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Rwanda Movie Industry Making Stride

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A soon-to-be released Rwandan film called “Tuzibanira” Part II, has already started causing a stir in the public even before its official launch, the furor mainly arising over concerns that it may contain scenes of obscenity and nudity. Why the uproar? Rwandan movie producers have not been able to fully capture the local audience mainly because the actors seem too amateurish on stage and/or the shooting and editing are shoddily done, and that seems not enough to entice film lovers to flock for the locally produced pictures.

Local movie producers have long played along the oblivion lines of the public, deeply embedded in the cultural beliefs that such scenes as kissing or fondling can never be displayed in local films, but that seems to be becoming a thing of the past. With the demand for local production materials steeply increasing at an alarming rate, the desire to satisfy that demand is equally up surging.

“Tuzibanira,” which features kingpin VD Frank, premieres 10th September and has been rated +18. Apart from photographs from shooting locations which show actors kissing and lustily ogling at one another, the cover itself maybe hintingly self-explanatory as far the film’s theme is concerned. But the trend in production for the last couple of years has greatly changed and so has the demand for local productions. And a lack of proper adjustment and adaptation to the changing times, style and fashion would be pure lethargy to the industry.

Rwanda Trading – promoting thousand hills coffee

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Rwanda Trading Company is a US-based company which came into Rwanda coffee processing business three years ago as a major competitor that actually broke the monopoly of Rwanda Export (Rwandex) – the largest coffee processor which existed in the country.

The coffee processing factory was opened in 2010 and deals in coffee processing and exportation and a little bit of roasting and selling locally. The factory is located in Gikondo industrial area in the former Rwandex factory.

The company exports Rwanda coffee to major buyers in the US and Europe and it operates with Coffee roasting giant Westrock Coffee who purchase massive quantities of dry Rwandan coffee to be shipped to the US state of Arkansas for roasting.

The decision of Westrock Coffee to start importing Rwanda dry coffee for roasting follows the acquisition of a new larger roasting facility in Arkansas

As a competitor, Rwanda Trading managed to ‘throw’ Rwandex out of competition since the company was already facing internal administration problems and eventually redeemed bankrupt due to major losses in the sector and failing to pay off the debts owed to the farmers.

Rwanda Trading Company bought loss-making Rwandex at US$2.3million and has since pumped in $7million for expansion. The company was exporting about 6,000 tonnes of ordinary – with revenues of up to $10 million annually.

Today Rwanda Trading is considered as the best coffee processing plant in Rwanda alongside others competitors like Rwacof and CBC– who have improved the export of coffee to foreign markets and bringing more income to the 400.000 local coffee farmers.

The company has an annual export capacity of 4000tons and possesses a range of special machinery for hauling, drying, grading (by size, weight and color) and other loading machinery used. The company also employs over 85 permanent staff and over 250 casual laborers who are recruited during the off season.

Rwanda trading works with farmers through agents who buy the coffee from the farmers, this coffee is either sold directly or bought and processed. With the coming of coffee washing plants, farmers can actually sell the coffee directly to Rwanda trading- who however have to process the coffee so that it is ready for export.

The Managing Director of Rwanda Trading Company, Matt Smith, say that company was motivated to enter the market because there was not a lot of industries processing coffee in Rwanda, so they decided to enter the market to compete with the existing companies, not to reduce the prices but to raise incomes of farmers and subsequently make a good profit for business.

Smith says that the greatest impact made by Rwanda Trading, in the coffee sector, is that there has been a favorably competition which has apparently increased the percentage of export value that stays with the farmers, as opposed to going to the exporter in terms of incomes for the local farmers in Rwanda, unlike in the past.

“The world market prices go up and down, but the difference is the impact we have made- that is- our profit margin is below 15 percent every year, as compared to 25 percent in the past- which means the 10% remains with the farmers instead of exporter” Smith says “we have no problem surviving with the 15 percent margin instead of a bigger margin which goes to our competitors”

The prices of a kilo of coffee on the world market keep fluctuating between $3 to 6 dollars US dollars and on average the farmer makes to Rwf294 per kilo of coffee cherry(as per 2010, thus the farmers margin is estimated at 350% because they invest about Rwf80 per kilo, Smith explains.

