Friday, July 24, 2009

The Road to Kigali- My African Journey Part 1

Out of Texas for 6 weeks, I spent the half of my summer semester in two African countries- Rwanda and my home country Nigeria- working with One Laptop per Child ( a Cambridge, Massachusetts based Non Governmental Organization). While in Rwanda, I saw first hand the evil acts of genocide on a weekend visit to Kigali Memorial Center, erected in remembrance of the 3 months civil war and killings that ravaged the country in the summer of 1994. However, I also saw the dedication on the part of the people and government of Rwanda to rebuild their country.
My immediate experience could be summarized in the writings of one of my favorite columnist- Dr Reuben Abati- titled " The Road to Kigali", hope you find his writings interesting and hope to share other interesting piece from my trip with you as soon as I 'get off' the jet lag and adjust to Texas 100 degree temperature:

I have just returned from Rwanda: a post-conflict society in transition, and I am angry with Nigeria. Fourteen years ago, Rwanda, former Belgian colony was a killing field; in the night of April 6, 1994 alone, about 800, 000 Rwandese: men, women children were killed in one of the worst genocides in recent history. Blood flowed freely on the streets of Kigali and other parts of the country. But today there is no trace of war on the streets of Rwanda except perhaps outside Kigali and may be on the walls of the parliament building at Ministeri, with bullet holes which have deliberately been left as reminders of that country's encounter with the beast in human nature.

The Rwandese have been able to hide the scars of war, and build a new society that works. Twenty nine years after its own civil war, Nigeria has refused to function. It carries on as if it is still in a state of war. Nigeria is a perfect example of a failed post-conflict society, the difference between it and Rwanda is to be sought in the arena of leadership. The Hotel des Mille Collines where I stayed and all the roads leading to it and virtually every other section of Kigali from Kacyiru to Remera, to Gachuriro to Nyatarama to Nyamirando, Kimironko, Kimiurura and Kibagabaga were major battlegrounds, they were all littered with bodies that were later eaten up by dogs: broken dreams and lives. But today, the nation of a thousand hills has cleaned up the mess of war.

Hotel des Milles Collines, the same hotel in the famous film Hotel Rwanda, is undergoing renovation, its notorious swimming pool which stranded citizens turned into a source of drinking water during the war, is boarded off, across the city, there is so much serenity. A Ministry of Public Infrastructure ensures that basic necessities that constitute a source of agony in Nigeria, serve as true evidence of how well Rwanda has been able to confront its problems. There are no potholes on the roads, electricity supply is taken for granted, 24/7 all year-round, there is pipe borne water. The whole city is littered with trees and in both poor and rich neighbourhoods, there is a sense of human dignity, The use of polythene nylon is forbidden in Rwanda, and so there are no pure water sachets littering the streets. The city is so squeaky clean it is embarrassing. I looked for the mountains of dirt that dot the Nigerian landscape, I could only see heights and valleys and a disciplined and safe society where people can walk about in the dead of the night and not fear any attack. I looked forward to power outage but that did not happen. Even the market at Kimironko is so organized I dare not compare it with any of the mad quarters we call markets in Nigerian towns and cities. The rich neighbourhoods of Gachuriro and Nyaratarama are so well laid out, they make many of Nigeria's rich neighbourhoods look like slums.

And yet this is in a landlocked country of 9 million people who after independence in 1959 began to play the politics of hate that would lead to a sad explosion on April 6, 1994 shortly after the plane carrying then President Juvenal Habyarimana crashed. Habyarimana was a Hutu.

In Rwanda before 1994, ethnic identity determined citizenship rights and privileges. The Belgian colonizers had found it convenient to divide these people who speak the same language and who used to see themselves as one people with different social classes. Social classes of old were soon turned into ethnic groups by the colonizer, and by favouring one group against the other, old ties were gradually destroyed. Rwanda became atomized among the Hutu (75%), the Tutsi (24%) and the Twa (1 %). The Belgians favoured the Tutsi whom they considered more intelligent, and at independence they more or less handed over power and privileges and a superior status to the Tutsi. The ground for future implosion had been prepared. The Hutu revolution began early in 1959.

