Prøve GULL - Gratis
REAPING REWARDS
Forbes Africa
|December - January 2021
In green Kigali, Viateur Ndahayo is adding his own aesthetic touch to the city with his booming flower business.
RWANDA IS RENOWNED FOR ITS GREEN AND immaculate public spaces. And 35-year-old Viateur Ndahayo is a flower farmer playing his part, beautifying the capital city of Kigali with his ornamental flora. At Gacuriro, a leafy neighborhood in Kigali, dressed in a white shirt and blue jeans, Ndahayo shows us around his RWF250 million ($253,000) nursery. He has come a long way to be in this prized spot.
After primary school, he could not pursue his secondary education due to limited means. As a firstborn, he had to help his widowed mother bring up his siblings.
“I was competent and excelled in my studies but my mother’s land was too small to finance our education,” he recalls.
With a heavy heart, Ndahayo made the decision to drop out of school and concentrate on growing flowers.
Little did he know he was sowing the seeds for a successful future.
“I grew flowers as an experiment because it was not a common activity here. Only one Belgian company used to do it,” he says. Ndahayo explains that when the Belgians flew back home from Rwanda, the people who took over their business weren’t doing it right.
“I had never seen colored plants before as I was used to green ones. They caught my attention and made me very inquisitive. And creative.
“I didn’t envisage a profitable business growing flowers, I was just driven by passion.”
Denne historien er fra December - January 2021-utgaven av Forbes Africa.
Abonner på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av kuraterte premiumhistorier og over 9000 magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
FLERE HISTORIER FRA Forbes Africa
Forbes Africa
RECLAIMING UBUNTU: CRAFTING A CODE OF INTEGRITY TO COMBAT CORRUPTION IN AFRICA
Leadership in Africa has become synonymous with corruption. As Kenyan journalist John Githongo describes it: “It is a free for all, everything is being eaten, everyone is eating.” Beyond the African stereotypes this scourge perpetuates, corruption drags the continent into deeper underdevelopment instead of strengthening state capacity and encouraging community wellbeing, which are models required to curb poor workmanship. It further erodes the very foundations of democracy, economies, and our shared humanity. It diverts resources away from the poor, undermines trust in institutions, and breeds cynicism in our youth. It is, quite literally, the opposite of the African philosophy of Ubuntu–I am because we are. Where Ubuntu insists on shared responsibility and dignity, corruption proclaims: I am, so you are not.
3 mins
December 2025 - January 2026
Forbes Africa
ACCESS MEETS AFRICA
Access is where ambition meets everyday care. Across South Africa and the wider region, leaders are translating strategy into solutions that patients can actually reach and afford. That means aligning clinical quality with price, building local capacity, and designing models that fit how people live and seek care.
3 mins
December 2025 - January 2026
Forbes Africa
HEALTH SOVEREIGNTY: DIRECTIONS TO SELF-RELIANCE
Dr Jean Kaseya, Director General of the Africa CDC, points to the urgency behind building systems that can prevent, detect, and respond. For him the G20 platform “was a pivotal opportunity for the entire African continent to present a unified agenda rooted in its own vision for health sovereignty and security.” Kaseya emphasized how between 2022 and 2024, Africa saw a 41% surge in epidemic events. “These figures are not just numbers. They are a call to action,” he states and adds: “We leveraged the G20 platform to advocate for genuine global support. This is not charity. It is a partnership that empowers Africa to build a resilient, self-reliant health system capable of protecting its own populations and contributing to global health security.”
2 mins
December 2025 - January 2026
Forbes Africa
CHASING THE PRIZE
THE BIG BUCKS AND GROWING POPULARITY OF SA20 AND ITS MOST EXPENSIVE BUYS.
2 mins
December 2025 - January 2026
Forbes Africa
WHY AI GOVERNANCE MUST BE BUILT ON THE MATHEMATICS OF LEARNING
The ICEGOV conference is a global platform that unites leaders from government, academia, industry, and international organizations to explore the role of digital innovation in strengthening governance. ICEGOV promotes dialogue on technology, policy, and sustainable development. The 2025 event, held in Abuja from November 4-7, was co-chaired by me and Dr Bosun Tijani, Nigeria's Minister of Communications, Innovation, and Digital Economy, and organized by the United Nations University and Nigeria's National Information Technology Development Agency, under the Federal Ministry of Communications.
3 mins
December 2025 - January 2026
Forbes Africa
GLOBAL GLORY
THE CONTINENT'S BIGGEST SPORTING EVENT IS PROJECTED TO GENERATE A RECORD PROFIT OF $112.84 MILLION.
2 mins
December 2025 - January 2026
Forbes Africa
WORD-WISE
AFRICA IS HOME TO OVER 2,000 INDIGENOUS LANGUAGES, MAKING IT THE MOST LINGUISTICALLY DIVERSE CONTINENT IN THE WORLD. INITIATIVES LIKE GOOGLE'S AI GLOSSARY AND PanSALB'S WORK HIGHLIGHT THE IMPORTANCE OF INTEGRATING AFRICAN LANGUAGES INTO THE LEXICON OF MODERN TECHNOLOGY.
2 mins
December 2025 - January 2026
Forbes Africa
SHOTS OF STRATEGY: THE VACCINE PLAYBOOKS
Across Africa, a quiet industrial revolution is underway, as the continent is redefining its place in global health; moving from vaccine recipient to producer and from fragmented manufacturing to coordinated capability.
3 mins
December 2025 - January 2026
Forbes Africa
Thandazani Nofingxana
THE HERITAGE WEAVER: CULTURAL CODES, TEXTILE LANGUAGE AND MODERN AFRICAN IDENTITY
1 min
December 2025 - January 2026
Forbes Africa
BRAIN MAN
HERRIOT TABUTEAU COMBINED A YALE MEDICAL DEGREE WITH TWO DECADES IN FINANCE TO START BIOTECH FIRM AXSOME. NOW ITS SUCCESS WITH DRUGS FOR NEUROLOGICAL DISORDERS HAS MADE THE HAITI-BORN IMMIGRANT A NEW BILLIONAIRE.
5 mins
December 2025 - January 2026
Translate
Change font size