The production and export for Rwanda trading company has been changing slightly and steadily and exports have been increasing every two years with a little margin. However, Smith says that Rwanda could double its exports in two years by farmers not planting more trees but taking care on the trees and just work on the trees.

He notes that the coffee sector can earn more than 100million US dollars in extra income, and this can reach 200million dollars target and beat the Rwanda tourism sector(which is the highest foreign earner), if only the farmers could be trained on simple farming practices such as mulching and pruning.

“This is not an easy task to train all the 4000 farmers but it is worthy trying and a lot of focus put in agronomy training that would help Rwanda’s exports out a lot. I mean in two years we could be reaching tourism up in two years if we double the coffee by maintaining the trees” Smith says.

Apparently Smith says that the company is doing well as a foreign group in the sector and after three years the company has grown quickly because of honest business in Rwanda. However, the company has to be relocated among the factories to be moved to the new industrial area in Gasabo district (Kigali Special Economic Zone -KSEZ).

The only problem is that his company still is being referred to as Rwandex- a name that has stuck in the minds of the local residents since the factory is located at a bus stop commonly known by the former company-Rwandex.

Meanwhile, coffee has always been one of Rwanda’s all time cash crops and Rwanda Trading Company seems to know this pretty well. The company has developed coffee production and trade right from the grassroots. They believe in helping farmers realize their dreams through earning what’s worth of their production. Rwanda trading company delves into help, right from washing farm to coffee washing stations and even export. The company has ventured miles and miles to the furthest areas of Rwanda just to ensure that the coffee plant is given its due worth.

When its coffee time, there is no such thing like a break, for Rwanda Trading company. Not even a few challenges can stop them from promoting coffee to where it should be. The company has a great deal of plans in regard to promoting coffee.

Kaberuka’s Revolution at the ADB

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His response to the global economic downturn has transformed the African Development Bank

Quiet streets greeted the African Development Bank’s return to Abidjan, its former headquarters, this May for its 45th annual meetings. The bank left in 2003, precipitated by the deteriorating security situation in the city as Côte d’Ivoire slid into civil war. Today it occupies three buildings in Tunis – a “Temporary Relocation Agency” that has begun to seem less and less temporary. Its dislocation has been frustrating for bank staff and for international partners, but with elections in Côte d’Ivoire repeatedly postponed an imminent return has seemed unlikely.

The AfDB, though, has achieved a turnaround that could similarly be described as unlikely. A decade ago the bank was languishing, struggling to articulate its relevance to the African countries that were its clients and shareholders.

Today the great inefficiencies and frustrations that outsiders experience at the annual meetings – bloated as they are by the slow march of protocol – disguise an organisation that has evolved significantly under the leadership of its returning president, Donald Kaberuka. Kaberuka, the former finance minister of Rwanda, took over the presidency in 2005, replacing Omar Kabbaj, whose tenure was characterised by risk aversion, restoring the bank’s triple-A rating but recentralising its staff and reigning in its ambition.

That he was returned to the office in an unopposed coronation in Abidjan this May is demonstrative of the regard with which Kaberuka is now held. According to bank sources, the Moroccan delegation to the bank tabled the suggestion that no election should be held, so successful has Kaberuka’s first term been. The institution’s confidence and purpose grew quietly over the first few years of the Rwandan’s term, but it has been the AfDB’s response to the economic downturn that has defined “his” bank.

One of the most immediate effects was that the bank was once again relevant to middle income countries that had largely graduated beyond its services – being able, as they were, to access funding direct from the capital markets. However, as credit dried up internationally, these countries struggled to raise funding. As Dr Nkosana Moyo, the bank’s chief operating officer, explains: “Well managed countries, countries like Botswana and Mauritius, started having to come to us, instead of going directly to the capital markets… But because the bank maintained its triple-A rating, it meant that it could still access capital and leverage its own balance sheet and therefore on-lend to the countries that, until this point, could have got there on their own.”

