000 attend RPF Gicumbi rally in Rwanda

August 2, 2010 Leave a comment

over 200,000 at Gicumbi

The RPF campaign caused another major surprise when over 200,000 people attended the latest rally in Gicumbi (Byumba) district. The site of the rally was Kabeza in Nyamiyaga sector, it is a natural amphitheatre situated between two hills and this allowed the unprecedented numbers to fill the mega-bowl shaped terrain. The area used to be a stronghold of the previous government so it underlines the political transformation that has taken place under the RPF in the last 16 years. Most in the crowd were adorned in RPF T-shirts and waited patiently for the RPF candidate to emerge.

Paul Kagame asked the people of Gicumbi to vote for the RPF in order to get a bright future and more development. “This are responded to liberation, voted for the RPF in large numbers last time, and I have so much hope and trust in you.” He was referring to the time in the war of liberation from 1990-1994, the RPF liberated this area in 1992 and held on to it throughout the war, it became a training base for the RPF and safe haven for Rwandans during the war. It was for that reason that he thanked the locals for their long support.


The size of the crowd was staggering and defied expectations, it was estimated to be between 150,000 but 200,000 and the cauldron-like setting really intensified the atmosphere. The rally had its usual fanfare and resembled a music concert as popular artist performed, speeches and jokes from comedians. The crowd chanted along to various party anthems and danced the local dance, pounding the ground with shattering stomps typical on the Bakiga dances of Northern Rwanda. The rally was surely the biggest of the campaign and surpassed the previous record of 130,000 set in Musanze, also in the populous North.

Categories: Uncategorized

Campaign moves to Gicumbi

August 2, 2010 Leave a comment

RPF candidate Paul Kagame takes his campaign to Gicumbi district in Northern Rwanda in what used to be known as Byumba. The verdant hills are some of the most beautiful scenes in Rwanda, the district is also home to the Murindi tea plantation, which was an early stronghold of the RPF during the war of liberation. Gicumbi district has benefitted greatly from government policies such as the Girinka scheme to provide each family with a cow. It has also been an area that pioneers new agricultural concepts such terracing, mixed-farming and diversification of crops.

Gicumbi district is divided into 21 sectors: Bukure, Bwisige, Byumba, Cyumba, Giti, Kaniga, Manyagiro, Miyove, Kageyo, Mukarange, Muko, Mutete, Nyamiyaga, Nyankenke II, Rubaya, Rukomo, Rushaki, Rutare, Ruvune, Rwamiko and Shangasha. It is heavily populated so it has more sectors than most districts, which have an average of 10-12 sectors. Whereas Kagame have been visiting on average 2 districts a day, he has set aside a special day for Byumba maybe because of its population and significance in the history of Rwanda. The campaign has seen crowds exceeding 100,000 on several occasions and today should be no exception. This is the final week of an intensive 3-week campaign that has criss-crossed the country.

Categories: Uncategorized

5 million register to vote in Rwanda

August 2, 2010 Leave a comment

About 5 million Rwandans — half of the country’s population — have been registered for the forthcoming presidential elections according the National Electoral Commission (NEC).

“The number of Rwandans ready to cast their votes in the forthcoming 2010 presidential elections has hiked compared to the previous figures for the parliamentary polls,” said Charles Munyaneza the executive secretary of Rwanda’s electoral body.

Rwanda goes to the polls on August 9, with President Paul Kagame widely expected to retain his seat.

According to Mr Munyaneza, the campaigning period has been smooth with no significant occurrences registered in the last week.

“Apart from posting campaign posters in undesignated areas such as electric poles and trees, generally there are no big issues because these are just minor. Candidates’ posters, are only supposed to be posted on public buildings,” he said.
Prof Chrisologue Karangwa the chief executive at NEC said that there is no deficit in the elections budget. He said that 83 percent of the budget for the elections has been made available.

Confident

Data availed by NEC indicated that already some Rwanda Francs 7.4 billion (about $13.4 million) has been received of the Rwf 8 billion budget.

