More than just crafts

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The beautifully laid crafts display a unique view of Rwandan culture, right from the baskets to bracelets, arm bands, bags paintings, woodcarvings and mats.

It is a sense of art that will come into your mind as you see these creations but as you look closely, you will notice that it is more than just crafts.

A display of Rwandan – made products in one of Agaseke Crafts shops in downtown Kigali. The New Times / Andrew Israel Kazibwe

Marie Florence Naweniwe, a sales representative at Agaseke Crafts shops in Kigali City centre, located opposite the Commercial Bank of Rwanda (BCR), tells us more of what is behind the exhibition in this shop.

Naweniwe explains that for years now, ‘Agaseke’ project has been growing, and it currently has sixteen cooperatives in various centers of the country.

The project was an inspiration of the ‘IMBUTO ‘ Foundation  and Kigali  City leaders in a bid to bring girls and women together, in something productive, not only to themselves but to the country too, since many were unemployed  after the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi.

They were brought together and first trained how to weave baskets, traditionally known as Agaseke out of sisal, grass and raffia. The skillfully woven basket in its design displays and represents the Rwandan culture and tradition.

The project has not only united women, but also created employment for many as now they can make their own items earn money.

Q: What kind of  people buy your products?
A: Most of our clients are foreigners. They buy our items and take them to their countries as souvenir from Rwanda.

Q: Do they like locally made products?
A: Yes, they do like them so much because they are unique, original and skillfully designed with a great display of the Rwandan culture.

Q: What are your future prospects?
A:  Since there is still market for our items, and they are appreciated by customers, we hope to continue displaying Rwandan culture through this because we do not want it to be forgotten.

Q: Any advice to people out there?
A: Making these items is a way of promoting our culture. So buying them is to support and promote Rwandan culture.

By Andrew Israel Kazibwe, The New Times

Ruhumuriza impresses in trial race

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Four time tour of Rwanda champion Abraham Ruhumuriza

Four-time Tour of Rwanda champion Abraham Ruhumuriza was on song as he swept yesterday’s 177km race in the Northern Province.

Ruhumuriza together with Hadi Janvier, Nicodem Habiyambere, Gasore Hategeka, Emmanuel Rudahunga and Joseph Biziyaremye all used three hours and 21 seconds from Musanze to Muhanga.

Jean de Dieu Uwimana, Hassan Rukundo and Samuel Biziyaremye followed in seventh place after clocking 3hours and 24 seconds.

Obed Ruvogera and Innocent Uwamungu were four seconds off the pace while Jean Bosco Nsengiyumva and Jean Bosco Ngiruwonsanga finished joint-eleventh after using 3 hours and 27 seconds.

Other riders included Emile Bintunimana (3 hours and 29 seconds), David Nkurunziza (3 hours and 31 seconds) and Jacques Mbarushimana (3 hours and 33 seconds).

The race is part of Team Rwanda’s build-up to the Tour of Morocco which is slated for March 23-April 1 in Casablanca.

Since 2006, it counts as the second round on the UCI Africa Tour.

By Bonnie Mugabe, The New Times

Kagame meets Rwandan community in Uganda

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President Kagame greeting members of the Rwandan community in Uganda yesterday.

President Paul Kagame has called on Rwandans wherever they live to desist from divisionism and work towards earning dignity for themselves and the countries they live in.

The President made the remarks yesterday while addressing over 3,000 members of the Banyarwanda community and Friends of Rwanda living in Uganda.

The colourful ceremony began with a cultural performance from Ingenzi troupe, with the lively audience chanting patriotic songs.

Kagame told the community that even with Africa’s high level of poverty, countries on the continent still have differences that have undermined unity and deprived the people of a dignified life.

He cited an example of China, saying that Chinese who live in America work for the good of America, but that doesn’t stop them from working for the good of their country of origin.

President Kagame criticized those who study history but never learn any lessons from it, emphasizing that it is divisionism that led to the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsis.

Dr Higiro Semajege, who spoke on behalf of the community, commended the President for restoring the dignity and the rule of law, thereby putting the country on the world map.

The audience, that comprised entrepreneurs, students and friends of Rwanda, interacted with the President through a question and answer session.

The President was in Uganda for a three-day State Visit that ended yesterday.

Kagame and his Ugandan counterpart, Yoweri Museveni, reiterated the commitment to further improve relations between the two countries.

Ministers from both countries signed several  MoUs in various areas of cooperation.

By Gashegu Muramira, The New Times

Syria violence kills 37, U.N. Security Council to meet

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AMMAN (Reuters) – Security forces killed 37 people in Syriaon Friday, activists and residents said, as people in Homs mourned 14 members of a family they said were slain by militiamen in one of the worst sectarian attacks in a revolt against President Bashar al-Assad.

