Rwanda tries to protect farmland in Africa's most densely populated nation

KIGALI, Rwanda (AP) — The rhythmic sounds of construction muffle the thud of farmers' hoes on a chilly morning inRwanda's capital, where new efforts aim to protect remaining agricultural land from relentless development in Africa's most densely populated country.

Associated Press A farmer prepares the soil for planting at a farm in Kigali, Rwanda, March 17, 2026. (AP Photo/Brian Inganga) A vertical farm set up in a home compound by Eza Neza, or Farmers tend to vegetable seedlings at a farm in Muhanga, Rwanda, March 17, 2026. (AP Photo/Brian Inganga) Christian Irakoze, co-founder of Eza Neza, or A view of buildings on a hillside in Kigali, Rwanda, March 18, 2026. (AP Photo/Brian Inganga)

Rwanda Protecting Farmland

Eighty-four-year-old Mukarusini Purisikira had been a farmer before she fled the country to Congo during the 1994 Rwandan genocide. Upon returning, she said, her family's land, which had stretched across the hills, had been taken away for construction. She gestured toward Kigali's high-rise buildings.

Now she grows maize and sweet potatoes on a piece of land the size of a small cottage, which she said is barely enough to feed her.

“It is all I have," she said, looking warily at construction equipment on a ridge nearby.

Now she has a measure of protection. Since September, Rwanda's government has been mapping agricultural land and using satellite imagery to track any development encroaching on farmlands and forests in a country where the population is expected to reach 22 million in a couple of years.

Rwanda is striving to ensure food security amid the latest global pressures on farm inputs likefertilizer, whose prices have been rising since theIran warbegan.

The capital set aside nearly a quarter of land for farming

The government has imposed fines of up to $3,000 and jail terms of up to six months on developers found to be encroaching.

Some buildings in Kigali have been torn down, though people associated with them didn’t want to comment for fear of government retaliation. The government now plans to incorporate drones for better real-time monitoring.

Meanwhile, land use data from the mayor’s office shows that the Kigali master plan has dedicated nearly a quarter of land — 22% — to agriculture.

City authorities acknowledge that housing construction is attractive due to demand but say future projections show that “farming will be even more productive.” They say the demand for food is also rising and believe that, with innovation, it can be grown on smaller pieces of land.

While most of the food consumed in Kigali comes from other districts in Rwanda, farmland in those areas is shrinking, too, a spokeswoman for the mayor’s office, Emma-Claudine Ntirenganya, told The Associated Press.

The government last year printed and displayed maps showing areas in districts across Rwanda that are designated for construction and reserved for agriculture.

Ntirenganya spoke of going into agriculture “in an urban way. We will be able to show Kigalians that they can also do agriculture and be productive.”

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The city administration, which is setting up a greenhouse on its roof, requires developers seeking building permits to include green spaces and gardens in their designs.

Some explore vertical gardens and hydroponics

Other approaches in Kigali include vertical farms, where vegetables and fruits such as strawberries are grown in stackable plastic containers.

Christian Irakoze co-founded a local company, Eza Neza or “grow well,” that sets up vertical farms in the city and described them as scalable. The AP visited two of them at local homes and another that provides stocks to a grocery store. One grows 600 plants in vertical rows stretching about 50 meters (yards) along a perimeter wall.

Irakoze described his work as “a different way of thinking about farming, from traditional large-scale upcountry farming to something smaller, modular, and that anyone can really do.”

Through the use of locally available inputs such as manure and volcanic sediment in place of soil, Irakoze said farming should be adapted to lessen outside impacts.

“We really have to find ways to find our own solutions, whether through inputs like fertilizers or seeds. Some of these global events are always a reminder that we should definitely have some alternatives,” he said.

Elsewhere in Kigali, a group of young agronomists are training farmers to adopt technologies such as hydroponics to maximize productivity, using water instead of soil.

“The population is increasing, yet our land is not increasing. We make sure that we find solutions that can help farmers to overcome that, and then they produce more,” said one of the agronomists, Richard Bucyana.

Bucyana agreed that solutions such as Rwanda’s help to buffer from global events.

“African governments should start thinking how they can be self-sustainable,” he said.

For more on Africa and development:https://apnews.com/hub/africa-pulse

The Associated Press receives financial support for global health and development coverage in Africa from the Gates Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP’sstandardsfor working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas atAP.org.

Rwanda tries to protect farmland in Africa's most densely populated nation

KIGALI, Rwanda (AP) — The rhythmic sounds of construction muffle the thud of farmers' hoes on a chilly morning inRwanda's capit...
Andrew Garfield Confesses He Uses ‘Creeper Accounts’ for Doomscrolling

Andrew Garfieldis keeping it real about his online habits. Even without official social media profiles, The Amazing Spider-Man actor admits he still gets pulled into endless scrolling, and has found a low-key way to do it.

