It has been an absolute privilege to serve as a Cabinet Member under the visionary leadership of our President.
What a welcome learning curve.
I am deeply grateful, Your Excellency President @PaulKagame, for the sustained trust placed in me to continue contributing to the development of our beloved Rwanda. I look forward to the new chapter and I’ll give it my all!
Building infrastructure for a connected and sustainable Rwanda. This World Environment Day, we're reminded that the best signal we can send is care for our Earth. #WorldEnvironmentDay
For 9 years, I’ve traveled across Rwanda documenting its landscapes, culture, and people… building an archive of hundreds of thousands of photographs along the way.
A Fine Art Exhibition is coming soon. Prints available.
Rwanda to the world. 🇷🇼
Photo: @innocentrw
Dans cet éditorial intitulé “Le Rwanda Commémore: l’audace d’un peuple d’exister, 32 ans après”, Son Excellence Mme Jeannette Kagame revient sur la persistance des discours de haine et la nécessité d’y répondre avec vérité, lucidité et résilience.
“Nous savons que les spasmes de la haine continuent en cette période de Kwibuka. Nous connaissons désormais le rythme.
Nous y répondons par la vérité, avec la même énergie.
Nous résistons en portant plus haut le flambeau, car il est de ces lumières que rien n’éteint: ni la haine, ni le temps, ni le mensonge.”
Lisez l’intégralité de l’Op-Ed: https://t.co/E6kbMbxf58
#Kwibuka32
@kezio_musoke@KopoKopoInc@Kansiime256 Familiar faces help in getting noticed fast. Billboards are most effective for daily commuters, but they need time, at least 3 months to turn attention into real impact.
And they work best as part of an integrated campaign, where the message is reinforced across other channels.
Join us today for the ‘Walk to Remember’
On April 11, 1994, over 2,000 Tutsi were forced from the former ETO Kicukiro on a systematic "Death March" to Nyanza Hill. Abandoned by the world and pursued by grenades, guns machetes and other weapons.
Today, we walk in their memory.
📍 IPRC Kigali → Nyanza-Kicukiro Memorial
🕒 3PM
#Kwibuka32
I remember April 1994 as if it were yesterday.
This short testimony goes to the youth, but especially to those who dare to speak of a “double genocide.”
I was not hunted.
But I remember how Tutsis were hunted.
I remember conversations with my Tutsi peers.
Fear in their eyes.
Total despair.
Wondering where to hide.
I remember Tutsi neighbours trying to return to their places of origin, hoping to find safety, and never making it.
Some were killed on the way.
Others were killed when they arrived, in places they believed would protect them.
I remember churches becoming places of animosity.
Places of slaughter.
And I remember not understanding how people could suddenly become so cruel.
There was a roadblock near our home.
People were stopped and asked to present their IDs.
If your ID said Tutsi, you were to die.
If you had children, they were to die, no matter their age.
If you were pregnant, the unborn child was to die first.
The unspeakable had become normal.
There was a nearby forest.
Killers had given it a name, CND.
And we would hear them say they had taken people to CND.
That is how death was spoken about.
Casually. As if it meant nothing.
No one questioned it.
Those who could ask were the same ones killing or giving the orders.
At no point during the Genocide against the Tutsi did I hear of Hutus being hunted for being Hutu.
Tutsis were hunted. Systematically. Ruthlessly.
Yes, some Hutus were killed because they were mistaken for Tutsi.
Yes, some Hutus were killed because they refused to kill, or because they chose to hide and protect Tutsis.
Yes, many Hutus died on the way to exile, mostly from cholera.
But they were never hunted to death for being Hutu.
Let us not distort history.
Let us not equalise what was never equal.
To the youth, Rwanda was once dead.
What you see today did not exist.
And yet, we rose.
We rebuilt.
We chose unity over division.
Today, Rwanda stands strong, among the fast-developing nations, guided by visionary leadership under H.E. Paul Kagame.
Under Inkotanyi, who stopped the genocide when the international community failed to act.
Our dignity was restored.
Today, amahanga aratwubaha.
This is not something we can ever take for granted.
We must stand together to protect our country and our leadership.
We must stand together to fight any harm against Rwanda.
We must stand together against any form of genocide ideology.
We must stand together against denial, so that “Never Again” becomes a reality.
Today and forever.
As our President said, Rwanda cannot die twice.
#Kwibuka32
Video: First Lady Mrs Jeannette Kagame joins the International Conference on Genocide Prevention and IBUKA’s 30-Year Journey | Kigali, 8 April 2026
For Photos: https://t.co/LzSNSnw26b
#Kwibuka32
This evening, President Kagame and First Lady Jeannette Kagame joined thousands of Rwandan youth for the annual Walk to Remember and Night Vigil at BK Arena, as part of the #Kwibuka32 remembrance activities, where young Rwandans stand together to uphold the memory of the victims of the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi.
Site Visit & Pre-bid Meeting Alert!
RISA under the Rwanda Digital Acceleration Project #RDAP funded by @WorldBank invites solution providers to participate in the site visit & pre-bid meeting for the Shared Government Data Hub & Data Interoperability Platform project. #DataHub