At a welcome event in London, Rwanda’s High Commissioner to the United Kingdom, Johnston Busingye, cast fashion as part of the country’s wider development agenda, not just a creative pursuit.
His remarks came as a group of nine Rwandan fashion entrepreneurs began a United Kingdom exchange programme designed to open markets, attract investment and build longer-term ties between Rwanda’s design sector and the British fashion industry.
The programme, led by the University of Westminster in partnership with the British High Commission in Rwanda, the Rwanda High Commission in the UK, the British Council and Inzira Creative Partners, brings Rwandan designers into meetings, panels and networking sessions with academics, buyers, investors and industry professionals.
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Organizers say the aim is to help emerging fashion businesses move beyond local recognition and into international markets.
For Busingye, the exchange reflects an effort by Rwanda to treat the creative economy as an engine for growth.
The programme, he said at the launch, "marks an important step for a sector that is still building its global reach.”
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According to the University of Westminster, the second phase of the programme was funded with £25,000 from the British High Commission in Rwanda and was created to support technical learning, market access and stronger people-to-people links in the creative economy.
That practical support matters because many fashion businesses face the same barriers when they try to scale: limited financing, weak networks and little access to buyers outside their home market.
The exchange is meant to address those gaps by pairing business conversations with cultural exchange, giving designers a chance to present their work in an environment where commercial growth and creative identity are discussed together.
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The programme extends beyond the designers themselves. Westminster’s role ties the exchange to an academic setting, for the participating entrepreneurs, the London meetings offer access to a market where branding, compliance and presentation can shape whether a label breaks through.
The programme’s structure includes conversations about entrepreneurship, luxury branding, technology in fashion and the challenge of scaling African brands for global buyers.
The exchange is also expected to feed back into Rwanda’s fashion scene. Organizers say the model could be repeated if the current pilot produces the kind of industry links they hope for, including future investment partnerships and skills-development opportunities. If it works, the programme could become a recurring bridge between Rwanda’s designers and the UK fashion market.