Rwanda's Masterful Deception

Rwanda's Masterful Deception

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Nadhani maspy wake ndio walimshtua maana ata yeye alitaka kumfyeka jk burundi lkn intelligencea wakagundua game
aaaaaahhhhhhaaaaa, eti anabadilisha nyumba kila siku, kumbe jenerali mzima wa jeshi ni muoga hivyo? Nani alimjuza kuwa mswahili anataka amchukue.

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Slim hatari sana, huyu jamaa hana mfano , angalieni hii video clip . Wapi Mr. Putin, unasemaje kuhusu hii clip ?
 
Slim hatari sana, huyu jamaa hana mfano , angalieni hii video clip . Wapi Mr. Putin, unasemaje kuhusu hii clip ?
Jamani nimeshindwa kua attach video clip , nimeenda kwenye option ya document inaonekana ina attach lakini mwisho zinakataa. Hakuna option ya kuattach Mp4 files. Msaada tafadhali
 
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Rwanda says borders are open, advises citizens against travelling to Uganda

Daniel Mumbere14 hours ago
Rwanda
Rwanda clarifies on ‘border closing’
Rwanda’s state minister for foreign affairs in charge of the East African Community, Oliver Nduhungirehe, on Friday explained the ongoing border standoff between his country and Uganda.

In two tweets posted on his official account, Nduhungirehe clarified that Rwanda’s borders were not closed, adding that Rwandans were however ‘strongly advised not to travel to Uganda’.
Is the border closed?
If it was construction of the road they wouldn't have prevented their people from coming into the country.​
‘‘As explained to many journalists, all Rwanda’s borders are open. Trucks and heavy vehicles are advised to use Kagitumba due to ongoing construction at Gatuna.’‘

Why can’t Rwandans travel to Uganda?
‘‘Rwandans are strongly advised NOT to travel to Uganda due to ongoing arrests, harassment, torture,Incarceration without consular access, deportation etc. This is for their own security.’‘
Can Ugandans travel to Rwanda?
‘‘Ugandans in Rwanda or travelling through Rwanda are safe.’‘
Uganda, Rwanda officials clash on social media
The diplomatic spat between Rwanda and Uganda is being played out on social media as high level officials of the two governments trade accusations over the genesis of the conflict.

Uganda’s government spokesperson Ofwono Opondo and Rwanda’s state minister for foreign affairs, Oliver Nduhungirehe on Friday were involved in a public display of animosity, as the latter accused Uganda of ‘detaining Rwandan nationals incommunicado’.
In his briefing to journalists on Friday, Opondo said Rwandans were being prevented from traveling to Uganda, and trucks from Uganda had been barred from accessing Rwanda via Katuna.

‘‘All vehicles coming from Rwanda enter well into Uganda but it’s the opposite on the Rwandan side. Rwandese aren’t being allowed to travel and enter Uganda but Ugandan nationals are. What is being stopped are only vehicles because of the blockage,’‘ Opondo explained.


Opondo went on to address the issue of whether Uganda is harassing Rwandan nationals, through arbitrary arrests and deportations.
‘‘We would like to send a clear message to Rwanda that there’s no one Uganda is harassing from Rwanda or has in custody,’‘ Opondo said.
To which the Rwandan minister responded by citing 40 Rwandan nationals that he said were ‘‘languishing in Ugandan cells’, adding that ‘‘more than 800 Rwandans who were deported from or refused entry to Uganda since January 2018’‘.

‘’ You can start by the list below and contact our High Commission in Kampala for further information. The families of the detained are getting worried about the fate of their loved ones,’‘ read part of the minister’s tweet.

Uganda raises alarm
Uganda on Thursday called upon authorities in Rwanda not to prevent people from crossing the border at the Southern point of Katuna (Gatuna).
The Ugandan government spokesperson Ofwono Opondo told journalists that since Wednesday 6:00pm (local time), Rwandan authorities had denied entry to both private and public vehicles attempting to cross the border from Uganda.
Opondo also questioned the explanation by Rwanda’s Revenue Authority (RRA) that cargo trucks from Uganda were prevented from crossing the border at Katuna because of a planned upgrade of the border post.