”We are confident that budgetary issues will not constitute a challenge, since the remaining sum will be transferred by various national and international organisations. The budget is quite modest since material and equipment used in the 2008 parliamentary elections can still be re-used,” Mr Karangwa said.
“This time round we have learnt a lesson and we expect to use more than 600 vehicles. Due to the the fleet policy of government on vehicles there are no vehicles to use. So the only option is to hire from private companies,” added Mr Munyaenza.

Officials at the NEC also told reporters this week that over 1,000 local and foreign observers will monitor the electoral process for the presidential elections scheduled for August 9.
Close to 300 international observers have already confirmed but a larger number is expected as the polling day draws closer.
Mr Munyaneza said that the commission communicated with a number of organisations to take part in the elections and among them the Comesa secretariat and foreign missions in the country have already shown interest.
This week a team of Commonwealth Observers Group (COG) is expected to arrive in the country. The group according to officials includes 13 prominent personalities headed by former Tanzania Prime Minister, Dr Salim Ahmed Salim, who was constituted by the Commonwealth Secretary-General, Kamalesh Sharma, following an invitation from NEC.

Key pillar

A Commonwealth press statement said that the group which will be in the country for at least two weeks, would also include Sabihuddin Ahmed a former Bangladesh Permanent Secretary, Art Wright, former Canadian Diplomat and ex Ghanaian Diplomat, Brig. Gen. (Rtd) Francis Agyemfra, among others.

”Their mandate is to observe the preparations for the elections, the polling and the overall electoral environment. They will also assess the conduct of the process and make recommendations for the future strengthening of the electoral framework in Rwanda,” Kamalesh Sharma said in the statement.

”The group is tasked to act impartially and independently, and to conduct itself according to the standards expressed in the International Declaration of Principles for Election Observation, to which the Commonwealth is a signatory,” he said.

“Rwanda is the newest member of the Commonwealth and we are very pleased to observe these important elections. Democracy is a key pillar of the Commonwealth, and the credible conduct of a country’s election is an integral and vital element of the democratic process,” he added.

Categories: Uncategorized

Nyamagabe and Huye welcome Kagame

RPF candidate Paul Kagame took his campaign to the second city, Huye, as well as the nearby town of Nyamagabe formerly known as Gikongoro today. The population of Nyamagabe swelled over tenfold from under 10,000 to nearly 100,000 just for the rally. There was the usual fanfare with singing and dancing, a full concert by popular artists followed by the appearance of the candidate Paul Kagame. Many endured the scorching sun from early in the morning for a chance to catch a glimpse of the president. His campaign in the southern province has taken him to several districts and towns in the second week of campaigning.

In his address to the eagerly awaiting crowd, Kagame called for the people of Nyamagabe to join him in continuing his development agenda for the next 7 years. He promised more roads, more schools, and health programmes and reiterated that he would multiply the achievements seven fold.

“The RPF is the only organisation that can deliver the aspirations of ordinary Rwandans, let us continue together on this road to development.” Kagame said.

He said that choosing the RPF and its candidate is a vote for hope and better things to come, he said that the people of Nyamagabe have come a long way but better times lie ahead. He addressed some 85,000 to 100,000 people dressed in RPF colours.

“Let us cultivate our crops, fill our houses with food and sell more.” He told an ecstatic crowd.

A local resident testified that locals owned 5% of the local tea estate in Kitaabi, and the local community feels a sense of ownership towards the plantation. Other locals said that life is now a lot easier and hoped for more in the future. Anybody looking around would have seen all the signs of modern development all around them, telecom masts and towers adorned most hills, shops were well-branded and filled to the brim. The Nyamagabe area has also become a hub for the agricultural sector due to its geographic location and increased production. The Girinka scheme to provide local families with cows was started here two years ago and many cows are to be seen.
The Campaign moves on to Huye and Nyanza later today with big crowds expected.

Categories: Uncategorized

Victoire Ingabire Umuhoza: The new face of terror

In the media there is always a tendency to take things at face value, how things look is often concluded to be the true state of affairs. The story of Victoire Ingabire Umuhoza is one such case, she returned in January after 17 years away in Belgium and Netherlands. She was apparently the head accountant for an international auditing firm and responsible for 25 branches but there is no evidence of this. Little is known of her private life except that she is married with three children, her husband stays out of the public limelight.

