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.

Rwanda has signed strategic investment agreements with some of Africa’s leading business and hospitality firms, in a move expected to accelerate the country’s ambitions of becoming a regional tourism and investment hub.
May 14, 1994 marked the 38th day of the 100-day Genocide against the Tutsi, as killings continued in different parts of Rwanda under the genocidal regime.
Paul Kagame has called on African leaders to transform external pressure into an opportunity for economic awakening, arguing that the continent must rely less on global powers and instead strengthen its own capacity to generate wealth and influence.
Rwanda generated more than Rwf 14.1 billion from agricultural and livestock exports over a five-day period, according to the National Agricultural Export Development Board (NAEB), underscoring the continued strength of the country’s agro-export sector.
President Paul Kagame on May 13, 2026, received a high-level delegation led by Ahmed Elsewedy, President and Chief Executive Officer of Elsewedy Electric, accompanied by Hossam El Shaer, Chairman of Sunrise Resorts & Cruises.
United Capital Financial Services Rwanda Ltd has been licensed by the Capital Market Authority (CMA) to operate as an investment bank, with the group selecting Rwanda as its East and Central Africa regional headquarters.
The Rwanda Revenue Authority (RRA) has rolled out a new digital system regulating the sale and transfer of vehicles, effectively ending privately drafted agreements in the transfer of cars and motorcycles.
Rwanda continues to face significant challenges in fully capturing death records in its civil registration system, despite steady improvements in recent years, according to the latest report from the National Institute of Statistics of Rwanda (National Institute of Statistics of Rwanda).
May 13, 1994 remains one of the darkest days in the history of the Genocide against the Tutsi, marking the beginning of large-scale massacres targeting thousands of Tutsis who had sought refuge on the hills of Bisesero in the former Kibuye Prefecture.