‘‘If it was construction of the road they wouldn’t have prevented their people from coming into the country,’‘ Opondo argued.
Opondo corroborated reports from the border saying as of Thursday morning, Rwandan nationals were no longer being allowed to cross into Uganda.
Opondo however called for calm, saying the Rwandan authorities were being engaged for an amicable solution.
Rwanda’s explanation
In a letter addressed to Uganda’s revenue authorities at the border on Wednesday, RRAexplained that heavy trucks would be diverted to other crossings.

We are considering reducing the traffic of heavy trucks to allow completion of the OSBPinfrastructure,” read the letter signed by Rosine Uwamariya, the Commissioner for Customs at RRA.
“In view of the above, Rwanda Revenue Authority would like to inform you that with effect from 28th February 2019, all heavy trucks carrying goods destined and those transiting via Gatuna shall be temporarily diverted from using Gatuna Border Post to Kagitumba/Mirama Hills border posts,” she added.

Breakdown in relations
Relations between Rwanda and Ugandan have recently become soiled by counter accusations of espionage and engaging in activities to destabilise each other.
Ugandan recently deported several top telecommunications officials including a Rwandan national, accusing them of compromising its national security.
Uganda’s president Yoweri Museveni has repeatedly alluded to foreign agents attempting to destablise the country. Last year, Museveni hosted his counterpart, Rwanda’s Paul Kagame and reduced the deteriorating relations to ‘ a lapse in communication’.

“A number of incidents that are being commented about in the media, many would be properly addressed if only there was better communication. We have phones, we should talk more,” Museveni said.
READ MORE: Museveni prescribes ‘course in telephoning’ to ease Uganda – Rwanda relations
In an exclusive interview with The EastAfrican newspaper earlier this month, Kagame accused Uganda of listening to dissidents who plan to destabilise Rwanda.
‘‘That must be resolved. Because the alternative is not something that we should even be thinking about, or entertaining,” Kagame said, adding that he is confident ‘the matter can be resolved’.
 
[https://www-therwandan-com]Therwandan

Who can win between Uganda and Rwanda at war?


These are the Military Statistics of both Countries;

Population
Uganda: 41 Million
Rwanda: 11 Million

GDP
Uganda: $25.5 Billion
Rwanda: $8.3 Billion

Military Budget:
Uganda: $ 326Million
Rwanda: $93 Million3

Active Personnel:
Uganda: 46,000
Rwanda: 33,000

Tanks
Uganda: 244
Rwanda: 34

Aircraft
Uganda: 53 (13 Fighter Jets, 10 Trainer Jets, 2 utility & surveillance, 28 helicopters)
Rwanda: 21 (All Helicopters)

Reserve
Uganda: 11,000
Rwanda: Unknown

Fit For Service
Uganda: 8.1 Million
Rwanda: 1.6 Million

The factors that are not shown in those statistics include, military experience, ability to sustain a war, etc. The Uganda military (UPDF) is fighting in over five African countries including the volatile Somalia where they have a staggering 4,500 soldier force.

The Rwandan military (RDF) is also a well-organized force considering the fact that the country has just come from a major instability (the 1994 genocide) only two decades ago but Uganda military is better organized.

The question of where the conflict takes place (which country invades) could also be a determining factor. Rwanda is a much smaller country with a small city (Kigali) which works both as the Administrative and financial capital and is only 87KM from the boarder with Uganda (Katuna). If the UPDF were to invade Rwanda, they would definitely make use of the much better air force that Uganda has to first takeout Rwanda’s key infrastructure and military installations in the tiny and hilly Kigali city and then the infantry would move in. The 87KM from the boarder wouldn’t be much hard for an army of 46,000 with better equipment, more experience, more money and more reserves.

Uganda on the other hand, if Rwanda were to invade Uganda, the capital (Kampala) is 426KM (264 miles) from the border with Rwanda. This is the distance that the 33,000 soldiers of the RDF would have to cover before they can run the Uganda capital. Along that 436 Km journey, they would be facing an air force with 8 Russian Sukhoi-Su 30 Fighters/Bombers, 5 MiG-21, and over 28 attack helicopters, 46,000 soldiers, 244 tanks, 11,000 reserves, 8 million military-service-ready-citizens, etc. This would be a hard war to win for Rwanda.