A Syrian soldier from the Free Syrian Army secures a street as he takes position behind sandbags, in Saqba, Damascus suburbs January 27, 2012. Credit: Reuters/ Ahmed Jadallah

The U.N. Security Council was to meet later in the day to discuss Syria before a possible vote next week on a new Western-Arab draft resolution aimed at halting 10 months of bloodshed.

Russia, which joined China in vetoing a previous Western draft resolution in October and which has since promoted its own draft, said the Western-Arab version was unacceptable and vowed to block any text calling for Assad’s resignation.

There was no let-up in violence on Friday, when anti-Assad protests again erupted after weekly Muslim prayers.

Tank and mortar fire killed 15 people in Hama, a resident said, on the fourth day of an army assault on rebellious districts of the city, where Assad’s father crushed an armed Islamist uprising in 1982, killing many thousands.

The opposition Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported 22 people killed elsewhere in Syria, including 12 when security forces fired on a funeral march in the southern town of Nowa, five in the normally peaceful city of Aleppo, and four in Homs.

Machinegun fire wounded five people in the Qusour district of Homs, one activist there said, adding that the city was calmer than it was at the height of Thursday’s violence, when 16 people were also killed by mortar fire from security forces.

The state news agency SANA said “terrorists” killed a security man in Homs on Friday and a bomb killed a child and wounded several civilians and security personnel in the Damascus district of Midan.

SANA also said a bomb wounded three civilians and three security men in the northeastern town of Albukamal and that a suicide bomber had wounded two security men at a checkpoint in the northwestern province of Idlib.

Arab League observers headed for the Damascus suburb of Douma, where government troops battled rebel fighters the previous day as the struggle to topple Assad rumbled close to the Syrian capital.

TRANSITION PLAN

The Arab League has demanded that the Syrian leader step down as part of a transition to democracy, a call rejected by Damascus. The government says it is fighting foreign-backed armed “terrorists” who have killed 2,000 soldiers and police.

“Any decision about a future political settlement in Syria must be made during the political process without … preliminary conditions,” Interfax news agency quoted Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Gennady Gatilov as saying.

He stopped short of saying Moscow would veto a Western-Arab draft if the call for Assad to hand over power was not removed.

The text calls for a “political transition,” but not for United Nations sanctions against Assad’s government, which Moscow, an old ally and arms supplier of Syria, opposes.

Russia and Iran are among Syria’s few remaining allies.

In another sign of Assad’s isolation, Hamas leader Khaled Meshaal has effectively abandoned his headquarters in Damascus, diplomatic and intelligence sources said.

“He’s not going back to Syria,” a regional intelligence source said of Meshaal, who has long been based in the Syrian capital. He heads the Palestinian Islamist group which rules Gaza and is an armed offshoot of the Muslim Brotherhood.

Analysts say Meshaal was embarrassed by Assad’s crackdown, in which more than 5,000 people have been killed, many of them Sunni Muslim sympathisers of the Muslim Brotherhood.

Homs, a mostly Sunni city with minority Alawite enclaves, has become a battleground since protests against Assad began in March, inspired by pro-democracy revolts elsewhere in the Arab world. Armed rebels have joined the fray in recent months.

GRISLY FOOTAGE

Residents and activists said militiamen from Assad’s Alawite sect had shot or hacked to death 14 members of the Sunni Bahader family in Homs’s Karm al-Zaitoun district on Thursday, including eight children, aged eight months to nine years old.

YouTube video footage taken by activists, which could not be verified, showed the bodies of five children with wounds to the head and neck, three women and a man in a house.

There was no comment from Syrian authorities, which enforce tight restrictions on independent media.

At least 384 children have been killed since the uprising began in March and a similar number have been jailed, the U.N. Children’s Fund (UNICEF) said on Friday.

The British-based Observatory said 43 civilians were killed on Thursday, including 33 in Homs, of whom nine were children.

Hamza, an activist in Homs, said the militiamen who attacked the Sunni family were avenging deaths inflicted on their ranks by army defectors loosely grouped in the rebel Free Syrian Army.

Tit-for-tat sectarian killings began in Homs four months ago. Assad’s Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shi’ite Islam, has dominated the political and security apparatus in Syria, a mostly Sunni nation of 23 million, for five decades.

“The Assads are the dirtiest of families,” shouted crowds in Deir Balba, on the edge of Homs, according to a YouTube clip that showed people waving pre-Baath party Syrian flags.

In the city’s Bab Amro district, demonstrators carried the body of a youth who had been shot in the head. “Bashar, your mother will bury you,” they chanted, YouTube footage showed.

It was not possible to verify the footage, which anti-Assad campaigners had posted on the Internet.

The opposition Local Coordination Committees said security forces had fired on an anti-Assad protest by refugees from the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights who live in Thiabieh near Damascus. It said several protesters were wounded.

