First
Lady Jeannette Kagame delivers her remarks on unity and reconciliation,
during Day One of the Global Citizen Forum in Montenegro yesterday.
Courtesy.
“Today, Africans who come to Rwanda receive visas upon arrival, while non-Africans are issued visas with ease, through online services, and based on reciprocal agreements with their respective countries. As a rule, we believe in building bridges with all peoples and cultures, despite, or perhaps because of, a past marked by exclusion for many of us, who grew up in Rwanda or in exile,” she said.
The two-day Global Citizen Forum is being held in the islet of Sveti Stefan in Montenegro.
The forum, which is attended by various global leaders, visionaries and entrepreneurs, is a platform for exchange, to educate, develop and promote Global Citizenship as a way of life.
The First Lady said there is more to be gained at a human and economic level by opening up to others, noting it is the reason Rwanda made a conscious decision to allow dual citizenship, and to advocate for a no-visa policy within Africa.
She also explained why government worked toward repatriation of Rwandan refugees, by establishing socio-economic programmes facilitating their return, ahead of the cessation clause of Rwandan refugee status, set for the end of December 2017.
The First Lady said, after the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi, Rwandans embraced a new mindset, which empowered them with the ability to shape their future.
The Prime Minister of Montenegro, Hon. Dusko Markovic welcomed the gathered guests to the Global Citizen Forum.
“Whereas in the pre-1994 era, Rwanda only saw about 2,500 university graduates through the years; the post-1994 era saw increased concerted efforts between government and civil society, to put in place 46 public and private tertiary education institutions, allowing close to 100,000 students to become university graduates.”
In this new era, she said, the nation also privileged a mindset framed in the country’s broader transformation into an open society, where unnecessary boundaries were dissolved.
The First Lady delivered her remarks to fellow global leaders, as well as entrepreneurs and celebrities attending the forum.
Protecting the populace
The First Lady noted that Rwanda’s terrible past shaped the attitude towards other global conflicts, playing its part in the protection of other threatened populations.
“We have, for instance, welcomed hundreds of thousands of refugees and provided them with access to the same education and health services that our citizens benefit from, as we believe that refugees or not, they are human beings, who deserve nothing less than to be treated with dignity.”
Founder of Global Citizen Forum, Mr Armand Arton delivering his remarks on Global Citizenship 2017.
“Ownership, responsibility and connectedness are as many values that make us good citizens, as they qualify us as good global citizens. In Rwanda, cultural values and tenets underpin the principles of political and economic governance, and guide the formulation of key policies and programmes,” added Mrs Kagame.
First Lady Jeannette Kagame shares a light moment with singer - producer, Akon.
editorial@newtimes.co.rw
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