Rwandans are once again left with more questions than answers after the shocking demolition of a privately built school in Jabana sector, Gasabo District — a school that reportedly grew from just 50 students to over 180, serving the community and expanding under what appears to have been known local oversight.
This institution was allegedly encouraged at some stage by education authorities under the National Examination and School Inspection Authority (National Examination and School Inspection Authority), yet on March 26 it was abruptly demolished in a forceful operation involving local authorities in Gasabo District, led by Mayor Bayisenge, alongside the Rwanda National Police (Rwanda National Police).
No clear public explanation has been given that satisfies basic questions of legality, procedure, or consistency.
Rwandans are now asking loudly:
- How does a school grow this large under official awareness, only to be suddenly erased overnight?
- Where was due process before destruction?
- Who approved this action, and on what legal basis?
- Are institutions working in coordination — or in contradiction?
This is not just about one school. It is about a pattern of governance that leaves citizens confused, projects vulnerable, and local development exposed to sudden reversal without transparency.
People are demanding clarity from all levels of authority — not silence, not confusion, and not after-the-fact justification.
And above all, the central question remains unavoidable:
Was this decision purely local, or does it reflect a wider chain of command reaching higher levels of power, including the office of President Paul Kagame (Paul Kagame)?
Until clear answers are provided, citizens will continue to see this not as isolated enforcement — but as institutional dysfunction that undermines trust in governance itself.
Rwandans are watching. And they are demanding accountability.
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