London skyline |
Kigali skyline |
I realise the gaps between my blog
posts are getting longer – the last one was done almost five months ago and
reading it, I see I had just come back from the UK after a visit there in the
Autumn and now I have just returned, again, back from the UK after a Spring
visit. Normally, I would not go
back so soon after a visit but I needed to go home to do a few ‘personal things’
and not do my normal mad dash around the country meeting up with friends to
talk about Rwanda. So to all those
family and friends, who did not see me this time accept my apologies and I will
see you on my next trip back.
Where's the shop gone? It was here yesterday! |
I don’t intend to write about what I have been doing since last November – mainly because I can’t remember!
Life in Kigali continues and I notice, on
my walks, so does the pace of development. Just up from Solace, I have been
observing a commercial block now having reached six floors and the roof has
started to go on. Next door, what
was a lovely house and garden full of trees is now a large hole as the diggers
have come in to start on what will be another commercial block that will,
sadly, dwarf the guesthouse. The
China Wall Restaurant, that has been in Kigali for many years and just up the
road, disappeared one day along with other buildings to make way for a new road
to the new convention centre that opens in June. So it goes on!
How sustainable this is all going to be, I wonder as not sure who is
going to utilise all these office buildings not to mention the many new hotels
and houses/apartments that are currently being constructed.
When I was back in the UK, I spent
a week in London and was fascinated to see the development that was going on
there too. The city skyline is
certainly changing and I was struck, seeing the city from the heights of
Kenwood and Hampstead Heath in North London, by the number of cranes there are
and seeing St Paul’s Cathedral being surrounded by all the new high-rise
buildings.
Count the cranes |
London, like Kigali, is
a very green city but the main difference is that London has many open spaces,
parks and heaths that are open to the public whilst in Kigali there are more
hills and trees but the open green spaces are only for decorative
purposes as no one is allowed to walk on them and if you do, you are likely to
get a telling off by a member of the police or military guards that are often
around. I am sure they are doing
more than just making sure nobody walks on the grass!
London open space - walk on the grass |
Kigali open space - whatever you do, don't walk on the grass |
It was good, when I was in Lewes
to have the opportunity to get up on the South Downs and the freedom to walk
across most fields and open land. I enjoyed a good walk with my good friend Jamie and the dogs –
my dog Jasper, who seemed very pleased to see me and Jamie’s dog, Alfie although
with all the sheep and the new born lambs around we had to keep them, at times,
firmly on their leads. I notice in
Kigali that there are many more dogs now being walked on leads and I have to
admit I walk past them with a degree of caution after one suddenly jumped out
towards me.
Keeping the dogs on their leads - Alfie (L), Jasper (R) |
Flying back with Turkish Airlines
to the UK in March, we landed in Istanbul very soon to when a bomb went off in
the city. A few days later, in
London, I was watching the news on television about the bombs in Brussels and thought that
Kigali seemed to be a much safer place to be. People still ask me “Is Rwanda safe?” and this always
surprises me, as it really is one of the safest, cleanest and most secure
countries in Africa. Yes, there is
a high security presence here and something that visitors coming for the first
time notice and are slightly concerned about but I tell them there is nothing
to worry about. You can walk the main streets of Kigali at night and nobody
will bother you and the times I have done this, I always feel very safe – in
all the time I have been in Rwanda, I have never felt unsafe or threatened.
Rains, what rains? |
I had assumed I would come back to
heavy rains in Kigali but, on the whole, it continues to be hot and dry with
the occasional downpour. Like
everywhere the weather patterns are changing but here there can either be
torrential rain causing houses to be destroyed, crops to be ruined and even
people washed away and killed or drought in certain parts of the country. For a small country, Rwanda does seem
to have many different microclimates affected by the volcanoes, mountains and
the tropical forest.
With the fast development in
Kigali, I assume wrongly that many people have jobs and there is work in
abundance. Sadly, this is not the case and I come across many people, even here
in the city, who struggle to find work.
