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Rwanda Travel Blogs

Background: In 1959, three years before independence from Belgium, the majority ethnic group, the Hutus, overthrew the ruling Tutsi king. Over the next several years, thousands of Tutsis were killed, and some 150,000 driven into exile in neighboring countries. The children of these exiles later formed a rebel group, the Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF), and began a civil war in 1990. The war, along with several political and economic upheavals, exacerbated ethnic tensions, culminating in April 1994 in the genocide of roughly 800,000 Tutsis and moderate Hutus. The Tutsi rebels defeated the Hutu regime and ended the killing in July 1994, but approximately 2 million Hutu refugees - many fearing Tutsi retribution - fled to neighboring Burundi, Tanzania, Uganda, and the former Zaire. Since then, most of the refugees have returned to Rwanda, but about 10,000 that remain in the neighboring Democratic Republic of the Congo have formed an extremist insurgency bent on retaking Rwanda, much as the RPF tried in 1990. Despite substantial international assistance and political reforms - including Rwanda's first local elections in March 1999 and its first post-genocide presidential and legislative elections in August and September 2003, respectively - the country continues to struggle to boost investment and agricultural output, and ethnic reconciliation is complicated by the real and perceived Tutsi political dominance. Kigali's increasing centralization and intolerance of dissent, the nagging Hutu extremist insurgency across the border, and Rwandan involvement in two wars in recent years in the neighboring Democratic Republic of the Congo continue to hinder Rwanda's efforts to escape its bloody legacy.




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Sardines Let us begin with a word on Ugandan taxis. They are not called 'shared' for nothing. To get to the border with Rwanda we took one of these cabs to save time. Inside the regular saloon car there were 4 adults including Big Dave in the back, 2 adults in the front passenger seat and 2 more on the drivers seat. The driver somewhat impressively managed to change gear even while half sitting on another man's lap! The border crossing was fine. We even managed to avoid the 'give the muzungus the wrong money because they don't know what [View Full Entry]

Couchies - Tracey Dave | Read The Full Entry | Subscribe
1764 Words | 4 Comment(s) | 8 Photo(s) | 0 Video(s)
Published: November 26th 2007 | 256 Views | [diary=222825]

Rwanda - where volcanoes look like volcanoes
The Rules
Tiny baby

There are only two events likely to draw a bigger crowd than a Rwandan football match. The first, setting your house on fire, as observed recently should pull you in around 2 to 3,000, dependant on it’s location. Near the main road appears to be best. You’d think in a country where fetching and carrying water is the national pastime and where children are schooled in the art from birth, the chances of a experiencing a serious blaze would be small. Sadly not, as the merit of this event as a spectator sport seems to far outweigh that of neighbourly duty. [View Full Entry]

NeilJ - Neil Jennings | Read The Full Entry | Subscribe
3369 Words | 0 Comment(s) | 17 Photo(s) | 0 Video(s)
Published: November 17th 2007 | 2170 Views | [diary=218699]

Who needs Kofi and Ban Ki..when you've got  Paris
Our New Headmaster
Rwand's No 1. Crowd Pleaser

Many countries in Africa have titles extolling the virtue of their people and land - Uganda is ‘the pearl of Africa’, Malawi the ‘warm heart of Africa’ - presumably both an example of national pride and a marketing catch-cry for tourists. Rwanda’s is a little less ambiguous than the above examples - it is the ‘land of a thousand hills’. Rumoured to be a country of amazing beauty and one that has made remarkable headway into peacefully moving forward after the horrors of the genocide in 1994, we were curious to see for ourselves this small east African [View Full Entry]

Katherine Howell - Katherine Howell | Read The Full Entry | Subscribe
2566 Words | 0 Comment(s) | 59 Photo(s) | 0 Video(s)
Published: November 19th 2007 | 537 Views | [diary=216327]

Lake Kivu
Rwandan cuties
Man reflects at the memorial garden at Kigali Memorial Centre

Mzungu is the Swahili word for "white person" which East African urchins joyfully shout whenever they catch sight of a western traveller, hence I've felt like a minor celebrity ever since setting foot in the "Pearl of Africa", Winston Churchill's moniker for Uganda. Uganda is just how I'd invisaged 'Africa' since childhood: lush green vegetation everywhere, brown roads that disintegrate into quagmires after torrential downpours, people carrying a multitude of goods on their heads (no hands) and big toothy grins on the locals' faces. Ugandans and Rwandans are perhaps the friendliest peop [View Full Entry]

Dom n Joms Big Trip - Douglas & Julie O'Malley | Read The Full Entry | Subscribe
1338 Words | 0 Comment(s) | 27 Photo(s) | 0 Video(s)
Published: October 21st 2007 | 929 Views | [diary=206654]

Who are you calling babyface??
Was Bananaman from Uganda?? I thought he came from the Moon??
Mr Primus was to become a good friend....

After reluctantly leaving Zanzibar we embarked on a long journey from Dar es Salaam through Tanzania to Rwanda. Any normal and/or sensible person would have flown this journey - not us! We tortured ourselves for at least a week getting to Kigali by African public transport. At least we had Rob and Emma for company (thanks guys) to increase the Mzungu numbers. A word of advice to anyone thinking of getting a train in Tanzania - don't! We took the train from Dodoma to Mwanza on southern Lake Victoria which took 40 hours instead of 24. We knew we were off [View Full Entry]

Nick_Kerry - Nick Currie | Read The Full Entry | Subscribe
339 Words | 0 Comment(s) | 9 Photo(s) | 0 Video(s)
Published: November 7th 2007 | 123 Views | [diary=212274]

Parc National Des Volcans
Parc National Des Volcans
Parc National Des Volcans

The Anniversary This blog posting finds me at a very interesting landmark: roughly one year since I left the United States! My last day in Seattle was the 18th of October, 2006, which in some ways feels like a lifetime ago, and in other ways feels like it was only yesterday. Since that time, I've begun speaking a new language (Kiswahili), visited five countries, held two volunteer positions in two different countries, learned about wildlife (especially primates) thanks to many books and a few safaris, made lots of friends from other countries, hosted a few friends from back home an [View Full Entry]

dmax - David Cook | Read The Full Entry | Subscribe
2231 Words | 1 Comment(s) | 13 Photo(s) | 2 Video(s)
Published: October 18th 2007 | 806 Views | [diary=212034]

Year in Pictures
First view of Virungas in SW Uganda
welcome to rwanda

Ah, Zan...Zi…Bar… a magical, almost poetic name, that conjures up a tantalizing sense of mystery, of hidden pasts, of intoxicating aromatic spices… of a vibrant and exotic culture, set in an island nestling in the warm Indian Ocean close to the Tanzanian coastline (40km). Where, according to my guide book (yes, I’ve learnt my lesson) ‘cooling monsoon breezes slant in off a deceptively gentle sea, across powder white coral, palm-fringed beaches and where a weary traveller can laze ‘lulled by soporific surf and the soft rustle of the palms’. Dip his t [View Full Entry]

NeilJ - Neil Jennings | Read The Full Entry | Subscribe
2601 Words | 0 Comment(s) | 16 Photo(s) | 0 Video(s)
Published: October 15th 2007 | 189 Views | [diary=211133]

Paje
Captain Mosquito
More?

After visiting Rwanda, it is almost impossible to believe that this is the very country which tore itself apart just 13 years ago. I arrived here with images of machetes, bullet-ridden corpses, intertribal warfare, and societal breakdown - instead, I arrived in an efficient and orderly country, where the people are quick with a smile and a greeting, and harmonious living is the order of the day. Now, forgive me for lapsing into teacher mode, but let me refresh you on the basics of Africa's worst genocide. Thanks to divisive rule by the Belgians, centuries of latent mistrust, various [View Full Entry]

Ouaga - Tom Griffith | Read The Full Entry | Subscribe
2140 Words | 6 Comment(s) | 12 Photo(s) | 0 Video(s)
Published: October 2nd 2007 | 1944 Views | [diary=206875]

Rwandans and Rwanda
Tragic remains
The real Hotel Rwanda

Our First Day in Kigali We spent our first day in Kigali (Sept. 16) with a short tour of the city and a visit to the place where the Belgian peacekeepers from the United Nations were killed in April 1994. It started raining, appropriately somehow, shortly after our arrival to the site, known as Camp Kigali. The entire story of the 1994 genocide is shocking, tragic and moving. I'll be writing much more about it as I progress, because that has been a great deal of our focus -- after all, that is the reality of Rwanda. However, I have been [View Full Entry]

LuesClues - Lue Dillard | Read The Full Entry | Subscribe
535 Words | 0 Comment(s) | 2 Photo(s) | 0 Video(s)
Published: September 21st 2007 | 89 Views | [diary=204268]

Bronze Plaque

Getting Closer From London to Nairobi, Kenya After the layover in London, we flew to Nairobi. Apparently I was a little too naive to know that you just do not take photographs in the airport at Nairobi, Kenya. I had taken several when we got off the plane -- on the tarmac, the old-fashioned way, coming down the stairs in the outdoors. We stood in a very long line for our transfer boarding passes, so I thought I would just get a few photos of the people and sights. WRONG!!! There was also a little issue that one of my bags [View Full Entry]

LuesClues - Lue Dillard | Read The Full Entry | Subscribe
284 Words | 0 Comment(s) | 5 Photo(s) | 0 Video(s)
Published: September 19th 2007 | 98 Views | [diary=203762]

Arrival in Kenya
Government VIP Lounge
Long Lines