Travel Blog | About TravelBlog | World Facts | Travel Wallpaper | Travel Forum | Travel Insurance | Services | Cameras

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.




Links: Rwanda Travel Blogs (all) | Rwanda Travel Photos | Rwanda Travel Forum | Hotels in Rwanda | Hostels in Rwanda | Cheap flights to Rwanda | Rwanda Facts | Map of Rwanda

Rwanda

Rwanda Location



Hostels in Rwanda
Latest Rwanda Blog Entries
Rwanda Photos











By RosalindCorby
January 12th 2007
Mountain Gorillas Africa » Rwanda
We went trecking to see the last Mountain Gorillas. They live at the border of Rwanda, Uganda and Congo. We went across to Rwanda to see them. We got really close and it was an amazing experience but the photos didn't come out great! [View Full Entry]

RosalindCorby - Rosalind Corby | Read The Full Entry | Subscribe
44 Words | 0 Comment(s) | 5 Photo(s) | 0 Video(s)
Published: January 12th 2007 | 72 Views | [diary=155321]

Pictures of the Gorillas we will be seeing
Setting off
Gorillas

By James and Karen
November 25th 2006
Mzungus in the Mist Africa » Rwanda
All of a sudden there was a rustling in the trees just twenty metres away. We looked at each other and grinned like mad. We could hardly believe that we were about to enter the world of the mountain gorillas. There are only about 720 mountain gorillas left in the world, making it one of the most endangered species on the planet. There are no mountain gorillas in captivity (those in zoos are generally lowland gorillas) and so the only chance of seeing one is by hiking in the rainforests of Uganda, Rwanda or Congo. We chose Parc National Des Volcans [View Full Entry]

James and Karen - James & Karen Collins | Read The Full Entry | Subscribe
719 Words | 2 Comment(s) | 9 Photo(s) | 3 Video(s)
Published: November 30th 2006 | 281 Views | [diary=106089]

Thinking
Eating Bamboo
Mum

By El Tigre
October 6th 2006
Icing on the cake.. Africa » Rwanda
First, I would just like to say that prior to my trip to Rwanda, I would have said that Africa has been my favourite continent. The sheer number of different sites (e.g. the dunes in Namibia, Vic Falls, all the game drives, Usambara mountains, and Zanzibar), the extremely friendly people (for the most part) and the variety of experiences (the inflation in Zimbabwe, the isolation of northern mozambique, malaria and Kin House) have been hard to beat. It may be because I have not travelled in so long but I would have to say that Rwanda, and the mountain gorillas was [View Full Entry]

El Tigre - Ryan Lang | Read The Full Entry | Subscribe
1183 Words | 4 Comment(s) | 13 Photo(s) | 0 Video(s)
Published: October 6th 2006 | 538 Views | [diary=93373]

Tea
Volcano
Bananas

We didn’t have plans for Rwanda, but as we were there in our way back from the volcano in Congo, we decided to look around the country of the thousand hills. Fore our surprise we found out one of the most developed countries visited do far in Africa besides its dark history. Quite recently the country was scene of one of the most impressive genocide known to mankind. In 1994 the dominant tribe called "Hutu" decide to exterminate all the members of the "Tutsi" tribe (15% of the population). After the call of their lieder, the Hutus started to kill their [View Full Entry]

2Brothers3Continents - Claudio e Fernando | Read The Full Entry | Subscribe
165 Words | 2 Comment(s) | 7 Photo(s) | 0 Video(s)
Published: August 25th 2006 | 763 Views | [diary=84328]

Swimming in Giseniy
Big plate for US$ 1
Children

By Claire Mac
August 10th 2006
Days 6 to 10 Africa » Rwanda
Am now in Rwanda, having travelled across Uganda to get here. Don't know if anyoneés ever tried typing on a French keyboard, note / don't even contemplate it! Day 6 - Jinga Free day today; Still flipping raining and incredibly muddy! My feet seem to be permanently stained a lovely shade of red - nice. Spent today feeling very bruised and battered after the rafting yesterday. Nothing a few local beers couldn't numb though (litre bottles for about 20p - at that price, who wouldn't?!) Fact: -60% of Ugandan girls are raped by the age of 16 and 80% by 18. [View Full Entry]

