@AdamsAbah5@FabrizioRomano Do you remember the first season of cucurella as a Chelsea player we were going to sell him but they trusted him and there he is so be grateful for even once
@AdamsAbah5@FabrizioRomano He is the one that is left so we should believe in him and see same as we did to cucurella for the first season we nearly sold him so let’s see what hato is capable of.
@CyrilCzar@FabrizioRomano What do you want to do with the player that doesn’t want to play for you? Cucurella is a good player but he doesn’t want Chelsea so it what it is
This video is a painful reminder of where Rwanda came from.
To the survivors: we walk with you. Your pain is ours, your resilience is our strength. The journey of healing is long, but you are not alone.
To the youth: Rwanda is yours. Guard it. Protect our unity. Defend the dignity and progress that was rebuilt from ashes. Never take it for granted.
To the RPF/RPA and President Kagame: you brought a nation back from the edge of extinction. You brought me, my grand parents and my parents back home. you gave Rwanda a second chance at life Thank you will never be enough.
To those who committed these crimes: this will forever stand as a reminder that what you did was not conflict, not tribal war, not a civil war and definitely not Hutu-Tutsi conflict but Genocide against the Tutsi. History will never be rewritten.
To the children of those perpetrators, scattered across the world from the DRC to Europe and America, who choose denial and distortion: the truth lives on. It lives in memory, in testimony, in history. No lie will ever bury it.
To the countries that continue to shield those responsible: we see you. Silence and protection do not erase accountability.
To the reporter who produced this @KoinangeJeff Thank you! history will remember this report for years.
And as the child in this video says:
“May we never see what happened in Rwanda anywhere again. May ‘Never Again’ not remain empty words, but become a promise the world finally keeps.”
#Kwibuka32
@SamuelBaker_B Kwibuka is a time to honor the victims of the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi and stand with survivors. Turning this moment of remembrance into political accusations risks distracting from the true purpose: remembering, learning from history, and strengthening unity. Stop this.
@Escobar55840675@DrDamascene Ese wabanje kumenya impamvu minister yavuze ko nta AERG ikiba mubigo bya amashuri?? Yabaye IBUKA kandi rwose kugira ikinyabupfura nizo ndangagaciro za Umunyarwanda twubaha abaturuta. Murakoze
@KabagambeI Confidence in a country should be strong enough to handle criticism—real stability comes from open debate, not dismissing dissent as distortion
@KabagambeI Labeling critical voices as a “coordinated false narrative” shuts down legitimate discussion. Acknowledging struggles doesn’t mean denying progress, and young people aren’t mindless targets who “swallow propaganda.