By 1990 the wave of ethnic Hutu nationalism and resentment had grown as the Hutu elite and the poor began to refer to the Tutsi as cockroaches that must be exterminated. The Ten Commandments of Hutu as articulated is one of the worst declarations of organised hate in human history. The death of Habyarimana, the second Hutu President eventually set the dogs of war onto the streets. The Tutsis were the main victims, the Hutu plan was to exterminate all of them including children. As the genocide spread, the international community failed to intervene on time. The cost was horrendous.

Twenty nine years after its own civil war, Nigeria is yet to recover. Rwanda is still mired in the febrile politics of the Great Lakes region but it has made much better effort at dealing with citizenship and identity questions at home. The spread of armed robbery in Nigeria is often traced to the civil war, and poverty, but there is no armed robbery in Rwanda, and the poor do not carry weapons against the rich. Public officials are efficient; they do not solicit for bribe. The policemen dress smartly, and they do not harass citizens or visitors with rifles. I looked for policemen without shoes or without caps or with dirty, torn uniforms, I couldn't find any. They have okada in Rwanda too. But every okada man wears a uniform and even the helmets have contact telephone numbers inscribed on them. The motorcycles in Rwanda carry only one passenger at a time, and I did not see any passenger refusing to use the safety helmet, or anyone relieving their bowels by the roadside.

I have heard the argument that the reason Nigerians are difficult and ungovernable is because they live under harsh conditions. In Rwanda Value Added Tax is 18%, PAYE is 30%, rent is between $200 - $300 per month, for a modest three-bedroom house, a sim card (MTN or Rwanda Cell) is 1,000 FRW (N250). But the people obey the law and every evening they troop out to the many bars and restaurants in Kigali to enjoy their Mutzig (tastes like Star) or Primus (tastes like Gulder) Beer. Rwanda is something of a police state. The government does not tolerate corruption, there is a National Office of the Ombudsman which protects national integrity; misdemeanours are harshly punished, and the Tax Office, the Rwanda Revenue Authority (RRA), is super-efficient. Every Rwandese pays tax, and each one of them has a National Identity Card. Nigerians don't like to pay tax. The country's National Identity Card Scheme is the biggest scam of the decade.

Between 120 and 200 Nigerians live in Kigali, including members of the Technical Aid Corps. The average Rwandese love Nigeria. They have seen our movies on Africa Magic and they know Obasanjo as a good friend of their President, Paul Kagame. Nigerian churches are in Rwanda too. The Redeemed Church is in Remera) and Christ Embassy (in Kacyiru). There is Nigeria's Access Bank (arrived March 2008), Ecobank, and IGI which has a major interest in Rwanda insurance sector (35 % of sonarwa sa). The PRO of the Nigerian Community in Rwanda, Mr Joseph Maborukoje says: "the Rwandese love foreigners, particularly Nigerians. It is a wonderful place to live in." He has lived in Rwanda for five years and he manages to speak a little Kirirwanda, the national tongue which is spoken along with French, Swahili, and now English which has been adopted as the national language following Rwanda's decision to join the Commonwealth.

It is ironic that the people of Rwanda love outsiders, for it is precisely the absence of love among them that led to the genocide of the 90s. The Kagame government has since legislated against ethnic division in an attempt to take the country back to its primordial, pre-colonial society. The question: what is your ethnic group? is a forbidden question in that country. The young lady who served as my co-guide bluntly refused to tell me her ethnic group. "I am Rwandese", she repeatedly insisted.

Another lady advised me not to go about asking such a question. Twenty nine years after Nigeria's civil war, its people are still trapped in ethnic empires and the most vicious fights are those involving primordial ethnic sentiments. Rwanda's ethnic differentiation is so easy to decipher by just looking at the people's physiognomy. The Tutsi are mostly slim, tall, with straight noses and tender features, the Hutus have typically African features, broad, squat, with flat noses, the Twa are short, like the pygmies of Congo. The government may have tried to legislate against ethnic identity but I doubt if this can erase the people's deep psychological scars. It is difficult to legislate a people's memory out of existence, under a cloak of officially sanctioned political correctness. Mr Maborukoje keeps a dog as pet, but he says the Rwandese do not have dogs in their homes: "dogs ate up the dead during their war."

