Rwanda counts results in referendum for Kagame

Updated 18 December 2015
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Rwanda counts results in referendum for Kagame

KIGALI: Rwanda began counting votes Friday after polls closed in a referendum to amend the constitution allowing President Paul Kagame to rule until 2034, with few expecting the changes to be rejected.
The proposed amendments have been denounced by Washington and Brussels as undermining democracy in the central African country.
But Kagame, 58, who could be in power potentially for another 17 years, told reporters after casting his vote earlier on Friday that “what is happening is the people’s choice.”
“I did not apply for this. You go and ask Rwandans why they want me,” said Kagame, who has run the country since 1994. Long queues formed during polling, some arriving before centers opened soon after dawn, with some 6.4 million registered to vote. Polls closed at 3:00pm (1300 GMT) with counting beginning almost immediately, an AFP reporter said.
“Yes, yes, yes..,” election officials said as they read the votes out to count.
“We want our president to continue to lead us. Look how the country is safe,” Emmanuel Ntivamunda said after casting his ballot, among those who thanked the president for the country’s economic growth, which is over six percent a year according to the World Bank.
“Paul Kagame has brought peace,” said Eridigaride Niwemukobwa, 67, holding up her voter card proudly, while admitting she did not know for how long Kagame could run Rwanda if the constitutional changes pass.
Kagame declined to say whether he plans to run again if the changes to the constitution are passed. “We will see when the time comes,” he said.
Provisional results are expected late on Friday, with final results to be announced before Monday, National Electoral Commission (NEC) executive secretary Charles Munyaneza has said.
Some voters said they were not clear about the exact constitutional changes they were voting on, describing the ballot as a simple choice about whether to endorse Kagame or not.
“What interests me is that the president is reelected,” said Saidi Alfred, one of hundreds who voted in a school in Kigali.
The amendment would allow Kagame to run for a third seven-year term in 2017, at the end of which the new rules take effect and he will be eligible to run for a further two five-year terms.
Kagame has run Rwanda since his ethnic Tutsi rebel army, the Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF), ended a 1994 genocide by extremists from the Hutu majority, when an estimated 800,000 people were massacred, the vast majority of them Tutsis.
The issue of long-serving rulers clinging to power has caused turmoil in Africa, where some leaders have been at the helm for decades.


UN chief calls Ukraine war ‘a stain on our collective conscience’

Updated 25 February 2026
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UN chief calls Ukraine war ‘a stain on our collective conscience’

  • Guterres warned that the fighting posed direct risks to the safe and secure operation of Ukraine’s nuclear sites

WASHINGTON: Four years ‌after Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres said the war there remained “as a ​stain on our collective conscience” and reiterated calls for an immediate ceasefire. In remarks for a session of the United Nations Security Council to mark the fourth anniversary of Russia’s invasion, Guterres commended the efforts of the United States and others to end ‌the war, but ‌said concrete measures were ​needed ‌to ⁠de-escalate ​and create space ⁠for diplomacy.
Referring to Russia’s invasion, Guterres said: “We have witnessed the cascading consequences of this blatant violation of international law.”
He said more than 15,000 civilians had been killed in Ukraine since the start of the war ⁠and over 41,000 hurt. Among those killed ‌or hurt were ‌3,200 children.
Guterres’ remarks were ​read on his ‌behalf by Rosemary DiCarlo, the UN under-secretary-general for ‌peacebuilding.
Guterres warned that the fighting posed direct risks to the safe and secure operation of Ukraine’s nuclear sites, and added: “This unconscionable game of ‌nuclear roulette must cease immediately.”
He urged UN member states to fully fund ⁠humanitarian assistance ⁠and said that any settlement to the war must uphold the sovereignty, independence and territorial integrity of Ukraine within its internationally recognized borders.
“Enough with the death. Enough with the destruction. Enough with the broken lives and shattered futures,” he added.
“It is time for an immediate, full and unconditional ceasefire – the first step toward a just ​peace that ​saves lives and ends the endless suffering.