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Sunday, February 19, 2017

Diamond ft Neyo Marry you lyrics

When I look at you

I see the air of ever favorably

I see the sun how you shine on me
Nikomzima kwa sababu ya wewe tu
And when you talk to me
I hear the angels I can hear them sing
I have the sound
I can blessed to be your man as much as true
And though I'm
Give to you baby If you take me, you girl
See forever something that I just can't do
No, No without you

I want to marry you (ooh lalala!!!)
I want to marry you (ooh lalala!!!)
I want to marry you (ooh lalala!!!)
Aaah twende kwa mama papaa
I want to marry you (ooh lalala!!!)
I want to marry you (ooh lalala!!!)
I want to marry you (ooh lalala!!!)
Aah twende kwa baba na mama yangu

Oooh baby hadithi hadithi utamu Korea
Oooh baby leo najihisi hamu kuongea
Oooh baby yalio ndani ya mtima
Nikueleeze how i feel
Mmh vile kupenda malazi ya moyo
Ntampenda nani
Sio mfupa mwenzio kibogoyo utanitesa honey
Vile mate wanakumezea
Kutwa wanakumendea
Ni pressure kizungu zungu

Eeeh when you smile(ndo mi napendaga)
Eeeh when you smile (ndo mi napendaga)
Eeeh when you smile (ndo mi napendaga)
When you smile (ndo mi napendaga)
I want to marry you (ooh lalala!!!)
I want to marry you (ooh lalala!!!)
I want to marry you (ooh lalala!!!)
Aaah twende kwa mama papaa

I want to marry you (ooh lalala!!!)
I want to marry you (ooh lalala!!!)
I want to marry you (ooh lalala!!!)
Aaah twende kwa baba na mama yangu
Now and forever we will be together I want you only

Sunday, February 12, 2017

THE NATIONAL COUNCIL FOR TECHNICAL EDUCATION CENTRAL ADMISSION SYSTEM (CAS) - MARCH/APRIL 2017/2018 INTAKE


THE NATIONAL COUNCIL FOR TECHNICAL EDUCATION CENTRAL ADMISSION SYSTEM (CAS) - MARCH/APRIL 2017/2018 INTAKE 
List of institutions/programmmes approved for admission in March/April intake 2017/2018.
To view a list of institutions/programmmes select Professional Area / Field of Study. 

LIST OF SUCCESSFUL LOAN APPELLANTS 2016/2017

LIST OF SUCCESSFUL LOAN APPELLANTS 2016/2017

The Higher Education Students’ Loans Board wishes to announce successful loan appellants.
Details of the loan allocations will be available in their respective institutions by end of 13th February, 2017.
Issued by:

 EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
HIGHER EDUCATION STUDENTS’ LOANS BOARD
11th February, 2017.

Friday, February 10, 2017

AWESOME MEDIA PRODUCTION AND STATIONERY

Karibu Awesome Media Production & Stationery  Picture printing, Video shooting and Editing, Camera za kukodi na huduma zote za stationery.








Kwa mawasiliano piga simu namba +255 767 499993 & +255 621 004880 au gabbyawe@gmail.com

Monday, February 6, 2017

Rwanda to switch from French to English in schools Move seen as further snub to former colonial power.

The Rwandan government is to switch the country's entire education system from French to English in one of the most dramatic steps to date in its move away from Francophone influence. Officially the change is to reposition Rwanda as a member of the East African Community, an organization
made up mostly of English-speaking countries such as neighbours Uganda and Tanzania.

However, the shift to education solely in English is part of a wholesale realignment away from French influence that includes applying to join the Commonwealth - if accepted Rwanda would be only the second member, after Mozambique, that has not been a British colony - and establishing a cricket board.
Underpinning the move is a long and bitter dispute with France born of its support for the Hutu regime that oversaw the 1994 genocide of 800,000 Tutsis, which has seen the French ambassador expelled and the closure of the French cultural centre, international school and radio station. 

However, what amounts to an attempt to expel the French language too, consigning it to a few hours a week in schools and increasingly forcing it out of the workings of government, will be badly received in Paris where protection of the language is at the heart of what critics describe as the
French obsession with maintaining influence in Africa and which led it to back the Hutu extremist government. No timetable has been set to implement the policy, which will face a number of challenges, including finding sufficient teachers who speak English. 
The cabinet also decided that all public service workers will receive English instruction. English was made an official language in Rwanda, alongside French and the indigenous Kinyarwanda, after the Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF)
overthrew the Hutu regime and took power in 1994. The RPF leadership, dominated by Tutsis raised in exile in Anglophone countries, generally speaks English and not French. Rwanda's minister of education, Daphrosa Gahakwa, grew up in Uganda where she took her O levels. She studied her PhD in genetic engineering at the University of East Anglia. English has also become fashionable even among French-speaking young people in the cities, particularly Tutsis,as a means of rejecting Francophone influence and its association with the Hutu regime responsible for the genocide. At present the first three years of primary school is in Kinyarwanda after which pupils may choose English or French. The French option is to be dropped. Instruction at Kigali's elite Institute of
Science and Technology is already in English and it is increasingly the language of instruction in the national university. The drive towards English is in part financial. Close trading ties not only with other east African nations such as Uganda and Kenya but also with South Africa, which has provided investment for luxury hotels and shopping malls, have helped drive an economic boom in
Rwanda. The Rwandan trade and industry minister, Vincent Karega, told Kigali's New Times newspaper that the country is looking beyond the Francophone world. "French is spoken only in France, some parts of west Africa, parts of Canada and Switzerland," he said. "English has emerged as a backbone for growth and development not only in the region but around the globe." There is little doubt that a deep loathing of all things French is also an important factor for some of Rwanda's leaders. The latest salvo against French influence comes weeks after the Rwandan government accused more than 30 French politicians, officials and military officers of complicity in the genocide,
including the late president, François Mitterrand, and called for their prosecution.
A two-year investigation by an official commission alleged that French forces in Rwanda committed crimes against humanity and protected those who organised the genocide, helping them to flee the country and escape justice. The Rwandan inquiry followed allegations by France's leading anti- terrorism judge, Jean-Louis Bruguière, that in effect accused Rwanda's Tutsi president, Paul Kagame, of bringing mass murder on his own people by allegedly ordering the 1994 assassination of the then president, Juvenal Habyarimana, which markedthe start of the genocide. The judge could not indict Kagame as head of state but he issued international arrest warrants for nine of his closest aides and advised the tribunal trying those behind the genocide to pursue Kagame.

 Backstory France's claim that Rwanda was a French-speaking nation was always somewhat disingenuous given that 80% of the population spoke only Kinyarwanda fluently. But there was no doubt about France's influence over the former Belgian colony. It remains strong in other Francophone countries in Africa from the Democratic Republic of Congo to the west and central African nations where the national currencies are underpinned by French financial support. French remains an important language of commerce and diplomacy in west and central Africa, so much so Ghana recently decided its officials should learn it so as not to be marginalised by the likes of Senegal. There is little doubt English is encroaching on French influence, not only because it is the language of business in Europe but because of the economic power of South Africa.