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Nzeyimana Jean  Bosco ni umusore wo mu Karere ka Nyamagabe mu Murenge wa Kitabi.

Yize ibijyanye n’imicungire y’umutungo (Business Administration), yashinze ikigo yise “Habona Ltd”gikora ibijyanye no gukusanya imyanda mu mujyi wa Nyamagabe kikayibyazamo ibicanwa birimo amakara azwi nka ‘Briquettes’, zitangiza ibidukikije, biogas yo gutekesha n’ifumbire y’imborera ifasha abahinzi guhinga neza.

KIGALI – What value does the digital economy provide Africa? The largest technology companies all have strategies for getting their products into African markets, but few have plans to provide what Africans truly need: jobs in the economy of the future.

Ahantu henshi mu mashuli usanga abahungu aribo bitabira gukoresha ikoranabuhanga, ariko mu Rwanda ho bimaze kugaragara ko n'abakobwa basigaye babyitabira ndetse bakageraho naho bagera ku rugero ndashyikirwa.

Bamwe mu bigiye imyuga muri gahunda ya NEP Kora Wigire bo muri Kamonyi, barashima ko yabahaye icyerekezo gituma batazigera Babura umurimo.

Babivuze ubwo basurwaga n’abayobozi batandukanye mu nzego za Leta, zirimo n’Ikigo cy’igihugu cyita ku myuga n’ubumenyingiro (WDA) ari na cyo gikuriye iyi gahunda, kuri uyu wa 26 Ukwakira 2016.

Hasuwe uruganda rwa NPD Ltd rutunganya amabuye agezweho akoreshwa mu kubaka imihanda.

The question “why do you want this job” could be one of the trickiest questions you could be asked in an interview. However, there are some great answers that could make you win the interviewer over.

Sometimes, getting or losing the job could lie in how you answer the questions asked.

1. Look for positive reasons

A Rwandan young graduate has fabricated an automatic user friendly hand washing unit that can be used in families and public venues.

Lambert Ruringana 20, a graduate from Nyanza Polytechnic institute in Southern Province is worried about securing a job after school.

Last year, before graduation day, Ruringana invited two classmates Derrick Shema and Yves Nasenge. They brainstormed on several ideas but zeroed in on making automated electric cooking stoves.

Two years ago, a young woman named Michele Hansen spotted a job opening that piqued her interest. She wasn’t qualified—the posting was for a product manager at an investment company, and she had no experience in financial services.

A technology scene is starting and you should be part of it. Here's why.  

Young, forward-thinking entrepreneurs such as myself have an opportunity and an obligation to advance economic and human development throughout Africa. Our continent is poised for great social and technological advances. These advances are dependent upon harnessing the continent’s immense economic potential. As business leaders, we can serve as catalysts for such change.   

In mid-2014, the World Bank’s Competitive Cities team visited Kigali, Rwanda, the only national capital among our six case studies of economically successful cities around the world, representing the Sub-Saharan Africa Region. Kigali and Rwanda as a whole have enjoyed some of the continent’s fastest growth rates, in terms of both jobs and incomes, albeit from a comparatively low starting point. We aimed to understand the factors and specific interventions underpinning this success and to extract some lessons for other cities.
 

Guhanga umurimo mu rubyiruko ni imwe mu ntego ikomeye urubyiruko rw'urwanda ruri gushishikarizwa kwitabira kugira ngo rugire uruhare mu kugabanya ingaruka ziterwa n'ubukene bushingiye kubaho nta kazi umuntu afite.

Bitewe nuko benshi bataba bafite igishoro kinini ni byiza gutangirira ku bushobozi buciriritse ndetse hakibandwa guhanga umurimo usubiza ibibazo n'ibyifuzo by'aho umuntu  atuye, kureba ibibura hafi aho bikaba aribyo bihazanwa, kuko kuba uhaturiye bigabanya igishoro n'igiciro kandi bikagurwa ku bwinshi.