Elias Hakizimana

Niyigena Radjabu

Niyigena Radjabu is a professional Rwandan journalist with three years of experience in the media industry, specializing in investigative reporting on public affairs and Rwanda-related topics. He currently works as a journalist for Umunota.com, one of Rwanda’s leading digital news platforms.

President Paul Kagame has congratulated Ismaïl Omar Guelleh on his re-election, reaffirming Rwanda’s commitment to deepening bilateral cooperation.
Beatha Muteteri, a survivor of the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi in Nyanza ya Kicukiro, has shared a chilling account of the atrocities she witnessed, including the killing of her mother and her own narrow escape after a machete attack.
Rwanda is leveraging its participation in the World of Coffee San Diego exhibition in California, United States, to deepen market access and elevate the global profile of its specialty coffee.
April 11, 1994 remains one of the darkest and most defining days of the Genocide against the Tutsi, marked by the withdrawal of Belgian UN peacekeepers from ETO Kicukiro, where thousands of Tutsi had sought protection—an action that preceded one of the deadliest massacres in Kigali.
A Congolese journalist, Daniel Michombero, has come under heavy criticism and online ridicule after mistakenly identifying Rwandan singer Yampano as a senior official within the AFC/M23 alliance.
The President of the Democratic Green Party of Rwanda and spokesperson of the Forum of Political Organizations, Dr. Frank Habineza, has dismissed claims that the RPF-Inkotanyi suppresses political parties, describing them as undermining Rwanda’s image.
Rwanda has reaffirmed its commitment to tracking and prosecuting individuals suspected of taking part in the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi who continue to live freely in foreign countries.
On April 10, 1994, the Genocide against the Tutsi entered a more organised and widespread phase, as coordinated killings escalated across several former prefectures, including Kigali Ngari, Gikongoro, Gisenyi, Byumba, Kibungo and Cyangugu.
The Investigating Chamber of the Paris Court of Appeal in Paris has ruled that former Rwandan army officer Lt Col Cyprien Kayumba will stand trial in France over alleged involvement in the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi.
Rwanda’s Minister of National Unity and Civic Engagement, Dr. Jean Damascène Bizimana, has strongly condemned Patrick Muyaya, spokesperson for the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) government, for publicly labeling Tutsis as “killers” and attempting to downplay his remarks afterward.