Andrew Garfield reveals he has creeper accounts on social media

Speaking at the London premiere of The Magic Faraway Tree, AndrewGarfieldopened up about something many people can relate to: doomscrolling. Despite staying off public platforms, he said he still falls into the same trap as everyone else. “I’m just as bad as everyone else,” he admitted, adding that he’s “not immune” to the addictive nature of social media.

The 42-year-old actor explained that while fans won’t find verified accounts under his name, he does use private profiles. He called them “creeper accounts,” which he uses to browse content quietly. “I don’t have social media… I have, like, creeper accounts in certain places,” he shared, noting that he has to stay “very, very disciplined” to avoid overusing them.

This isn’t the first time his secret scrolling has come up. His We Live in Time co-star Florence Pugh once accidentally exposed his habits during a lightheartedinterview. She hinted that Garfield browses platforms like X (formerly Twitter), even though he quickly denied having any official presence. The moment confirmed what fans suspected: he’s watching, just not posting.

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Garfield also shared a broader perspective on the digital discipline. He said he’s genuinely impressed by people who can manage their screen time, especially parents balancing kids and online distractions. He called that level of control “impossible” and said he admires those who pull it off successfully.

Garfield has had a really solid career. He broke out with The Social Network and later became Spider-Man in The Amazing Spider-Man films. He has also headlined emotional movies like Hacksaw Ridge and Tick, Tick… Boom! too. He has also won awards, including a Golden Globe, and earned multiple Oscar nominations. What stands out is how natural he feels on screen. Whether it’s drama or action, he keeps things real and easy to connect with.

Originally written by Rishabh Shandilya onMandatory.

The postAndrew Garfield Confesses He Uses ‘Creeper Accounts’ for Doomscrollingappeared first onReality Tea.

Andrew Garfield Confesses He Uses ‘Creeper Accounts’ for Doomscrolling

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At least 8 dead after series of police pursuits across US

A string of high-speed police car chases resulted in at least eight deaths and several injuries over a span of less than a week, marking the latest deadly incidents in an upward trend of police pursuit fatalities in the United States.

USA TODAY

In Texas, police said a man died early on Sunday, April 5, after fleeing from officers and crashing off the roadway.The Montgomery Advertiser, part of the USA TODAY Network, reported that four people died after a driver attempted to evade a state trooper and struck a tree in rural Alabama on Friday, April 3.

In Southern California, authorities said three people were killed in separate incidents last week after local law enforcement tried to pursue two suspects who then collided with other vehicles.

Hundreds of people die each year during police pursuits, according toexperts and research. The longstanding police practice has faced criticism for years.

A study published inThe Journal of the American Medical Association(JAMA) in 2024 found that research spanning from 1982 to 2020 "suggests an increasing trend in fatalities resulting from police pursuits" in the United States. In a2023 report, the Police Executive Research Forum, a police research and policy organization, called high-speed vehicular pursuits "one of the most controversial and dangerous police activities."

Citing data from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, the report noted that there were more than 2,200 fatal vehicle crashes involving a police pursuit from 2015 to 2020. The report recommended that law enforcement agencies only conduct pursuits when a violent crime has been committed and the suspect poses an imminent threat.

"While officers’ decisions to initiate or continue a pursuit are driven by an understandable desire to catch a fleeing suspect, this desire sometimes results in excessive risk-taking and negative consequences for officers, innocent bystanders, the motorist being pursued, and any passengers in either vehicle," the report states.

'A real problem':Police misconduct settlements can cost millions, but departments rarely feel the impact

Driver dies after fleeing from Texas police

In anews release, the Fort Worth Police Department said officers were involved in a vehicle pursuit that resulted in a fatal crash at about 2:34 a.m. local time on April 5. Officers attempted to conduct a traffic stop after seeing a vehicle driving without headlights, striking another vehicle on Interstate 35, and failing to stop.

The driver fled from officers and then hit another vehicle, according to police. The suspect then exited the highway and later crashed off the roadway.

Officers located the vehicle and found 2 men, including a passenger who sustained minor injuries and the driver, who was pronounced dead at the scene, police said. The passenger was transported to a local hospital with his injuries.

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No other injuries were reported in the incident, according to police.

4 killed in Alabama while evading state trooper

Capt. Jeremy Burkett, a spokesperson for the Alabama Law Enforcement Agency, confirmed to the Montgomery Advertiser that four people died after the driver allegedly tried to evade a state trooper in Pike County.