The bank also “frontloaded” – accelerating the deployment of its resources in its client countries to act as a countercyclical investor and cushion the impact of the downturn. “There were other tricks,” Moyo says. “We went back to the portfolio and worked with countries to reconfigure that portfolio so that some resources could be released where they had been committed but not yet used. So in consultation with the countries in question you could essentially cancel effectively any commitments and redeploy them in the same country, just then reprioritise them.”

The group committed US$12.6 billion to its regional member countries in 2009, compared to US$5.5 billion in 2008. In the past four years, its portfolio has doubled to US$15.6 billion. In Abidjan this year, the AfDB’s governors approved a general capital increase that tripled the bank’s capital to almost US$100 billion. This, bank officials say, will finance more than just the shortfall caused by the crisis response. Instead, it will push on with the institution’s mission defined by Kaberuka – to do less, but do it better. “In the last five years what the president has done is to be very disciplined in getting the bank not to try to do everything under the sun,” Moyo says.

This focus has meant cutting back direct interventions in social sectors and concentrating on areas where the bank perceives it has expertise, such as infrastructure, and the infrastructure elements of other thematic areas.

Taking food security as an example, Moyo explains: “We do not want to try and do everything that comes under the agriculture umbrella. What we want to focus on is the infrastructure component. So whether it’s the movement of goods, or irrigation, or water harvesting, we will pay attention to that. But we understand that our partners, such as FAO and the seed companies and so on, will come in and do other things.”

The crisis, too, has brought this issue of focus into sharp relief as donors examine their development budgets and try to cut out duplication of effort amongst the institutions that they fund. “If you go to the donor side, the same people are giving money to the World Bank and to us,” Moyo acknowledges. “There has to be a rationale why you do exactly the same thing with these two institutions. So there is a dialogue which is seeking to clarify much more sharply the division of labour.”

The bank, Moyo says, should be expected to help to form policy and demonstrate local knowledge. Under Kaberuka, the bank began to reverse the previous phase of recentralisation. The first stage of that decentralisation has largely been completed, says Moyo, and the second, which will see decision making and research brought closer to the point of disbursement, is underway.

“Strategic or policy formulation dialogue should be better informed by interaction with us,” he says. “We want to begin to develop the knowledge component of our institution.” To this end, the bank has hired Professor Mthuli Ncube, formerly the dean of the Faculty of Commerce, Law and Management at the University of the Witwatesrand, as its chief economist. “We implement projects. What do we learn from them?” Moyo says. “How do we use that experience to reformulate the causality relationships in terms of what we know from the economics side?”

In 2006 the Center for Global Development in Washington DC set down six pieces of advice, three for him and three for the AfDB’s shareholders. The report: Building Africa’s Development Bank advised that the institution should define its mission as promoting economic growth; focus on one area where it had comparative advantage and could fulfil that mission – infrastructure; and to “lead, but don’t lend, on key regional issues” – i.e. to develop as a policy and advocacy actor beyond its role in disbursing donor capital.

In a “report card” on the bank’s progress, issued before the annual meetings began, the CGD gave the bank a B+, A- and A, respectively. The crisis response, increased private sector disbursements and the narrower focus on infrastructure came through strongly. On the third target, whether Kaberuka has personally graduated from the effective technocrat that he was known to be before his term, to become a potent interlocutor in international affairs is arguable, Todd Moss, senior fellow at the CGD says. “He is definitely a technocrat,” Moss says, “but if you think back to what Khabbaj was doing, he simply didn’t play that role. Whereas at the G20, at Copenhagen, if there’s an African issue, who are the shareholders going to turn to as a credible voice? It’s Kaberuka.”