She applied for a Rwandan passport and was given one as she was entitled to one, all it takes is evidence of a Rwandan grandparent to qualify for a Rwandan passport. She had stated her intention to run in the 2010 election, her arrival was hastily organised to qualify for the residency requirement of 8 months in order to run for the presidency. Her team was also quickly assembled, her deputy was a certain Joseph Ntawugundi, who also acted as her chief of staff and ideological advisor. Her first public appearance at the Genocide memorial at Gisozi caused shockwaves.

In her statement, she said that she acknowledged that a genocide had been committed against the Tutsi population of Rwanda but also said that war-crimes had been committed against the majority Hutu population. This was the first blunder in a long list of many, it made Tutsi survivors nervous that she was flirting with extremism and also made the general population nervous that she was digging up old wounds. There has never been a denial that some elements in the RPF committed atrocities, those who did so were executed. The chaotic madness of 1994 meant that some RPF soldiers saw their whole families hacked to death and took revenge, only to be executed themselves.

However, her statement at Gisozi soon a sign of things to come, her loyal stalwart Joseph Ntawugundi was accused of committing crimes during the genocide. The initial reaction was that these crimes were false and politically motivated. Ingabire even managed to convince several diplomats, journalists and human right activists to call for his release. It soon emerged that Ntawugundi had changed his name and assumed an alias but he was indeed guilty of killing 8 people, including some children in his care while he was a head teacher at a school in Southern Rwanda. It also emerged that Ingabire’s mother had also been convicted of killing a pregnant woman during the genocide.

Soon the wheels began to come off the Ingabire bandwagon, but the Western media refused to acknowledge any wrongdoing on the part of Ingabire. She must have known that Ntawugundi had committed the crimes, maybe she thought it wouldn’t come to light or maybe she was duped by her backers. The Ntawugundi affair was only the start, she was charged with Genocide denial and endangering state security but more serious charges are soon to follow. At first it appeared that she was a “clean skin” and that she had no crimes in her past but new facts have come to light that cast doubt on this.

Firstly, a UN Group of Expert’s final report on Congo (9th November 2009), concluded that “FDLR military leaders are also in telephone contact with Diaspora members of the Forces Democratiques Unifees (FDU). The Group shows below that Victoire Ingabire, the president of FDU, who is based in the Netherlands, has attended “Inter-Rwandan Dialogue” meetings with pro-FDLR participants”

Secondly, witnesses, emails, and Western Union receipts prove that she has directed and funded the creation of an armed wing of her political party, FDU Inkingi by persuading top FDLR commanders to break away from the organization…arguing it isn’t violent enough. The purpose of Ingabire’s armed group is to wage guerilla war against Rwanda.

With the assistance of a number of nations, Rwanda has obtained persuasive evidence – wire transfers, phone logs, emails and co-conspirator confessions – of Ingabire’s contacts and coordination with FDLR leaders and her attempts to create a violent splinter faction. She sent thousands of dollars to Congo to pay for arms and ammunition

On 29 April 2010, former FDLR Colonel Tharcisse Nditurende pleaded guilty to forming a guerrilla rebel group to launch offensives against the country of Rwanda. Nditurende says he was recruited by Victoire Ingabire during meetings in Kinshasa and Congo-Brazzaville to lead a military guerrilla wing of her political party – FDU-Inkingi.

On 6 May 2010 former FDLR Commander Jean Marie Karuta pleaded guilty to working with Victoire Ingabire’s FDU party (alongside Colonel Nditurende) to plan military offensives to cause state insecurity within Rwanda.

Ingabire solicited money donations for military supplies from individuals across Europe and Africa. This money was sent to her the military wing of the FDU-Inkingi through Western Union branches in Belgium, Holland, Switzerland and Tanzania. The Government of Rwanda has obtained the Western Union receipts with photo identification.

This evidence shows that Ingabire, far from being a peaceful democrat, is willing to wage a military struggle against a democratically elected government where innocent civilians will be killed. Ingabire has been called “The female Mandela” by her supporters, but nothing could be further from the truth. She even stated the “the Hutu populace shall carry out revenge on the Tutsi unless I am elected.” A clear threat to continue Genocidal slaughter, so far from being a uniting figure, she seeks to divide Rwandans along ethnic lines as a shortcut to being elected.