Many students finish secondary school and wish to go onto university as
they know, to get a good job they will need, at least, a Bachelor’s Degree
although this still does not guarantee them work so they then have to go onto
do a Master’s.
There are many universities in
Kigali but the government are now encouraging them to open regional campuses so
that study can be available to people across the country and to save them from
having to come to the capital.
People here will often do full-time study or evening and weekend courses
combining this with their, if they have one. Fees are expensive and beyond the means of many and then
they need a laptop and money for accommodation, food, registration fees,
examination fees and so it goes on!
Fees for primary and secondary schools
also continue to be a challenge and I hear stories of many families who owe
schools a lot of money in back-fees and it gets to the stage when their
children have to leave the school.
It becomes a bit of a vicious cycle as fees are not paid, the school don’t
then have money to pay teachers who them find themselves without the money to
pay fees for their children.
The government is now trying to
encourage more VCT (Vocational Training) so young people can get a skill in
something like carpentry, plumbing, electrician and I agree this is a good way
forward. When you see the amount of construction that is going on across Rwanda
and the need in the future for maintenance and repairs, you hope there us going
to be a demand for people with the skills to do all this.
Being a typical Muzungu who likes
to have everything planned out, I arrived back in time to pay school fees for a
number of students that are in the Educational Sponsorship Fund although this
was made challenging as all the documentation I needed was in a suitcase that was still in Brussels! I planned my arrival back on a Wednesday so I could go to the banks
on Thursday, thus avoiding the queues that I knew there would be on Friday as it was the 15th of the month and the day that all businesses and
companies have to pay their VAT and PAYE (they get a very hefty fine if they
don’t). So, coinciding with families paying fees (the system here is you pay
direct to the school bank account and the student has then to take a copy of
the bank receipt to give to the school on the first day of term – failure to do
this means they will be sent home and not allowed to return to school until
fees have been paid) and VAT/PAYE day, I really wanted to be back in time to
beat the rush at the bank.
As I managed to get the
information I needed, to pay the fees, from various bits of information I had
in my office and which took me most of Thursday, I found myself on Friday going
to my bank to withdrawal the cash I needed and then to pay it into four other
banks. It was a race against the queues building up and I, finally, had to give
up at the last bank four hours later, as I could not face the number of people that were there. Anyway, it was satisfying to have been
able to get the majority of fees paid and then the receipts scanned and emailed to the
families so their child could go back to school.
Some fees I paid using Mobile
Money, a great system here for sending money across the country. I just buy
some money using the MTN network, someone sends it for me and it instantly arrives
on the phone of the recipient who can then take their phone to an MTN
representative to get the cash.
When I first came to Rwanda in 2006, mobile phones were non-existent but
today so many people use them as the country is being built on the use of
technology – there is fibre-optic cable around the country providing broadband
and excellent Wi-Fi available through three providers. The first thing that everyone asks when
arriving at the guesthouse is “Do you have Wi-Fi?”
Remember |
My return to Rwanda has coincided
with ‘Kwibuka 22’ (Remember22) and today, at Solace, we had a commemoration
service to remember those that died in the 1994 genocide against the Tutsi twenty-two
years ago. One moving testimony from a lady told us how she escaped death many
times and spent two weeks in a pit latrine as she was too fearful of her life
if she came out. Candles were lit
and held by some of the young members of Solace and names of some of those
killed in 1994 were read out.
Kwibuka 22 lasts for 100 days with local commemorations around the
country to mark the date that a massacre took place in a particular
community. Even today, they still
find remains of people killed but ensure that they are now given a dignified
burial.
Remembering loved ones who lost their lives |
It is still so very hard to
comprehend these tragic events of 22 years in a country that is so beautiful
with people that are so wonderful.
It is amazing to see where the country is today and where it has come
from and it certainly lives us to its new name of “Remarkable Rwanda.”