Uganda has another advantage of geography over Rwanda. Most of Rwanda’s imports and exports go through Uganda to and from Mombasa, apart from those shipped by air. During war, Uganda would certainly halt these imports including the crucial ones like fuel. This would definitely complicate things for Rwanda and their ability to sustain the war would reduce.

Rwanda generally is country that punches way above its weight in economy, military and many other aspects but in a war with Uganda Rwanda would almost certainly lose. Uganda beats Rwanda in all key military aspects. More personnel, 9x more tanks, more fighter jets, more helicopters, etc. These factors plus being more experienced, more money, and better geography makes an armed conflict between Uganda and Rwanda very hard for Rwanda. We just hope such a war never happens as these two countries are literally sisters.

That’s my non-military expert analysis.



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Asee
[https://www-therwandan-com]Therwandan

Who can win between Uganda and Rwanda at war?


These are the Military Statistics of both Countries;

Population
Uganda: 41 Million
Rwanda: 11 Million

GDP
Uganda: $25.5 Billion
Rwanda: $8.3 Billion

Military Budget:
Uganda: $ 326Million
Rwanda: $93 Million3

Active Personnel:
Uganda: 46,000
Rwanda: 33,000

Tanks
Uganda: 244
Rwanda: 34

Aircraft
Uganda: 53 (13 Fighter Jets, 10 Trainer Jets, 2 utility & surveillance, 28 helicopters)
Rwanda: 21 (All Helicopters)

Reserve
Uganda: 11,000
Rwanda: Unknown

Fit For Service
Uganda: 8.1 Million
Rwanda: 1.6 Million

The factors that are not shown in those statistics include, military experience, ability to sustain a war, etc. The Uganda military (UPDF) is fighting in over five African countries including the volatile Somalia where they have a staggering 4,500 soldier force.

The Rwandan military (RDF) is also a well-organized force considering the fact that the country has just come from a major instability (the 1994 genocide) only two decades ago but Uganda military is better organized.

The question of where the conflict takes place (which country invades) could also be a determining factor. Rwanda is a much smaller country with a small city (Kigali) which works both as the Administrative and financial capital and is only 87KM from the boarder with Uganda (Katuna). If the UPDF were to invade Rwanda, they would definitely make use of the much better air force that Uganda has to first takeout Rwanda’s key infrastructure and military installations in the tiny and hilly Kigali city and then the infantry would move in. The 87KM from the boarder wouldn’t be much hard for an army of 46,000 with better equipment, more experience, more money and more reserves.

Uganda on the other hand, if Rwanda were to invade Uganda, the capital (Kampala) is 426KM (264 miles) from the border with Rwanda. This is the distance that the 33,000 soldiers of the RDF would have to cover before they can run the Uganda capital. Along that 436 Km journey, they would be facing an air force with 8 Russian Sukhoi-Su 30 Fighters/Bombers, 5 MiG-21, and over 28 attack helicopters, 46,000 soldiers, 244 tanks, 11,000 reserves, 8 million military-service-ready-citizens, etc. This would be a hard war to win for Rwanda.

Uganda has another advantage of geography over Rwanda. Most of Rwanda’s imports and exports go through Uganda to and from Mombasa, apart from those shipped by air. During war, Uganda would certainly halt these imports including the crucial ones like fuel. This would definitely complicate things for Rwanda and their ability to sustain the war would reduce.

Rwanda generally is country that punches way above its weight in economy, military and many other aspects but in a war with Uganda Rwanda would almost certainly lose. Uganda beats Rwanda in all key military aspects. More personnel, 9x more tanks, more fighter jets, more helicopters, etc. These factors plus being more experienced, more money, and better geography makes an armed conflict between Uganda and Rwanda very hard for Rwanda. We just hope such a war never happens as these two countries are literally sisters.

That’s my non-military expert analysis.




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MTC | 101|
 
OPINION: Kagame is behaving like a victim of Schizophrenia and Delusional Disorders

posted onMARCH 20, 2019

[https://kampalapost]

byKAMPALA POST

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By Rwakarubanga Innocent
Schizophrenia is a chronic and severe disorder that affects how a person thinks, feels, and behaves. It also involves intense, anxious or fearful feelings and thoughts often related to persecution, threat, or conspiracy. Schizophrenia can become delusional, when irrational thoughts and beliefs become so fixed that nothing can convince a person that what they think or feel is not true. Symptoms of paranoia and delusional disorders include intense and irrational mistrust or suspicion, which can bring a sense of fear, anger, and betrayal.

