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10.10.2008 - Rwanda opts for English teaching

By Martin Plaut
BBC Africa analyst

Rwanda's parliament has decided that all education will be taught in English instead of French.

Officially the Rwandan decision is a result of joining the English-speaking East EU splits ahead of Finance summit ...
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African Community.

The Czech Republic news are represented by www.czechrepublic-prague.com

But relations between Rwanda and France have been frosty following the 1994 genocide, when France was accused of supporting Hutu militias.

Rwanda has applied to join the Commonwealth, the loose association of ex-British colonies and territories.

France has consistently denied any responsibility for the genocide, in which some 800,000 Tutsis and moderate Hutus were slaughtered in 100 days.

In 2006, a French judge implicated Rwandan President Paul Kagame in the downing in 1994 of then-President Juvenal Habyarimana's plane - an event widely seen as triggering the killings.

Brush-off

The decision taken by parliament on Thursday will apply from nursery schools to universities.

Conversations in the capital, Kigali, are increasingly conducted in English.

A colleague who recently visited the country reported being given a brisk brush-off for asking for information in French.

And the Kigali Institute of Science and Technology has for some time used English as the official medium of instruction.

But elsewhere in Africa the story is a little different.

Ghana recently decided that its officials should learn French, so that they could hold their own with their West African colleagues from Ivory Coast, Burkina Faso and Senegal.

In Algeria, French, which was banned from all public life in 1998, is now making a comeback and is taught in schools from the second year.

Young Algerian men and women are at least as likely to chat in French as Arabic, given the all-pervasive presence of French satellite television.

So although Paris will not be pleased by the Rwandan decision, their language is by no means about to be extinguished from the African continent.

(BBC)

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