Categories: Uncategorized

Kagame – Rebel reformer Time magazine article

In the run-up to the presidential election on Aug. 9 in the tiny East African nation of Rwanda, the government of Paul Kagame has arrested several opposition members, expelled a representative of Human Rights Watch (HRW), shut two newspapers and suspended the BBC’s Rwandan service. On May 28, police detained Peter Erlinder, 62, an attorney from Minnesota representing an opposition leader, and held him for more than two weeks. Other regime challengers have been less fortunate. A former army officer living in exile in Johannesburg was shot and wounded on
June 19; in Rwanda, a journalist was shot dead on June 24, and an opposition leader was beheaded on July 14.

Taken together, these events might suggest that Rwanda is run by a type of government all too familiar in Africa — and many of Kagame’s critics have made the inevitable comparison of him to the continent’s notorious Big Men. “We have no problems acknowledging [Kagame] has done positive things,” says Kenneth Roth, head of HRW. “But we question whether the world should be closing its eyes to dictatorship.”

But Rwanda, where the ethnic-Hutu majority macheted 800,000 members of the Tutsi minority and their Hutu “collaborators” over 100 days in 1994, is not an easy place to explain. Kagame’s record on human rights is more nuanced than critics admit. He has abolished the death penalty, released thousands of so-called génocidaires from jail to participate in a reconciliation process, decentralized government, given the opposition seats in his Cabinet and taken a stand against African homophobia — hardly the actions of a tyrant.

Kagame’s accomplishments don’t end there. Since his rebel forces ended the genocide, Kagame has presided over Rwanda’s stunning rebirth. Its economy has grown an average of 6.4% since 2001; last year the World Bank named Rwanda its most improved country; roads, schools, running water and phones are widespread; disease is down; literacy and life expectancy are up; even the mountain gorillas are thriving. That record makes Kagame, 52, the star of a new Africa recast as a place of growth and opportunity, a status U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon cemented on June 24 when he named Kagame co-chair of a new panel on ending world poverty.

How to reconcile that impressive record with the unsavory events ahead of the vote? Kagame denies any involvement in the attacks and attributes HRW’s expulsion to a visa violation. To understand the closure of newspapers and arrests of critics, you have to remember that memories of the genocide will never fade — and neither will fears of a relapse. The arrests and closures, Kagame says, were meant to stop the stoking of more Hutu-Tutsi violence. The President is a Tutsi. There’s no denying that many opposition figures representing Hutus have contact with the militias responsible for the 1994 atrocities and sometimes make inflammatory statements.

Erlinder’s client, Victoire Ingabire, told TIME recently that if the Hutus win power again in Rwanda, “I am sure they will revenge themselves against the Tutsis.” One of the closed newspapers, Umuseso, also predicted blood. Quoting John F. Kennedy, it wrote, “Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable.” In most places, the quotation would be unexceptionable; in Rwanda, it can be read as an exhortation to bring out the machetes again.

As Kagame sees it, his government’s seemingly draconian measures are designed to save Rwanda from its worst demons. And if that means some Western critics question his human-rights record, so be it. There’s no bigger rights violation than genocide, after all, and the results his administration has delivered give him the authority to challenge Western notions of how his country — and Africa — should be governed. “If I am solving my people’s problems,” Kagame tells TIME, “it doesn’t matter how much you abuse me.” His people, for the most part, aren’t complaining: Kagame is expected to easily win the election, adding seven years to the 16 he’s been in charge.

Kagame was born in Ruhango village in central Rwanda in 1957 but was raised in a refugee camp in southern Uganda after his family fled an outbreak of Hutu-on-Tutsi violence in 1959. He grew up serious and refugee-skinny, a physique that to this day gives him an air of austerity. By 21, he was a rebel. He helped Yoweri Museveni seize power in Uganda in 1986. Then he co-founded the Rwandan Patriotic Front, which invaded Rwanda in 1990. On April 6, 1994, unknown attackers shot down a plane carrying the Presidents of Rwanda and Burundi, both Hutus, over Kigali, the Rwandan capital, triggering the genocide. Kagame’s forces pushed south and by July held most of the country. What he saw in those 100 days, says Kagame, still defies description. “Fathers were killing their own children because [they] resembled their wife, who was a Tutsi. How do you explain that?”