Some identifiable beliefs and behaviors of individuals with symptoms of schizophrenia include mistrust, hypervigilance, difficulty with forgiveness, defensive attitude in response to imagined criticism, preoccupation with hidden motives, fear of being deceived or taken advantage of, inability to relax, or are argumentative.

Delusional disorder is characterized by irrational or intense beliefs or suspicions which a person believes to be true. These beliefs may seem outlandish and impossible, bizarre or fit within the realm of what is possible. It can be difficult to treat a person with such illness since symptoms result in increased irritability, emotional guardedness, and possible hostility.
I have been closely following the rather unfortunate ongoing impasse between Rwanda and Uganda with a keen observation to how the leaders of the two East African countries have handled the situation. On the side of Uganda, you see president Museveni exercising a lot of patience and restraint, whereas on the other hand, you see Rwanda’s leader General Paul Kagame handling the matter in a quite disappointing erratic manner. However, this could have a strong tie to how both leaders grew up from when they were children to date most. For purposes of this piece of writing, I shall focus my attention on the person of president Kagame.

It is important to note that president Kagame became a refugee at a very young age and of course it was a traumatic experience for everyone involved. Kagame also by nature is very tall but too tiny which could have been a source of ridicule from his peers. This might have affected his self-esteem therefore, making him have to contend with violence as a way of showing that he is in charge or an equal. It’s no wonder that during the National Resistance Army (NRA) bush war, Kagame’s penchant for extreme violence earned him a nickname of Pilato from fellow combatants.
The death of Rwigyema might have equally triggered extreme defensiveness in Kagame’s psychic especially that he had the same weaknesses of lesser education that had collided Rwigyema against his colleagues on different occasions.

President Kagame was a good friend of Gen Rwigyema but Presiednt Museveni and Gen Salim Saleh showed more preference to Rwigyema which might have affected Kagame who already suffered low esteem hence the unexplained animosity towards the two individuals that are responsible for his raise to presidency in Rwanda.

Recently, I watched Kagame while in Gabiro saying that nobody can bring him to his knees, referring to his decision to close the Ugandan border. I am intrigued to ask if he weren’t on his knees as a refugee in Uganda for over 30 years. After the death of Rwigyema, he was recalled from Command and General Staff College Fort Leavenworth USA by President Museveni to take over Rwanda Patriotic Front (RPF) and experienced NRA commanders were assigned to help him defeat Habyarimana.

It is on record that very many ordinary Rwandans including students left schools to join RPF, one then wonders what he means when he claims that he owes his raise to power in Rwanda to no body. For a man, like Kagame, who defeated Habyarimana because of his adamant refusal to allow Rwandan refugees including Kagame himself to return home claiming that Rwanda was too small to accommodate her citizens, to turn around and create more refugees with his brutalities and refusing those that want to return home claiming Rwanda is politically too small to accommodate her citizens’ views is quite perplexing.
His former ambassador to USA, Mr Theogene Rudasingwa observed thus “General Kagame has fought armies of former Zaire and toppled dictator Mobutu; he installed President Laurent Kabila in DRC; he has fought armies of Angola, Zimbabwe, and Namibia; he has quarreled with Tanzania, Burundi, and South Africa; he has thrown temper tantrums at France, and even to his benefactors; USA and United Kingdom, when they question the assassination of opponents and closure of political space” as if this is not bad enough, he still throws more tantrums at his last sisterly neighbour, Uganda, if this is not acute suicidal schizophrenia, then what is it?