For the shareholders, the CGD report advised that they “back off” and reduce the long list of conditions imposed upon the bank; “lighten up” and transform the board into a non-executive, non-resident body; and finally to address the issue of the bank’s headquarters. On this latter point, the bank determined that the security situation in Abidjan had not recovered sufficiently to begin the process of return. The CGD gave the shareholders an “incomplete” grade for this and for the first recommendation – back off – but Moss is encouraged by the lack of a new “Christmas list” of shareholder demands to accompany the recent capital increase and in the discussions around the replenishment of the African Development Fund, the group’s concessionary window.

On the requirement to “lighten up,” Moss says: “It’s unlikely that they’re going to go to non-executive, non-resident. But the point is that the board is totally focused on the wrong things. They’re focused on the minutiae of policy and the mechanics…They’re tying up the staff with all this paper chasing. It’s totally counterproductive,” he argues. “It’s one thing to have a white knuckle, tight grip on things if you don’t think that Kaberuka knows what he’s doing, but I think everybody’s pretty happy with Kaberuka, and if they’re happy with him, let him do his thing, let his team work.”

Coffee Shop Business

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What is the most booming industry you can think of? What pops in my mind is the coffee shop business. I mean come on, doesn’t it ever slow down? The world has certainly spoken, and what they love is coffee. I often wonder if the plethora of businesses will ever cease, or plummet in profits. At this rate I’m thinking that the coffee shop business is headed nowhere but up. Have you had your cup of Joe today? Who am I kidding; one is never enough.

I love coffee! I will admit that to anyone. Now I’m not claiming that it’s healthy or anything like that. I’m not one of the new-age specialists who say that coffee makes you more intellectually endowed. I’m simply a guy who loves the taste of java. Yep, that’s right! It’s not even the caffeine issue. Heck, you can take the caffeine out of the equation, because I love the flavor. Personally I’ve even considered opening my very own coffee shop business. Then after many nights of brainstorming I realized that I’d consume all the profits.

That would just not go over well in the long run. However, I do encourage those who strive to start their own business to consider a coffee shop business. This is where the money’s at. It’s that simple. You take a town that lacks a proper coffee house or espresso drive-thru, and then you invest in a coffee shop business where the morning traffic hits. Put up a drive-thru right where the entire town passes by. That’s golden my friends. I saw it happen several times in Oregon and the customers were pouring in. What always gets me is the ration of supplies versus cost. Let’s see, there’s a cup of milk, two shots of espresso and some syrup in an average latte. How in the world do they get four bucks out of that? That’s got to be some major turn-over.

If you’re a coffee nut and wish to start your own coffee shop business, then you may want to do some recon work first. It’s crucial to know the right location. This will really determine how well your coffee shop business will do in the long hall. They don’t say location, location, location for nothing. You will also need to know the overall investment cost prior to getting started, and that’s why it’s imperative to get jacked into the web. The Internet will educate you plenty regarding what it takes for a successful coffee shop business.

Here’s to your success and great coffee!

KigaliKonnect Launch Party, Knowless at QuelQuePart Restaurant

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KigaliKonnect Launch Party with the star Knowless @ QuelQuePart Restaurant. It was a huge success with guest appearances from many celebreties and guest artists.

The event was brought to you exclusively by KigaliKonnect.com and many more to come soon!

A big thank you to Knowless, QuelQuePart, DJ’s, MC’s, the supporting Crews and ofcourse all the FANS!!!

Stay tuned for the updated section for all the professional Photos and Videos.

More colaboration coming soon with Knowless so stay tuned to this page!

Check out the FULL AMAZING PHOTO ALBUM on our Facbook page @ http://www.facebook.com/kigalikonnect

Kigali City Tower

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Project Objectives


It is safe to say that Kigali City Tower, like most unique discoveries in history, owes its existence to sheer serendipity. Originally a parking site for taxis in Kigali, the promoters intended to re-develop the site into a modern taxi park offering organized parking to help Kigali manage the ever-worsening state of city parking. The concept gradually evolved into the current mixed use development that will for ever re-define the skyline of Kigali City.

