Insight

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EVERY Wednesday and Saturday afternoon, Callixte Gashugi carries his sewing machine to Ndera Minor Seminary in Gasabo district, city of Kigali to sew torn clothes of students. “Whenever I come, I make a minimum of Rwf3,000 which is a good deal,” says the tailor in his late fifties. When Education Times visited the school last Saturday, Gashugi was surrounded by many students bargaining for a cheap service. “You will pay me only Rwf 300 and that’s the last price,” Gashugi tells one of the students who wanted a turn-up on his pair of trousers. Inside the room, other students are queuing for a haircut, also from a visiting barber, while others are waiting for the cobbler who also comes twice a week. 
Students of Ndera Minor Seminary scramble for the tailoru2019s services on Saturday. (Jean de la Croix Tabaro)
Students of Ndera Minor Seminary scramble for the tailor’s services on Saturday. (Jean de la Croix Tabaro)
Jean de la Croix Tabaro