Ape Expectations
12 July 2017
Ape Expectations
It's Saturday morning in downtown Kigali and the streets are curiously empty. There are no cars roaring along the smooth Tarmac roads, and only a few people milling in manicured parks. There’s not a spot of litter, either.
No chewing gum underfoot. It’s not what you expect in a capital city. But Rwanda is full of surprises. Just 23 years after genocide devastated the country, reducing the population of seven million by almost a third, the small East African nation has lofty sights set on progress.
There’s a flashy new Radisson Blu convention centre, and national airline RwandAir has invested in a eet of sleek new A330s to operate the rst direct route between London and Kigali, which launched at the end of May.
Then there’s the commendable commitment to conservation. Umuganda, the obligatory monthly street clean-up I’m witnessing, is all part of that. But one of the biggest surprises came last month, when the Rwandan Development Board announced the price of gorilla permits would double to $1,500.