Tykevious Russaw, 27, was driving with three other passengers in his 2022 Hyundai Elantra, Burkett said. He identified the passengers as Robert Hall, 27; Quamay Richardson, 24; and a 17-year-old whose name was not publicly released.

The incident occurred at around 11:57 p.m. local time on April 3, when Russaw's vehicle left the roadway and struck a tree while attempting to evade a trooper, according to Burkett. He said Russaw, Hall, and the 17-year-old were not wearing seat belts at the time of the crash, causing all three of them to be ejected.

Richardson was the only passenger not ejected, Burkett said. All four passengers in the vehicle were pronounced dead on the scene after the crash.

Hostile gunfire:How many police officers have been killed in the line of duty in 2025?

3 dead after drivers crash into bystander vehicles in Southern California

In Pomona, California, a city in eastern Los Angeles County, police said a domestic violence suspect who tried to flee from officers crashed into another vehicle on April 1, according toThe Los Angeles TimesandCBS News Los Angeles.

The couple inside the bystander vehicle, a 26-year-old man and a 25-year-old woman, were killed in the incident. Both the Times and CBS News Los Angeles reported that the couple was days away from the birth of their first child.

In San Clemente, California, a coastal city in Orange County, the sheriff's department said in anews releasethat deputies were attempting to stop a U-Haul van with no license plates that was reported stolen on March 30. When deputies tried to stop the vehicle, the sheriff's department said the driver accelerated and collided with an SUV about less than half a mile away.

The driver of the SUV was killed in the crash, and her three passengers were transported to the hospital in critical condition, according to the sheriff's department. The suspect ran from deputies and was later arrested, while the passenger of the stolen U-Haul remained at the scene and was also taken into custody.

Contributing: Sarah Clifton, Montgomery Advertiser

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Police car chases across the US resulted in at least 8 deaths

At least 8 dead after series of police pursuits across US

A string of high-speed police car chases resulted in at least eight deaths and several injuries over a span of less than a week, markin...
Jake Paul Plans To Make His Version of Druski’s ‘Conservative Women’ Skit

Jake Paulhas unveiled his plans to make a skit in response toDruski’s recent “conservative women” one. Although Paul admitted to loving the skit despite being a Republican himself, the influencer said he wants to respond with a “darker” video.

Jake Paul said this about Druski’s ‘conservative woman’ skit

During his appearance on Theo Von’s podcast, This Past Weekend, Jake Paul addressed the “conservative women” skit, which went viral after content creator Druski posted it online on March 26.

“Honestly, it’s f***ing hilarious. I loved it,” the 29-year-old YouTuber admitted. “I’m obviously Republican, and all the Republicans mad about this s**t is a f***ing L for all Republicans. Because this is f***ing hilarious.”

The influencer-turned-boxer said that the video is dark and twisted. However, he reasoned that it is what comedy is supposed to be, which is humans making fun of humans. “There’s truth in this,” he added. Paul then shared that he had been considering filming a response, even reaching out to makeup artists to create a “darker” skit.

In response, Von explained to Paul that if he wants to do it, there needs to be “black support” for the character. He said that maybe collaborating with Druski himself, or someone like former NBA star Charles Barkley, might be ideal. However, Paul didn’t agree with that perspective. He said that it might make them look “prejudiced.”

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The conversation then shifted to the two talking about examples. They brought up past controversies involving figures like Justin Trudeau and Jimmy Kimmel, asking how they got away with it without much backlash.

The host then expressed his frustration that a kid can’t dress up as a popular black person, like LeBron James, for Halloween. Paul concurred with the criticism and pointed out that there are “too many haters out there.”

Their conversation was triggered by Druski’s skit, in which he seemingly parodied Charlie Kirk’s widow, Erika Kirk. He captioned the post, “How Conservative Women in America act.” Currently, the post has garnered over 184 million views on X (formerly Twitter).

Originally reported by Harsha Panduranga onMandatory.

The postJake Paul Plans To Make His Version of Druski’s ‘Conservative Women’ Skitappeared first onReality Tea.

Jake Paul Plans To Make His Version of Druski’s ‘Conservative Women’ Skit

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Are Newspaper Engagement Announcements the One Wedding Trend That Has Real Staying Power?

"Hearst Magazines and Yahoo may earn commission or revenue on some items through these links."

Town & Country Wedding planning checklist with checked items.

Anyone who thinks print is dead should talk to a weddings editor at theNew York Times. Or theWashington Postor theBoston Globeor any small-town chronicle, wherethe romance beat is alive and thriving. Even as wedding announcements, like other customs, have evolved to suit contemporary tastes, the demand for ink endures.