Claire Mac - Claire Macdonald | Read The Full Entry | Subscribe
945 Words | 0 Comment(s) | 0 Photo(s) | 0 Video(s)
Published: August 17th 2006 | 239 Views | [diary=82645]


The sea of people surrounding us parted and a single man walked through. “Hello. I am Providence.” Providence indeed. The day was ending, light quickly escaping from the sky as it does here - day turns to night barely bothering to pass through dusk. The bumpy, dusty, windy, hilly and absolutely stunning road that skirts the eastern shore of Lake Kivu had spit us out on a stretch of tarmac seven hours after we started. We stood there, still vibrating just a bit from the ride on the back of UNHCR truck, with no real idea how to get where we [View Full Entry]

Sarah and Jonathon - Sarah T Lucas and Jonathon J Kass | Read The Full Entry | Subscribe
832 Words | 3 Comment(s) | 12 Photo(s) | 0 Video(s)
Published: July 21st 2006 | 339 Views | [diary=75876]

The long and winding wait
The commute
Cool pack

Lake Kivu sits on the border between Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of Congo (the DRC). It is surrounded by deliciously green hills, every last inch of which is cultivated with sorghum, maize, beans, potatoes, tea, bananas, bananas, and more bananas. The soaring mountains of Volcanoes National Park, and their famous inhabitants, the mountain gorillas, watch over the lake from the north. Countless little villages dot the Rwandan shore, perched beside a hellacious dirt road running north to south (and zig zagging along the shore in every other direction imaginable). We had an incredibl [View Full Entry]

Sarah and Jonathon - Sarah T Lucas and Jonathon J Kass | Read The Full Entry | Subscribe
707 Words | 2 Comment(s) | 13 Photo(s) | 0 Video(s)
Published: August 9th 2006 | 489 Views | [diary=75877]

Bound for Market
Resting
The Pied Sarah

Children have a space of their own here. The winding trio of rooms feels empty except for the ten floor-to-ceiling photos of individual children. Each photo is accompanied by a simple plaque with the child’s name, age, and a few details like favorite foods, best friend, character traits, last words, and cause of death - hacked with machete, smashed against the wall, clubbed with rifle butt, shot. The final room offers just one wall to look at. A wall on which are displayed -- quite simply, as if hung on the fridge or living room wall at home -- snapshots of [View Full Entry]

Sarah and Jonathon - Sarah T Lucas and Jonathon J Kass | Read The Full Entry | Subscribe
723 Words | 0 Comment(s) | 4 Photo(s) | 0 Video(s)
Published: July 20th 2006 | 274 Views | [diary=75880]

Rwanda's peaceful beauty
Fun with a few Rwandan kids of today
Isn't it just so lovely?

The grass is always greener on the other side…unless you’re in Rwanda. In the “Land of a Thousand Hills,” the scenery is so constantly spectacular that the camera never quite makes it back in the bag. Whether it’s tea plantations, terraced hillsides, or rainforest, there’s something stunning—and green—around every corner. Even in busy downtown Kigali, people go about their daily grind with picturesque views of the surrounding countryside as the backdrop. It’s hard to imagine the horror of the 1994 genocide, in which over one million p [View Full Entry]

hellotrain - Jenny and Randy | Read The Full Entry | Subscribe
1378 Words | 4 Comment(s) | 25 Photo(s) | 0 Video(s)
Published: March 24th 2006 | 1859 Views | [diary=48538]

Kigali Afternoon
Meat Stick Man
Banana Fields Forever

By Markim Gadabouts
March 17th 2006
Rwanda Africa » Rwanda
Rwanda is one of those countries in the world which has an image problem. For may it sums up many of Africa's long term problems - poverty, corruption and civil war. The events that took place in the mid eighties that led up to and included the mass genocide of 1 million (10%) of it's own people is still remembered by most even though wasn't reported about that much in the West, mainly because we (especially the UN) chose to leave Rwanda to it's own devises at the time when it needed outside help most. Over the last few years the [View Full Entry]

Markim Gadabouts - Martin | Read The Full Entry | Subscribe
641 Words | 1 Comment(s) | 5 Photo(s) | 0 Video(s)
Published: April 18th 2006 | 372 Views | [diary=53321]

kw
ko
ko