Rwanda is the only country in the world that fears for her citizens’ lives to the extent of physically preventing them from leaving Rwanda against their will yet Rwandans are running in droves to Uganda to escape the open brutality and death at the hands of Directorate of Military Intelligence (DMI) that Kagame supervises himself. You have to feel sorry for people like Gen Kabarebe who is purely Ugandan, he was the one behind the border closure probably because he had to appear overzealous and too loyal to an ever suspicious Kagame. But deep down Gen Kabarebe, knows that a conflict between Uganda and Rwanda would be counterproductive in that Rwandans would most likely take the advantage of getting rid of Kagame.
According to the New Times, a Rwandan government owned newspaper, President Kagame advised a one Mr Rujugiro to clear his overdue taxes in South Africa in order “not to tarnish Rwanda’s good name like that” which is laughable because Rwanda has killed her citizens inside South Africa, one then wonder which of the two scenarios has worse reputational consequences; individual tax evasion or state sponsored murder of dissidents? A person like Rujugiro would be the first to admit that he would rather play hide and seek with tax laws of England and South Africa because he will live another day to pay those disputed taxes than be in his homeland of Rwanda where a President would order his execution on account of tax evasion.

It’s very difficult to advise a schizophrenic person like Kagame, he needs medication instead and Rwandans are too unlucky to come from a refugee status from across the world only to end up as hostages at home at the hands of a maniac who should be in a mental facility instead of state house. The lucky ones have assumed their refugee status again but others have not been that fortunate, many have been killed at home and whenever possible abroad.

If history is anything to learn from, those that love President Kagame would have reflected on the lives and presidency of President Saddam Hussein and Adolf Hitler of German. They somehow tried to develop their countries but their mental disorders denied them the ability to see things with clarity and ended up making blunders that cost them their leaderships and more importantly their lives. If President Kagame freed Rwandans inside, and invited those abroad to come back home, there would be no need for this unfounded fear of his overthrow.

The writer is a law abiding Ugandan of Rwandan origin.



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[https://www-therwandan-com]Therwandan

Kagame Demanded That South Africa Normalizes Relations With Rwanda Or Else

[https://2-gravatar-com] therwda

19 hours ago

[data:image/svg+xml;charset=utf-8,<svg height="490px" width="640px" xmlns="http://www][https://www-therwandan-com]

President Kagame with the South African President Cyril M. Ramaphosa

By David Himbara

Rwanda’s General Paul Kagame gave a revealing interview to South Africa’s newspaper, The Star. The newspaper shared its conversation with Kagame in an article titled ”SA and Rwanda in dirty fallout”, published on March 18, 2019. The Star cites Kagame warning South African President Cyril Ramaphosa of dire consequences if South Africa does not normalize its relations with Rwanda:

”Rwandan President Paul Kagame has thrown down the gauntlet on South Africa and warned that if Pretoria does not rein in its top officials to mend relations between the two counties, there is a risk of a further fallout that could also cause political instability in the Great Lakes region.”

The Star further says that Kagame blames South Africa and Uganda for regional instability because the two countries are linked to Kagame’s political foes exiled in South Africa. In other words, Rwanda’s troubles hhail from South Africa and Uganda.

Regarding the normalization of relations between Rwanda and South Africa, Kagame cannot grasp why Ramaphosa is cooperative while the rest of his government is not. As explained by The Star:

“A frustrated Kagame said although he seemed to enjoy cordial relations with President Cyril Ramaphosa, it appeared that top South African officials were using their control and influence in government systems to block efforts to fix the broken relations between the two countries.”

Kagame is especially upset by the inability of Rwandans to get South African visas in Kigali, Rwanda. “We don’t deny South Africans visas to travel to our country, but the reverse to South Africa is not the same,” Kagame told The Star. Here, Kagame has conveniently forgotten that the centre of what The Star calls ”the dirty diplomatic tussle” are three issues — (1) the 2013 murder of former intelligence chief, Patrick Karegeya, in South Africa; (2) South Africa’s expulsion of Rwandan diplomats and Kagame’s expulsion of six South African diplomats in a tit-for-tat standoff; and (3) the ongoing South African judiciary inquest into Karegeya’s murder in Johannesburg.

Evidently, Kagame imagines that other governments operate as his own dictatorship in which he determines everything. The Rwandan ruler imagines that Ramaphosa singlehandedly can normalize relations with Rwanda. Kagame does not seem to realize that that South Africa is a country of laws and institutions that are not controlled by the head of state. Crucially, Kagame forgets that he is the one who in 2014 expelled six South African diplomats thereby shooting himself. It was not South Africa that closed its visa office in Rwanda. Kagame did.

Categories: Africa

Therwandan




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