Which is perhaps not surprising given that we live in an era in which overexposure has become de rigueur, and everyone you know has an expensive wedding publicist on retainer. But as the just-the-facts announcements of yesteryear have been eclipsed by a new style of narrative-driven coverage, the newspaper weddings section has become one of the few remaining places that operates as something like a meritocracy: It’s about the story, not the status. And no, you still can’t buy your way in.

“I think there’s much more interest because of social media,” says event planner Marcy Blum, a 39-year veteran in the businesswho has seen trends come and go, sometimes twice over. “It’s not just about who reads theTimeson Sunday. Once it’s printed, then you see it on Insta­gram.” Given her clout and relationships in the industry, Blum says she’s often brazenly asked in advance by prospective clients if she can secure wedding-section coverage. She wields her influence with discretion. “The reason I’m friends with editors is because they know I won’t do that. I’ll only send them something that I think works for them, as well.”

Kit Harington and Rose Leslie engagement

What exactly makes an ideal match for a weddings editor who is perennially drowning in submissions? “I’m always interested in stories that have a cinematic feel to them,” says one editor at a national publication. The focus has shifted dramatically, too, from social status and family lineage to the narrative of the romance.

Susanna Treacy and Nicholas Wiegand’s talemade the cut last December, when their Manhattan wedding was featured in theNew York Times’s “Mini Vows” section. “There’s a classic, Old New York feeling to the weddings section,” Treacy says. “Nick and I are old souls. A lot of it was a celebration of the city, and it would have made it come full circle to have it acknowledged.” She surmised that their chances were improved by using a wedding planner and photographer who had worked on earlier weddings published in theTimes. “I thought maybe we’d have a shot at it,” she says. Nonetheless, she followed the paper’s standard submissions guidelines and got the approval several days after the big event.

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Daily News page 20 Sunday Now section dated July 19, 2009, H

“We say explicitly in the submission form that if you don’t hear from us within two weeks of your wedding, you can assume it hasn’t been selected,” the national editor says. That doesn’t always deter pushy types. “I’ll still hear from publicists representing more notable couples, ‘just checking in.’ ” Occasionally newlyweds ask what they might do to increase their odds, often phrasing their inquiries in ways nuanced enough to remain open to interpretation. However, the editor emphasizes, there’s absolutely no quid pro quo. “We have very strict standards.”

Placement can be bought, of course—in the form of an ad, like the one that ran in theBoston Globelast December, featuring Zendaya and Robert Pattinson styled as a newly engaged couple. The image was a publicity stunt for the forthcoming filmThe Drama, but it also underscored a lingering truth: Published wedding announcements still eclipse social media as the most coveted way to see—and be seen. “I’m going to custom-frame the print version and put it somewhere in our home,” Treacy says.

An Instagram post, after all, doesn’t hang on a wall.

Top: To promoteThe Drama, in which Zendaya and Robert Pattinson are a couple with premarital, well, drama, A24 took out a faux announcement in the Boston Globe.

This story appears in the April 2026 issue ofTown & Country.SUBSCRIBE NOW

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When Did Fast Food at Weddings Get So Fancy?

It all started, as so many things do, with the middle school set. Fast food at formal events “got very hot, hot, hot a few years back,” says event planner Marcy Blum. “It came out of the bar/bat mitzvah scene.” Faced with the onerous task of menu selection, kids decided that steak tartare didn’t sound nearly as appealing as french fries and hot dogs.

Town & Country Wedding ceremony themed hot dog cart.

Eventually the millennials caught on. At weddings from Santa Barbara to Savannah (and even,if you were really fancy, abroad), it became obligatory to bring out silver trays of Big Macs or In-N-Out ­Double-Doubles for the afterparty. Lately, though, couples have been moving past the novelty humor of the $777 Taco Bell wedding package and leveling up their late night snack options. Not that they’re trading burgers for another round of filet mignon: Fast food staples remain the choice menu, except now those fries are coming from La Goulue, not Mickey D’s.

“It may be comfort food, but all the ingredients are fresh and high-quality,” says Alice Garretti, co-founder of Acquolina, the preferred caterer of fashion and art world parties. And at the same time that quality expectations are rising—even for something just to satisfy the midnight munchies—the desire for less fuss has been filtering into the main reception dinner menu. “A number of years ago, smokes and foams and essences were in vogue,” Garretti says. “Now people are steering away from anything that feels too fancy. They want the classics.”

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For a wedding at the New York Public Library, Acquolina, which is known for crafting extravagant edibles (like baked Alaskas that resemble the Sugar Plum Fairy’s candy palace), served mini-meatballs. At other events Acquolina has done dim sum carts or little hot dogs topped with caviar.

The caviar, by the way, is key.“You’re not just serving chicken nuggets, you’re doing Coqodaq,” