Benard came Very early for work means he loves his Job.
Such people need to be followed up. Might find the wife beats him that’s why he goes to the bar 😹😹
If there is something @EriasLukwago_ could have done for the people of Kampala is to apologize to them for the mess he kept Kampala in while he was demanding cars with personalised number plates & advancing his personal fights. Look at how Gulu’s outskirts look like 🙌
There are places we pass through in life… and there are places that become part of who we are.
Manchester will forever be my home.
To the city, the club, and every supporter, my sincerest thank you. These past four years have been unforgettable, filled with moments my family and I will carry with us for the rest of our lives. There simply aren’t enough words to describe the happiness and warmth we’ve felt here.
Thank you for every cheer, every memory, and for making us feel at home from the very first day.
Forever a Red Devil ❤️
DOES BPR HAVE THE MOST ACCESSIBLE CEO IN BANKING?
Yesterday, I witnessed something rare in banking, and in leadership generally. 📱
A colleague urgently needed an overdraft. We walked into BPR's main branch together, but unexpected documentation requirements threatened to derail her plans.
She turned to me, anxious. I had no senior contact in lending . But I had the CEO's number. Someone I have never met in person.
I handed her the phone. Patience Mutesi picked up before the third ring. 📞
No gatekeepers. No "she's in a meeting." Just — yes, tell me.
My colleague explained her situation quickly. Within minutes, the branch manager called her in. Thirty minutes later, we walked out with full assurance her request would be handled, swiftly. 😌
This did not surprise me entirely. I had already noticed Mutesi responding personally to clients on X without hesitation. But seeing it translate into a real branch experience, on a busy lunch hour, for an ordinary customer? That is something else. ✅
A CEO who answers any call. An institution whose top leadership makes an ordinary citizen feel seen at their most urgent moment.
That is not just good customer service. That is the standard every bank should be measured against. 🏦
Umuturage ku Isonga. 🇷🇼
@Peshmutesi
Join @GSI_Rwanda 👇🏾
https://t.co/vH22HwN07d
The 12th Uganda–Rwanda Joint Permanent Commission opened today at Mestil Hotel, Kampala, with the Senior Officials’ Meeting. The Ugandan delegation is led by Amb. @richardkabonero , Head of REC, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, who welcomed the Rwandan delegation led by Ms. Teta Gisa, Director General for Africa Department, @RwandaMFA . The JPC reaffirms both Sister Republics’ commitment to deepen cooperation in defense, trade, infrastructure, migration, and human capital for mutual prosperity.
The testimony of the Minister @nmukazayire can touch the hearts of some who deny what their parents did during the Genocide against the Tutsi in Rwanda.
It is very clear that her heart has been set free, and she has nothing to be blamed of what her mother did!!!
Mukazayire Nelly is Mukazayire Nelly, and her mother is her mother, and each person will be held accountable for what they personally did.
It is sad to see that some people choose to defend their parents simply because they fail to accept the evil they committed!!!
However, everything has its time. There will come a moment when those who distort history and defend those who killed the Tutsi in Rwanda will realize that they have been wrong for many years and have wasted irreplaceable time.
Deep in their hearts, they know that their parents killed and played a major role in planning the Genocide against the Tutsi, but they choose to create defense mechanisms to cover up that evil!!!
Evil cannot be removed by another evil.
Evil is only overcome by truth.
On one side, many of her families were killed, and on the other side, her own mother killed Tutsis!!!
Truly, only God helped her endure and accept all of this!!!
God blessed you Minister for your sincere and truthful heart, may He also bless you on a global level and may He take you far to the best place possible!!!
Thank you Hon.Minister 🙏❣️
#kwibuka32 #rwandatrends #nellymukazayire #ubuhamya #paulkagame #perezidakagame #ijamboryaperezida #rdf
Nelly Mukazayire ni minisitiri wa sport mu Rwanda akaba yaratanze ubuhamya mu kwezi kwa Gashyantare agaruka kuri Mama we...more
https://t.co/mZEvTAsTfD
On April 13, they came to kill me.
They left me there… thinking I was already gone.
My body was broken.
My head was cut.
I was covered in pain and silence.
But inside me… life was still there.
I don’t know how I survived.
I don’t know how I opened my eyes again.
But I did.
This picture shows what they did to me.
The wounds. The scars. The moment they thought my life was finished.
But look at me now…
I am alive.
I am breathing.
I am standing.
I carried my pain.
I cried.
I healed slowly.
I rebuilt myself piece by piece.
And today… I rise.
They thought they ended my story.
But my story continued.
I am not just a survivor.
I am life that refused to die.
32 years ago, the West made a deal with the Rwandan genocidal regime.
The deal that sealed the fate of the Tutsi.
In this documentary, U.S. officials confirm it.
"The deal we made was that in return for safe passage for our diplomats, we would not take any Rwandan citizens with us. We left our U.S. government employees colleagues to fend for themselves," says Prudence Bushnell, then Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs.
Laura Lane, then an officer at the U.S. embassy, recalls:
"To this day, I always thought I got lucky. But now I realise it was part of the plan to get us out."
As she concludes, the genocidaires wanted a license to kill, and they got it, without any resistance.
From that moment on, they knew the West wouldn't stand in their way as they proceeded with the next phase of their plan: the extermination of the Tutsi.
The US made the deal; the French and the Belgians sent in their troops to enforce it.
Thirty-two years is not a long time. For some of us, it feels like yesterday.
And so: yesterday, they evacuated their people, and even their dogs, and left our people to die.
Now, when the FDLR launches attacks from neighbouring DRC, they issue travel warnings to their own citizens.
But interestingly enough, they expect us to remove our defensive measures before the FDLR, the very genocidal group they've supposedly spent billions on peacekeeping missions to neutralise, is dealt with.
So we have to ask:
Have they made another deal with the devil?
A deal not just to exterminate the Banyamulenge and other Tutsi communities in Congo, but one that extends to the destruction of Rwanda itself.
Cc: @ali_naka@Ali_Rukaliza@albcontact@wmnjoya@RobCyubahiro@byukavuba@dr_dash250@onduhungirehe@DavidHundeyin@Nath_Yamb@cobbo3@AndrewMwenda@DavidNdii@EFFSouthAfrica@MbuyiseniNdlozi@MarioNawfal@DD_Geopolitics@AsstSecStateAF@SecRubio@qataharraymond@US_SrAdvisorAF
To my children,
Our family carries both love and loss. In 1994, during the Genocide against the Tutsi in Rwanda, we lost your grandfather. *He was your father’s father.The man who helped raise your dad, who would have raised you too.
Daughter , you lost more than a grandfather that day — you lost your twin. You and your father’s father looked so alike, like the same seed planted twice. When I look at you, I see him. I see the man who gave us your dad. His smile, his forehead , his strength — they live on in both of you.
And my little girl, you’re 9 now. You’ll never get to meet your father’s father here on earth, and I know that hurts. I feel it too. Your dad’s dad would have loved you so much. He would have told you stories about when your father was little, braided your hair, and called you his princess.
Last time you asked me, _“Why did Hutus kill Tutsis? How do Hutus look?I told you we are all made in the image of the Lord. That’s still true. Your father’s father and the people who took him looked like each other — like brothers, neighbors, Rwandans — because we _are_ family. We all have the same eyes, the same hearts, the same blood.
I don’t fully know why they killed. Hate makes people forget who we are. But I do know this: They didn’t know we were seeds.They thought killing your father’s father would end us. But seeds don’t die when you bury them — they grow.
And that’s what we’re doing. I’m busy raising my tribe, your father’s tribe, every single day. You, your sister — you are the garden your father’s father planted. We grow with his kindness, with his memory, and with truth. We grow so hate can’t win.
Your father’s father isn’t gone. He’s in your dad’s laugh, and now in yours. He’s in your questions. He’s in the way we choose love over hate.
We say his name. We remember he was your father’s father. We honor him. And we keep growing.
OPINION: “Using the term Genocide against the Tutsi does not diminish the suffering of others who were killed during that tragic period. It simply acknowledges the documented reality of the genocide’s intent and structure.”
✍️🏾: Amb Joseph Mutaboba(@MutabobaJoseph)
https://t.co/Rn3C89Ay5T
A man in central Uganda was being caned by his own family members and concerned members of the community for not being married
While being caned, he was repeatedly questioned:
"Lwaki towasi?" 😭🤣🤣🤣
which translates to..."Why are you not married ?" 😭😭🤣
🚨🎙️ | Collette Roche, #mufc CEO of New Stadium Development:
“I think when we launched the idea of a new stadium 12 months ago, we did say it would take between four and five years for construction, and that's right.
“But I think people read that as we might have the stadium ready for 2030.
“But as you know with a stadium build as complex as the one we are going to enter into, it does take one or two years to get ready for construction, to get the land assembled, the gets the funds in place and to get the planning permission, so that's the part we are doing right now. We have not named a date for opening but we are on track.”