Rusting Rwandan roller-coasters
Rwanda | Jerusalem Post | December 2007 | link download pdf
Africa is often associated with famine,
corruption and civil wars. Especially
for Rwanda, the country where in
1994 800,000 people were massacred
during the 100-day genocide, that
connotation is strong. But in the capital, Kigali,
an enormous amusement park was being constructed,
planned by a businessman who hopes
to prevent new mass murders. Last month, however,
the Rwandan government suddenly sold
the construction site to a rich developer.
Rwandan multimillionaire Eugene Nyagahene,
49, is disappointed. “This is what used to
be my dream,” he says while flipping through a
book of the completely planned amusement
park. The book shows (animated) pictures of
rides you would expect in Disney World: wooden
and steel roller-coasters, a Ferris wheel, ghost
trains, a carting track, climbing facilities, water
rides, a zoo, swimming pools and a casino.
“During the genocide I was abroad, but I lost
a lot of family. One of the problems that led to
the killings was a complete lack of entertainment,
and no information from outside Rwanda.
The only radio station in the country was
the hate-radio station RTLM, Radio Television
de Mille Collines. It broadcast only propaganda,
setting the tribes against each other and turning
people into murderers. I strongly believe that
people get a more open mind by entertainment
and outside information. With this information
and entertainment, these tragedies can be prevented
in the future,” says the entrepreneur
who built the country’s largest multimedia
company, Tele-10, after ’94.
In Rwanda you are not supposed to ask if
someone is a Hutu or a Tutsi, after the Hutu
majority murdered hundreds of thousands of
Tutsis – and moderate Hutus – in 1994. The
killings stopped only after armed Tutsis invaded
the country from neighboring Uganda and took
power. After the invasion, a lot of Tutsis in exile
returned to Rwanda, where they rebuilt the
economy. Western countries gave billions of
dollars of aid to boost the economy, sometimes
driven by feelings of guilt. Nowadays the country
is experiencing an economic boom, especially
in Kigali. The amusement park would have
become the ultimate symbol of the revival.
In February, Nyagahene started to feel something
was wrong, after the Rwandan environment
authority REMA ordered him to stop construction.
REMA claimed the park was located
in a protected wetland. “I have invested $6 million
so far,” he says as he drives around the 100-
hectare (1,000-dunam) construction site.
Iron rails for the future roller coaster lie
around the site, rusting, as do bright-colored
vehicles and boats for the water rides. There are
40 containers full of equipment, most of it
imported from China. “Look, the roads were
already finished. And on the other side I have
constructed an expensive artificial lake. All
those trees have been planted by me. When I
started preparing this terrain for construction
five years ago, it was a rubbish dump. Now it is
worth $15 million.”
That appears to be the main problem. Five
years ago the place was a worthless, but in the
current booming Kigali everyone wants the
land for building.
“I had to hear on the radio that the Kigali City
Council sold the land to a developer called
Dubai World,” says Nyagahene. The council
could do so, because it owns the majority of the
shares in the amusement park. The Rwandan
government could not resist the offer from
Dubai World, which claims it will invest a total
of $250 million in the country. Expensive houses
and hotels will be built on the location, and
Rwanda can continue its boom. Suddenly the
protected wetland is not an issue anymore.
Nyagahene still tries to be positive: “If
Dubai World compensates me with $15 million,
then I can possibly still realize my dream
at another location.”
But the park, which should have been opened
late this year, will be delayed by at least five
years. As he drives off, the roller coaster rails
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