KCT comes across as a unique state-of-the art development reflective of the rapid advancements in technology and the growing need for quality and innovation in shopping, entertainment, office accommodation, and car parking construction.

The project concept involves the development of a 14-storey office tower, a 356-car parking silo and a commercial complex housing a supermarket, food courts and shops, among others.

PROJECT OBJECTIVES

This mixed-use development is meant to achieve the following core objectives: –

• To provide quality office accommodation, vehicle parking and a unique shopping and entertainment centre for the residents of Kigali.
• To exploit a business opportunity presented by the prime location of the project property at the heart of Kigali’s Central Business District coupled with a booming economy that requires the envisaged services
• To make a contribution towards achievement of the Government’s Vision 2020 initiative.
This aims at, among other things, modernizing the Central Business District in order to attract quality investments into Rwanda.

Services


The facilities and services envisaged under KCT are as follows: –

Phase 1: The Public Garage: –

The is a 4-storey car park using split-levels that conform to the natural slope of the site creating eight levels of parking space. Each level elevated from the next by a height difference of +1.50m. It is located at the higher plot area close to the street front. The internal vehicular communication is by two sets of ramps on both ends of the structure. Each set has ascending and descending ramps that rise to a height of 1.5m.
A centrally suited core houses pedestrian vertical communication, sanitary units and installation ducts for all the floors of the building. The vertical circulation includes two elevators and central staircase. The sanitary units include two toilets and a technical room for the installation ducts of each floor. The entry points will be manned by employees of the management company accompanied by security personnel. This is necessary for control and security and collection of parking fees during the entry of vehicles.

A breakdown of the utilization of this surface area is as follows: –
Function Area Surface Area
356 Parking Slots 4,475 M²
CIRCULATIONS and UTILITIES 4,215 M²
TOTAL: 8,690 M²

Phase 2: The Commercial Centre

The commercial centre represents the heart of the entire development and is designed to host different facilities that will operate virtually on a 24-hour basis. The structure comprises five floor levels. The main unit of the centre cascades upwards effectively decreasing the surface area of each additional flow above. The basement level of the building is accessed from the lower street. The small shops facing the street have supply areas at the back approachable by delivery vehicles from the controlled entrance gate. These shops are technically not included in the Commercial Centre unit since they are a separate building structure. In terms of utilization, the Commercial Centre is zoned as hereunder. It is important to mention that the provision for shops at KCT will be carefully selected to offer a diverse shop mix with goods and services ordinarily not available on this side of town. The Centre will cater for all kinds of shopping, from home accessories to gifts.

TOTAL AREA (lettable) 4,606 M² (gross) 7,075 M²

Phase 3: The Office Tower

This is the flagship of the development that gives it character and identity. Indeed, the tower has been touted as a symbol of the future prosperity and development of Rwanda.
The tower is a multi-storied building with the elegant shape of floors giving a unique appearance and devoted expression. A breakdown of the Office Tower by floors is as follows: –

TOTAL AREA (lettable) 4,626 M² (gross) 5,579 M

Contact Us!


5th Floor Tele 10 Building;

P.O. Box 1284 Kigali-Rwanda;

Office Phone: +250-5877-26/30; Fax: +250-587728

General Information : inquiries@kigalicitytower.rbo.rw

Management : management@kigalicitytower.rbo.rw

Engineers : engineers@kigalicitytower.rbo.rw

Boomtown in Kigali

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Kigali is booming.  High-rise buildings are popping up like mushrooms, the kerbs on the dual carriageways are painted and everyone seems to be talking on mobile phones.

I was welcomed by Dr Tony Mudakikwa, a wildlife vet now working at the Rwanda Development Board – the government body which includes tourism and national parks – on the fifth floor of a smart glass and metal office block with a computer on every desk.  At the helm is the dynamic Deputy CEO, Rosette Rugamba, and I sat in on a meeting she had with the Gorilla Organization to discuss some of their projects.

