Iwawa centre: a true success story

Close to 600 former street children last week, graduated from Iwawa Rehabilitation and Vocational skills centre (IRVSDC), in Rutsiro district.

Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Close to 600 former street children last week, graduated from Iwawa Rehabilitation and Vocational skills centre (IRVSDC), in Rutsiro district.   

This was is the second graduation at the centre.

When the Government opened the Centre in February, last year, where the initial beneficiaries  were former street children, critics pounced to smear the otherwise noble initiative, calling it a prison and all sorts of names.

Sections of the international media twisted the hugely inspiring story of Iwawa, alleging that teenagers had been ferried to the Lake Kivu Island against their will, and without the knowledge of their relatives. Fortunately, the architects of IRVSDC did not waver in their cause.

Instead, the Government continued to upgrade the training centre, equipping it with modern training infrastructure and providing training personnel, for effective delivery of special vocational skills.

Today, the Iwawa students are an empowered and skilled work force.


Their relatives and guardians recounted moving stories about the rehabilitated youth.

The future, indeed, looks brighter for these youth, who had pretty much lost hope. The Government is laying mechanisms to ensure that they get employed. It is heartening that various industrial stakeholders have committed themselves to helping these youth put their newly acquired skills to good use.

From a terribly dangerous street life, these youths are on the verge of becoming highly resourceful professionals in commercial farming, construction, carpentry, tailoring,  to mention but a few.

Their story embodies the great strides Rwanda has taken, against all odds, for the past 17 years.