Activists in the Damascus suburb of Irbin said 15,000 people had turned out to demonstrate against Assad.

Several thousand also gathered in the rain in the ancient, eastern desert town of Palmyra, clapping to anti-Assad anthems. “Bashar, God is greater (than you)!” they sang.

By Khaled Yacoub Oweis, Reuters

Libyan commander says will retake Bani Walid

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SADADA, Libya (Reuters) – A militia commander whose troops were driven out of the Libyan tribal stronghold of Bani Walid this week said on Friday that his forces were massing to recapture the town but were holding back at the government’s request.

A bullet-riddled barracks is seen after an attack by armed Gaddafi loyalists at the headquarters of the May 28 Brigade in Bani Walid, a town about 200 km (120 miles) from Tripoli, in this still image taken from video January 24, 2012. A bullet-scarred barracks, scorched and abandoned like the ageing tanks guarding its shattered gateway, was all that remained on Tuesday of what passed for the Libyan government’s grip on Bani Walid. Credit: Reuters/via Reuters TV

“It is our right to reenter Bani Walid and nobody can prevent us,” Imbarak al-Futmani said in an interview with Reuters at his desert camp near Sadada, 30 miles east of Bani Walid.

Futmani’s troops were pushed out by angry townsmen who he accuses of being the remnants of loyalists of Muammar Gaddafi, the former dictator who was overthrown then captured and killed in October.

Eight hundred of his men were now massed along the eastern flank of the town awaiting his orders to enter by force, said the elderly warrior, who was dressed in an ornate black and gold waistcoast, a skullcap and a white blanket over his shoulder.

Bani Walid, 90 miles south of Tripoli, was one of the last towns to surrender to the anti-Gaddafi rebellion last year.

Hundreds of fighters loyal to the interim government have surrounded the isolated town after hearing word that a pro-Gaddafi uprising had broken out.

Futmani said he faced a couple of hundred “criminals” nostalgic for Gaddafi’s time in power, rather than large battalions of organized loyalists.

“We have all the revolutionary fighters with us and we can take Bani Walid in a matter of hours.”

“If they don’t hand themselves in, they will face what they cannot imagine,” he added, his eyes hidden by thick-rimmed, amber Ray-Ban sunglasses.

GADDAFI SUPPORT ALLEGATIONS

On Monday, armed residents surrounded Futmani’s brigade, who named themselves the “28th of May,” after the date last year when Gaddafi loyalists executed a number of pro-democracy protesters in Bani Walid.

After a battle in which Futmani lost six fighters, his men fled the barracks in the dark of the night.

“Once the Gaddafis broke through the gate and entered the barracks, all they cared about was stealing our tanks. We just walked right out,” said one of Futmani’s men.

Echoing complaints by residents that the 28th of May Brigade had been harassing people and abusing prisoners, the town elders said they were dismissing the government-backed local council on which Futmani sits and appointing their own local government.

They said they were not Gaddafi supporters but just tired of the militia pushing its weight around their town.

Futmani says the elders profited from Gaddafi and were trying to reclaim their town from its rightful rulers, the western-backed National Transitional Council (NTC) government.

WAITING ON THE PRIME MINISTER

With hundreds of fighters waiting at the gates of Bani Walid, drinking tea and oiling their weapons in the cold desert, why have they have not pushed forward?

Sitting in his base, a former Gaddafi holiday mansion on the top of a rocky hill, Futmani said the prime minister had asked him to hold off to allow civilians to leave the town and, hopefully, for the assailants to surrender.

“The prime minister called me and asked me not to move and I accepted,” he said.

“(Prime minister Abdel Rahim) El Keib promised that the government would use force to maintain security, if necessary.”

Troops from the nascent National Army, composed of revolutionary fighters who have signed up to the government force, had joined the militias around Bani Walid.

The NTC has been unable to fully establish control over armed revolutionary groups in Libya and has only incorporated a few brigades into a national security force. All of the militias claim loyalty to the government but most are still unwilling to disarm. Instead, they adopt a wait-and-see approach to who comes to power, and if they like them.

Futmani’s men cruise around the base in dirty pick-up trucks with machineguns mounted on the back.

He is skeptical of any peaceful solution and saw more violence ahead.

“These pro-Gaddafis, they see us a rats, like Gaddafi did,” he said. “They are murderers and criminals, they will never integrate into the new Libya because they know they will face justice now.”

By Oliver Holmes and Taha Zargoun, Reuters

India Travel Guide – A Great Source of Information About Places in India

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What is the best touring company to 25 yr the old woman for a short stay?

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Joanna183 Question : What is the best touring company to 25 yr the old woman a break
I recently went to Morocco Explorer, but it was quite a group of “mature” – there are tour companies, where people are a little closer to my age? Thanks in advance! Best Answer:
Response Melaka

Lotus
might want to try and source of down to watch them.

