Crossword clues for rwanda
rwanda
- Its capital is Kigali
- Central African nation
- Burundi neighbor
- Kigali's country
- Where Kigali is
- Setting of Volcanoes National Park
- Neighbor of Burundi
- Land of Hutu and Tutsi
- East African republic
- "Gorillas in the Mist" setting
- Where Dian Fossey did her work
- Site of 1994 genocide
- Site of 1990s genocide
- See 43A
- Land between Uganda and Burundi
- It's south of Uganda
- It borders Burundi
- Hotel hero Rusesabagina's homeland
- Gorilla safari locale
- Country in central Africa
- Cheadle's' "Hotel"
- Central African country about the size of Massachusetts
- Burundi's northern neighbor
- Burundi's neighbor
- "Hotel ___" (2004 film)
- "Gorillas in the Mist" land
- Kigali's land
- Country in 1994 headlines
- Congo neighbor
- Dian Fossey's home
- Country with a Hutu majority
- Landlocked African country
- Land near the Equator
- Landlocked African land
- African country known as the Land of a Thousand Hills
- Country with a gorilla on its 5,000-franc note
- Where primatologist Dian Fossey worked
- Neighbor of Tanzania
- A landlocked republic in central Africa
- Formerly a German colony
- Kigali is its capital
- Country's official staff arrested by troops
- Country golf club admits women!
- Country artist covering washed-out base of wood
- Painter captures something magical in land
- Artist holding stick in country
- African country, capital Kigali
- African nation
- Tanzania neighbor
- Landlocked African nation
- Uganda neighbor
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
African nation, named for indigenous people there, whose word for themselves is of unknown origin.
Wikipedia
Rwanda ( or ; ), officially the Republic of Rwanda (; ), is a sovereign state in central and east Africa and one of the smallest countries on the African mainland. Located a few degrees south of the Equator, Rwanda is bordered by Uganda, Tanzania, Burundi and the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Rwanda is in the African Great Lakes region and is highly elevated; its geography dominated by mountains in the west and savanna to the east, with numerous lakes throughout the country. The climate is temperate to subtropical, with two rainy seasons and two dry seasons each year.
The population is young and predominantly rural, with a density among the highest in Africa. Rwandans are drawn from just one cultural and linguistic group, the Banyarwanda, although within this group there are three subgroups: the Hutu, Tutsi and Twa. The Twa are a forest-dwelling pygmy people descended from Rwanda's earliest inhabitants. Scholars disagree on the origins of and differences between the Hutu and Tutsi; some believe differences are derived from former social castes within a single people, while others believe the Hutu and Tutsi arrived in the country separately, and from different locations. Christianity is the largest religion in the country; the principal language is Kinyarwanda, spoken by most Rwandans, with English and French serving as official languages. Rwanda has a presidential system of government. The president is Paul Kagame of the Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF), who took office in 2000. Rwanda today has low corruption compared with neighbouring countries, although human rights organisations report suppression of opposition groups, intimidation and restrictions on freedom of speech; the government says it's protecting its country as any other government may do in its situation. The country has been governed by an ordered administrative hierarchy since pre-colonial times; there are five provinces delineated by borders drawn in 2006. Rwanda is one of only two countries with a female majority in the national parliament.
Hunter gatherers settled the territory in the stone and iron ages, followed later by Bantu peoples. The population coalesced first into clans and then into kingdoms. The Kingdom of Rwanda dominated from the mid-eighteenth century, with the Tutsi kings conquering others militarily, centralising power, and later enacting anti-Hutu policies. Germany colonised Rwanda in 1884 as part of German East Africa, followed by Belgium, which invaded in 1916 during World War I. Both European nations ruled through the kings and perpetuated a pro-Tutsi policy. The Hutu population revolted in 1959. They massacred numerous Tutsi and ultimately established an independent, Hutu-dominated state in 1962. The Tutsi-led Rwandan Patriotic Front launched a civil war in 1990. Social tensions erupted in the 1994 genocide, in which Hutu extremists killed an estimated 500,000 to 1.3 million Tutsi and moderate Hutu. The RPF ended the genocide with a military victory.
Rwanda's economy suffered heavily during the 1994 Rwandan Genocide, but has since strengthened. The economy is based mostly on subsistence agriculture. Coffee and tea are the major cash crops for export. Tourism is a fast-growing sector and is now the country's leading foreign exchange earner. Rwanda is one of only two countries in which mountain gorillas can be visited safely, and visitors pay for gorilla tracking permits. Music and dance are an integral part of Rwandan culture, particularly drums and the highly choreographed intore dance. Traditional arts and crafts are produced throughout the country.
Rwanda (sometimes spelled Ruanda) is a country in East Africa.
Rwanda or Ruanda may also refer to:
Usage examples of "rwanda".
By 1961 when Urundi voted to become an independent monarchy, renamed Burundi, and Ruanda voted to become a republic, renamed Rwanda, Max had moved up in rank and established himself as a friend of the Burundian government.
Then the Hutu strategy backfired, and by August the Tutsi Rwandan Patriotic Front was in power in Rwanda, and somewhere between half a million and a million Hutus had become refugees in other countries, mainly Zaire.
From the banks of video screens he could see by their various labels that they were live video feeds coming from East Timor, the Golan Heights, Bosnia, Kosovo, Haiti, the Congo, Rwanda, Sinai, Angola, Namibia, Zimbabwe, Afghanistan, Bogota, Iraq-everywhere the UN had a peacekeeping mission, an inspection team, or a monitoring post.
Rwanda gets its independence and the Hutus celebrate by killing a hundred thousand Watusi and grabbing majority rule, right next door in Burundi the Watusi slaughter two hundred thousand Hutus just to make sure it won't happen there.
I watched the news in horror as wars, and the famines and epidemics brought on by them, claimed millions of innocent human lives in Ethiopia, Somalia, Rwanda, Bosnia, Serbia, Holland, Iraq, Ghana, Ivory Coast, Columbia, Spain, and many other nations.
Finally, undefeated but running out of ammunition, the mercenaries had vacated the Congolese lakeside city, walked across the bridge into neighboring Rwanda, and allowed themselves, with Red Cross guarantees which the Red Cross could not possibly fulfill, to be disarmed.