Oh, my dear Nathan, it is with a heavy heart and a half-empty beer bottle that I sit down to pen this condolence note. The news hit me like a delayed hangover. Giporoso, that sacred little corridor in Remera, is no more. Bulldozers have rolled in, the Come Again Bar fence is gone, Impala Resto-Bar has lost its soul and half its roof, and even the mosque is packing up for greener pastures. What was once a narrow vein of cheap alcohol, loud laughter, and whispers louder than megaphones is now just dust and dreams of flyovers.
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We mourn you, Giporoso. You were never pretty. You were old, crooked, dusty, with walls that had seen more secrets than a confessional booth. Your bars served beer so cheap it tasted like regret mixed with hope, and your "corridor" was so tight that two people couldn&039;t pass without sharing life stories or at least a cigarette. But oh, the rumors! Giporoso was the beating heart of Kigali's underground breaking news. Where else could a man learn about RDF promotions, M23 maneuvers, or which mayor has lost his job, all while nursing a gin because the beer was "out of stock" again? You were Wikipedia before Wikipedia, but with better gossip and worse lighting.
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Dr. Dash, my brother in breaking news, where will Nathan go to get you scoops now? You used to bank on him, perching there like a tall crane, ears wide open, phone in hand, texting you the juiciest bits before the ink even dried on official memos. "Inkuru mpawe na Nathan mu Giporoso," you&039;d say, tagging him like he was the Oracle of Remera. Now what? Will he wander the streets like a lost informant, hoping some construction worker drops a hint about drone coding or regional security over a shared cigarette? The flyover might ease traffic, but it sure won't ease the flow of classified bar talk.
And Dr. Dash! Where will he meet you now? Gisimenti is too bougie, full of people sipping cocktails and pretending they have no scandals. The old spot had character; plastic chairs, questionable hygiene, and zero chance of being overheard by anyone important. You two would huddle in the shadows, him laughing his signature laugh while you dropped bombs like "SWAT ihagarariye u Rwanda iri muri Dubai" or "M23 igiye ku bahonda accordingly." Now? He'll have to settle for DMs or God forbid, Zoom calls. Imagine Dr. Dash in a suit, trying to look serious while you whisper "Ndayishimiye yabeshye" over bad Wi-Fi. It's tragic.
The magic was in the murkiness of Giporoso, not some sterile café with air conditioning and visible prices. So where are you migrating to, Nathan? Batsinda? Too far, my friend, it's like asking a Remera boy to commute to Musanze for gossip. You'd arrive exhausted, the rumors already stale on Twitter before you even park the moto.
Nyamirambo? Ha! Nyamirambo has noise, yes, endless swearing in Arabic, but gossip? It's all surface-level drama: who cooks better chapati, whose restaurant cooks the best pilau. No deep-state whispers over warm beer. Nyamirambo gossips about Kiyovu Club and Rayon sports; Giporoso gossiped about geopolitical triangles. Big difference. Perhaps you'll try Kimironko? Too crowded, too commercial, everyone's selling phone credit or second-hand shoes, not amakuru. Or maybe Kanombe, near the airport? Too official; the spies there wear suits and speak in codes, not Kinyarwanda slang over cheap gin. Sorry, Nathan, you've lost your natural habitat. You're like a cyber-security researcher suddenly forced to work without Wi-Fi, exposed, vulnerable, and probably tweeting from a rooftop just to get signal.
But take heart, patriot. Giporoso may be gone, but its spirit lives on in every exaggerated story Dr. Dash retweets with your tag. The developers promise progress, four lanes, flyovers, underpasses, no more bottlenecks. They say it'll make traffic, efficient, beautiful. But what price progress when, the unfiltered, unpretentious, rumor-soaked soul, gets paved over? We'll remember you, Giporoso, the place where truths were born drunk, where legends were forged in plastic cups, and where Nathan became the unofficial minister of information.
Condolences again, Nathan. May your next spot have cheap drinks, dim lights, and even cheaper rumors. Until then, keep feeding Dr. Dash those exclusives, somehow, from somewhere. Because if Giporoso taught us anything, it's that real inkuru never truly die; they just find a new corridor to whisper through. With a tear and a toast to the old days, comrade.
The writer is an ideator and alternative development financing strategist.