A better future, Kagame decided, meant a clean break from the past. For Rwanda to have peace, the colonial divide-and-rule legacy that pitted Tutsi against Hutu had to go — and there could be no tolerance for the breed of politician or journalist who fanned ethnic animosities to orchestrate the genocide. “This is not about criticism or debate or opposition,” says Kagame. “It is a line drawn on the basis of what is right and wrong for us.”

To prosper, Rwanda would have to confront other dubious Western ideas. The rich world, says Kagame, still looks at Africa with “absolute contempt” for being poor. Aid and human rights are just Western arrogance in a white SUV, a fresh manifestation of the old belief that Africans cannot take care of themselves. Fix the poverty via business, which has rocketed — not aid, which Kagame insists is temporary — and you remove the reason for prejudice. “The rich world says Rwanda is a small country, an African country, a poor country,” he says. “I reject that.”

Kagame’s not the first African leader to question Western notions of governance. Many of Africa’s Big Men — like Zimbabwean leader Robert Mugabe, Muammar Gaddafi of Libya and Liberia’s Charles Taylor — have railed against former colonial powers, all the while making the case for intervention with their misrule. Kagame, on the other hand, can point to a record of success to underline his claim that he knows better than the West what’s best for his country.

As for human rights, he says, it’s not that he sacrifices them in the name of results; it’s that results are the best kind of rights. Rights groups say such arguments are just finely articulated excuses for tyranny. But many outsiders are willing to give Kagame the benefit of the doubt. Says a Western diplomat in Kigali: “We are here for development, and Rwanda is very good at it, so there is a tendency to cut them some slack.”

Categories: Uncategorized

Nyamasheke rally pulls biggest crowd so far


An estimate 135,000 people turned up to see Paul Kagame address a rally in the south-western district of Nyamasheke. The number surpasses previous records set at Musanze and Rubavu, many had arrived early morning to attend a rally that was to start in the afternoon. Nyamasheke is one of the most beautiful but isolated districts in Rwanda, it lies on the shores of Lake Kivu roughly an hour north of Cyangugu. It was one of the poorest and worst performing districts in Rwanda but recently has been making massive strides and last year it emerged as the best-performing under the imihigo or performance assessment system.

RPF candidate Kagame took to the podium to address the massive crowd and was greeted by massive applause.

“I do not need to preach to the converted, by emerging as the best performing district under the imihigo assessment, Nyamasheke – you have already proved that that you embrace the RPF and its programmes very long ago. You are an admirable lot and you make us proud.” Said Kagame

The crowd cheered as he thanked them for their support, he promised them that he would tarmac their road and bring electricity to their area. He said that they needed to be a better plan for how to productively use the area surrounding Lake Kivu. He said he was proud of how Nyamasheke had increased its agricultural output and was supplying food to other parts of the country. In the recent past Nyamasheke was not food secure and had to rely on nearby areas to supply them with food.

A smiling Kagame said that Nyamasheke had become a breadbasket because of its hardworking people who are determined to have a better future, and a local leadership that is close to its people.

“This is what the RPF stands for, all the good programmes that you have initiated here, the good policies in agriculture, health, education and decentralisation. This is what we need to consolidate in the next seven years.” Kagame said.

The crowd was also ecstatic at the announcement that basic education was extended for 9 years to 12 years. Rural areas like Nyamasheke already have 90% of children in school, the area has also seen a surge in young girls attending school, which has also been a major target of the RPF. The Campaign takes a break on Friday before resuming on Saturday.

Categories: Uncategorized

Nyaruguru turns out in numbers for Kagame


The residents of Nyaruguru turned out en masse to attend an RPF rally, the party candidate Paul Kagame was eagerly awaited by the crowd. A helicopter taking aerial shots and pictures of the event was mistaken for a helicopter carrying Paul Kagame, the crowd shouted and begged the helicopter to land and were disappointed when it went away without landing the candidate. The rally continued with entertainment in the form of songs and dancing until the candidate arrived.

