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Top diplomat shows the proud face of Rwanda

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Louise Mushikiwabo has managed to convey to the world that Rwanda is a country in the fast lane on development matters. Photo/FILE

Louise Mushikiwabo has managed to convey to the world that Rwanda is a country in the fast lane on development matters. Photo/FILE 

By MARK AGUTU
Posted  Saturday, March 20  2010 at  21:00

In Summary

  • As the Foreign Affairs minister, Mushikiwabo goes far beyond the normal call of duty

Foreign Affairs ministers are, by dint of their job requirements, top diplomats of their respective countries.

They are expected to articulate the interests of their countries at the regional and global level and, while at it, strive to project a positive image abroad.

However, Louise Mushikiwabo, the Rwandan Foreign Affairs minister, sees her role as going beyond the normal call of duty.

Serving her government and the people of Rwanda is a job to which she says she gives more than her best, alluding to her country’s recent painful past.

“I believe in my country. This is a job I took willingly, and I am only too aware that it requires much more than I thought,” she told the Sunday Nation in an interview.

She radiated dedication as she spoke on diverse issues: the people, democracy, media operations and life in Rwanda in general as she spoke on the sidelines of the just-concluded Pan Africa Media Conference, where both she and President Paul Kagame readily answered questions about their country.

“My duty is to speak about this. In Rwanda, we have nothing to hide,” she said in the interview during the two-day conference, the centrepiece of the 50th anniversary celebrations of the Nation Media Group at the Kenyatta International Conference Centre in Nairobi.

Interestingly, Ms Mushikiwabo does not belong to President Kagame’s political party, the Rwandan Patriotic Front. She successfully ran for parliament as an independent candidate in the country’s last general election.

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Upon her victory, she was first appointed Information minister. Later she moved to the more crucial position of Foreign Affairs minister, an influential position held by only a handful of women in the world, the best known being America’s Hillary Clinton.

Ms Mushikiwabo has lived and worked in the United States as a public relations consultant for 20 years, which may have influenced her appointment.

For someone who has been in her position for only two years, Ms Mushikiwabo has managed to convey to the world that Rwanda is a country in the fast lane on development matters.

She never hesitated to defend her government’s democratic record in the face of tough questions and accusations, including claims that President Kagame’s government was a “benevolent dictatorship’’.

“There is no political repression in Rwanda. Rwanda is led by men and women who have done so much for their country.

“This is a country that, for 16 years, has been faced with a very difficult situation, and the ruling party has shown it has a different way of doing things for the sake of its people,” she said.

Rwanda, she says, has learnt to focus on meeting the needs of its citizens and giving them a reason to be proud of their country.

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