Twenty nine years after its civil war, Nigeria has no museum anywhere documenting this important aspect of its national history. The Rwandese have documented their own history through three national museums. I visited the Kigali Memorial Centre, the genocide museum, where through pictures, words, images, concrete signs and mass graves containing 280, 000 unidentified victims, the Rwandese tell the story of their lives and the evil of genocide as a universal concern. The narrative is one-sided, constructed as it is from a Tutsi perspective, but it is nonetheless a hauntingly human story about murder, hate and violence. Through such memorial centres, Rwanda seeks to remember even as it struggles to forget the cost of its colonial heritage. But the large population of orphans, widows, street boys (maibobo), and the poor of the jungle city of Nyamirando (Kigali's Ajegunle) can never ever forget.

This is the major challenge that the Kagame government faces. Will Rwanda's political elite consider Rotational Presidency and a policy of Proportional Representation as they pilot their nation through a season of transition? I left Rwanda feeling despondent. When Nigerians refer to themselves as "the giants of Africa", they should take a second look at the mirror. They should visit other African countries and see how far behind we are. Rwanda proves the point that a society, no matter the problems it faces, can be made to work efficiently, by a committed and enlightened leadership. Nigeria continues to search for such leadership.




Friday, July 3, 2009

We are in the news......

US agency donates 100 laptops to pupils
National News Jul 2, 2009
By Emmanuel Edukugho
The first batch of laptops specifically designed for pupils in the world has arrived in Nigeria.Under a scheme known as one-laptop-per-child (OLPC), the vision of an American, Nicholas Negroponte, who sponsored the production of the laptops to be distributed free to primary school children in developed and developing countries to enhance learning, the first beneficiaries are pupils of Kingdom Heritage Model School, Canaanland, Ota, Ogun State.The no fewer than 100 laptops were commissioned and dedicated at a brief ceremony in the Youth Chapel, Covenant University, Ota, yesterday.
Nigeria is the first country in the West African sub-region to receive the children laptops, which so far are for private schools since the Federal Government cancelled the initiative that would have made public primary schools benefit from the project.
Two representatives of the US-based OLPC, founded by Negroponte, brought the laptops and presented them to the school.
Nigerian-born Miss Ada Inyama and Mr. Sam Ade Jacobs made the presentation at the ceremony attended by pupils, teachers and headteacher of Living Faith Church Worldwide-owned Kingdom Heritage Model School.
Inyama said the laptops are free under a formal arrangement after an institution should have been selected.
According to her, it will cost $200 (N33,000) per unit for parents who may want to buy to defray freight charges and custom dues demanded by the Nigerian government, even when the custom officials were told the items were for school children but still declined to waive payment.
“With one laptop per child, we expect to have full saturation for all the pupils. It can be embraced at national level, like in Rwanda, Uruguay and some other countries where the governments are paying. In Nigeria, it’s a challenge. Somebody has to pay for it.”
She said that with all the activities that the laptop can perform and the softwares, internet connectivity, servers, it is very cheap. “By 2010, the cost may come down to $75.”
Pastor Williams, Chairman of the Local School Board who commissioned and dedicated the laptops to the excitement of the children in primary four who are the first beneficiaries, described the presentation as “a great blessing from God.”
He said that the wisdom of dedication is keeping in God’s hands, what we (people) cannot keep.
“God packaged knowledge in these little things to aid learning,” he said, “children, these are your laptops. They are beautiful. Praise the Lord.”
The delighted and happy school children were asked to come out to have handshake with Ada Inyama and Sam Jacob before taking possession of the laptops.
“Thank you sir and ma,” the children chorused.
Head Teacher, Kingdom Heritage Model School, Deacon Williams Olurinde, told Vanguard after the brief unique ceremony, that he felt happy and honoured, as only three schools out of several others in the country were picked — in Minna, Ibadan and Lagos.
He promised that the laptops will be put to use very well, and properly kept as parents will sign undertaking to ensure safe keeping when they are taken home for assignments.