The Singapore of Africa?
Rwanda has, however, made great strides since those dark days nearly two decades ago. The reason why Kigali is so clean is because the last Saturday of each month is a compulsory ‘cleaning day’, when all business comes to a halt.In 2011, Charles Robertson from Renaissance Capital wrote that a visit to Rwanda was the greatest positive shock of his professional career. He stated that Rwanda is implementing many of the same economic reforms that Singapore introduced since the 1960s to transform itself into one of the world’s foremost financial centres.
Rwanda has done a lot to improve its business environment. According to data from the World Bank and IFC, it takes about three days to start a business in Rwanda, compared to an average of 34 days in the rest of sub-Saharan Africa.Link: RwandaForeign investors have also taken notice of these reforms. Earlier this month South Africa’s Protea Hospitality Group announced that it will open a hotel in Kigali. A new five-start Marriott hotel is also set to open later this year. In addition, Reuters recently reported that Rwanda has signed a deal with South Korea’s largest telecoms provider KT Corp to roll out high-speed 4G internet to most of its citizens within three years.
KT Corporation - Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaKT Corporation also known as KT formerly Korea Telecom, in Korean 주식회사 케이티(formerly 한국통신), is a South Korean integrated wired/wireless telecommunication service provider. KT focuses on information & communications business, and it has the largest portion of the South Korean local telephone and high-speed Internet business. Originally founded in 1981 as a public corporation, KT actively led Korea’s transition to the information era and played a key role in promoting the growth of Korea into a globally recognized IT superpower. In 2009, KT merged with its mobile subsidiary KTF, paving the way to the convergence of fixed and mobile services. Since KT initially introduced iPhone to South Korea, it constantly seeks new business area, such as media, virtual goods, and global business with its domestic businesses experiences. The company has a well-distributed shareholder structure under which the National Pension Service(NPS) is the largest shareholder(6.81% as of December 31, 2012),[2] but NPS holds no managerial rights over the company. Under the current shareholder structure, no controlling shareholder exists.