Know better? Leave your answer in comments!

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CHRIS BROWN TATTOOS GIRLFRIEND’S FACE ON ARM

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Will his relationship with Karrueche Tran last as long as the tatt?

Celebrity News, Style, Rihanna, Fashion, Chris Brown,Karrueche Tran, tattoo

Chris Brown just made a bold move to prove how serious he is about his relationship with girlfriend Karrueche Tran (who he’s been dating for several months) by tattooing her face on his arm. The new ink, based on a photo of Tran’s face covered with paint and tousled wet hair, appears by his elbow on his left arm nestled in a sea of other tattoos.

What do you think about Breezy’s declaration of love? Do you think it was the right move? Would you do the same for your significant other? Sound off in the comments!

Be the first to like this post.

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UN official surveys typhoon damage in the Philippines

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Margareta Wahlstr?m, Assistant Secretary-General for Disaster Risk Reduction. UN Photo/JC McIlwaine

The head of the United Nations office dedicated to disaster risk reduction wrapped up her visit to the Philippines today by comparing the damage caused by Typhoon Sendong to that of major tsunamis such as the one that struck Japan last year.

Typhoon Sendong claimed 1,430 lives after it struck in the middle of the night on 16 December, making it the second most deadly disaster of the last 12 months, according to a news release issued by the UN International Strategy for Disaster Reduction (UNISDR).

The Philippines topped the disaster league table last year with 33 major reported events, affecting 12.5 per cent of the population, added the office, whose chief, Margareta Wahlstr?m, visited the typhoon-devastated coastal cities of Iligan and Cayagan de Oro in Mindanao this week.

?What I have seen in Kalakala in Cagayan de Oro reminds me of the impacts made by major tsunamis such as the one which hit Japan last year or the Indian Ocean tsunami in 2004. In Kalakala you really feel the magnitude of the disaster and the force of the water which took so many lives, uprooted trees and swept away houses,? she told Foreign Minister Albert F. Del Rosario today.

Ms. Wahlstr?m, the Secretary General?s Special Representative for Disaster Risk Reduction, and the Foreign Minister discussed the need for social mobilization to be linked to early flood warnings to ensure timely evacuations.

They also discussed the combination of environmental factors which contributed to the disaster, including illegal logging; the need to develop risk-sensitive comprehensive land use plans; and the need for greater cooperation between the public and private sectors to reduce risk.

?The Philippines has a very sophisticated disaster response system and it has the capacity to be a world leader in disaster risk reduction,? said Ms. Wahlstr?m, who met with representatives of UN agencies, non-governmental organizations (NGOs), churches and 20 local mayors during her visit.

?I am confident the Government will act on the lessons learned from Typhoon Sendong to ensure better coordination and improved dissemination of early warnings as well as implementing existing legislation on land use and deforestation,? she added. ?The UN system will be fully engaged in helping the country in the recovery phase.?

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Italy must urgently act to end violence against women, UN rights expert says

Rashida Manjoo, Special Rapporteur on violence against women. UN Photo/Jean-Marc Ferr?Italy must do more to protect women from violence and urgently address the underlying structural causes of gender inequality and discrimination, an independent United Nations human rights expert warned after visiting the country.

Rashida Manjoo, the UN Special Rapporteur on violence against women, its causes and consequences, wrapped up a 12-day visit to the Mediterranean country during which she focused on instances of violence against women in four specific areas ? the home, the community, violence perpetrated or condoned by the state, and violence in the transnational context.

During the visit, Ms. Manjoo met survivors of domestic violence in various anti-violence shelters located in the country?s major cities, such as Rome, Milan, Bologna and Naples. Her trip also included stops in camps for Roma and Sinti communities as well as detention centres for irregular migrants.

?Most manifestations of violence are under-reported in the context of a family-oriented and patriarchal society where domestic violence is not always perceived as a crime, there is economic dependency, and there are perceptions that the state response to such complaints will not be appropriate or helpful,? Ms. Manjoo noted.

She also added that a fragmented legal framework, inadequate investigation of and punishment for perpetrators, and poor compensation for women victims of violence, also contributes to the silencing and invisibility surrounding this issue as do systemic, structural inequalities and discrimination which ultimately facilitate violence against women.

Despite the multiple forms of violence and discrimination faced by minority women in both private and public sectors, Ms. Manjoo emphasized that Italy retains a vast amount of expertise regarding the provision of legal, social, psychological and economic assistance to women victims of violence and that such a framework should not be lost in the tenuous economic climate.

?I call on all relevant stakeholders to take on the responsibility at this crucial time to promote human rights for all, and most importantly, to keep the issue of violence against women on the national agenda,? said Ms. Manjoo.

The expert will present the findings of her mission to Italy at the June 2012 session of the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva, Switzerland.

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