When Kagame arrived he received massive cheers and calls for his re-election. He promised the locals that he would strive to raise incomes of the local people. The average income of Rwandans has risen from under $300 to $560 per annum, with a target of $2,000 by 2020. As for the environment, Kagame promised to prevent erosion by terracing the hills. Terracing of hills in Rwanda is practised mostly in the Northern and North-western areas as a means of both maximising land mass and preventing erosion. Recent agricultural policies have emphasised preserving agricultural land while conserving the environment through tree planting.

“Rwanda will be rebuilt by policies that promote development, the real work starts after August 9th.” Kagame said.
The campaign moves to the South-west on Thursday in the Cyangugu/Rusizi area, moving on the picturesque district of Nyamasheke on the shores of Lake Kivu. It is part of a 3-week campaign that has taken the various candidates to all parts of the country.

Categories: Uncategorized

Cell phones save lives in Rwanda – CNN

Musanze, Rwanda (CNN) — The Rwandan government is giving out hundreds of cell phones in an attempt to save pregnant women and babies.
Nearly 500 volunteer community health care workers in the rural district of Musanze have been given free phones so they can keep track of all the pregnant women in their villages.
The cell phones are used to register and monitor expecting mothers. If there are any questions, complications or updates, health workers simply send a text to their local clinic and receive a response within minutes.
A cell phone got 23-year-old Valentine Unwingabire the help she desperately needed. In the middle of the night Unwingabire unexpectedly went into labor and her village health worker, Germaine Uwera, knew exactly what to do.

“I sent a text and after sending a text they gave me feedback, and in 10 minutes the ambulance came,” Uwera told CNN.
It’s hard to get ambulances or healthcare in Rwanda’s heavily populated rural areas. Roads are unpaved, few people have cars, and nearly 95 percent of Rwandans cannot access electricity.

Before Uwera got her cell phone, it took at least an hour to get help. Health workers had to carry patients in a makeshift stretcher for nearly an hour to reach the nearest health facility.
Inside Africa: Madagascar’s children find safe havens
Rwanda is ranked among the world’s worst for maternal mortality. The majority of Rwandan women have their babies at home with untrained midwives. Many die from bleeding or infection, both easily preventable with the right care.

The cell-phone program, or Rapid SMS scheme, was set up in conjunction with various U.N. organizations to bring the number of maternal deaths down.
“We tend to lose people who are actually supposed to be developing this nation,” said Dr. John Kalach, the director of the closest hospital in Ruhengeri. “We don’t want to be in a nation where we lose pregnant ladies while they are giving life to others.”

We don’t want to be in a nation where we lose pregnant ladies while they are giving life to others.
–Dr. John Kalach, Rwanda
Every text message sent under the new program is stored at nearby health facilities and a central server in Kigali.
Health care professionals are able track a woman’s progress from her first trimester to the last. Volunteers are also automatically reminded to send in monthly check-ups, and if a doctor spots any problems, they can send a text urging the mother to get to a clinic.
In the Musanze district, the program has been a big success. There have been no reported maternal deaths since the programs launch last year, compared to 10 deaths in 2008.
According to UNICEF the next step will be to give out over 17,000 phones to health workers (specifically in charge of monitoring maternal health) and then to eventually distribute 50, 000 phones to every volunteer health worker in the country. The government hopes to even expand the scheme to other sectors like agriculture and education.

But the system does have some challenges. Health workers must travel long distances to charge their phones, and networks aren’t always reliable in Rwanda’s rural districts.
But when the phones are functioning, they do save lives. Thanks to Uwera’s cell phone Valentine Unwingabire gave birth to a healthy baby boy, Manirakoze, which means “Thank you God.”
“When I went to the hospital I was thinking maybe my baby would not be very healthy or maybe premature,” Unwingabire said. “But when I found that the baby was OK and healthy, I stopped and I thanked God because I wasn’t expecting such a miracle.”

Categories: Uncategorized
Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.