GO has been building water cisterns in schools for years, after surveys put this at the top of a list of community needs;  these were so well received that other NGOs began installing them, but Rosette was concerned about the lack of coordination or overall planning.  Signs were also on her agenda.  Any such projects in developing countries come with a big sign saying what it is, where it is and who funded it, usually in acronyms and logos.  Rosette felt these signs were a missed opportunity, “Why can’t they all carry a simple message beneath a picture of a gorilla – ‘Helping us to protect our forest’?” she asked.

It seems such an obvious idea – people queue up to fill water containers so what an ideal opportunity to offer a bit of conservation awareness. For me, though, the most exciting outcome of the meeting was the confirmation that there was a gorilla permit available the following day.  An early night was called for because to be at the Volcanoes Park HQ in Kinigi at 7.00am, I’d have to be up at 4.45am!

Crossing Lake Kivu

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These past few days since my last blog have been an extraordinary journey, not just geographically but between the extremes of human nature – great joy and inspiration contrasting with harrowing stories of our species’ ability to inflict great suffering.  Email access has been intermittent and time short, but let me bring you up to date day by day:

15th – Lake Kivu is a beautiful lake, dotted with islands and dug-out canoes.  Crossing it on the deck of a high-speed ferry is a delightful experience on a fine day.   Inside, the passenger cabin has rows of comfortable seats on either side of a central aisle and a wide-screen TV which usually shows videos.  Unfortunately the DVD player had malfunctioned so we had to make our own entertainment (reviewing rushes with the Australian Network 7 crew).  This was a particular disappointment to me because the videos most often shown nowadays are documentaries provided by the Great Apes Film Initiative (http://www.gafi4apes.org) in association with the Gorilla Organization (GO).

GAFI aims to rectify the iniquitous fact that films made about wildlife by TV companies in UK, Europe, America and Japan are unaffordable to most TV stations in the developing world where so many of those documentaries are made.  Thus, the average man, woman or child in the street in UK or USA knows more about gorillas than their counterparts in Africa.  GAFI has begun to rectify that by negotiating broadcast rights for films about great apes on TV stations in great ape range states.  And with the help of partner NGOs, also organises public screenings and provides a library of such films to education centres.

The screenings on the Lake Kivu ferries have been a great success, educating all those able to afford the $50 fare (politicians, aid workers, businessmen and -women) about the importance of conserving Congo’s forest eco-systems.  As the steward served drinks and sandwiches, I asked if he had the GAFI films and he immediately opened the cupboard under the screen to show me the BBC’s award-winning three-part series on the Congo basin.  Shame the DVD player was broken today…

As we pulled up to the Goma jetty, I was met by Tuver Wundi, a journalist who works with GO;  we did a quick YoG interview with Captain Amisi about the GAFI films (sorry, video uploading not yet sorted, so plan B is to send DVDs to colleagues at the Convention on Migratory Species – thank you, Gentle Reader, for  your patience.  If that fails, I guess I’ll try tying them to the leg of a pigeon!!).   Tuver bounced me to the border on the back of his trail bike, negotiating volcanic rocks and the famous lava flow through the middle of the town, to meet Jillian Miller, GO CEO. She was waiting in line at the DRC border-post, crossing into Rwanda, after showing a BBC World team a GO project that had been nominated for an award (see http://www.gorillas.org/worldchallenge09 ).

Before I crossed, however, I wanted to visit the GO Resource Centre and interview some Goma conservationists about the Year of the Gorilla.  I rang Pierre Peron, a former Ape Alliance volunteer now working for ICCN, the Congolese Wildlife Dept, and received some shocking news.  The previous day, a patrol of Virunga Park rangers had come across some hippo poachers near Lake Edward.   The poachers had opened fire and in the ensuing fire-fight, one ranger had been killed.  Without doubt, the rangers patrolling DRC parks are among the most courageous protectors of Nature on the planet.  Senior staff were understandably busy dealing with the aftermath and unavailable for a YoG interview, so I talked to my old friend Vital Katembo and the GO team instead, before crossing into Rwanda to meet up with the Australians again.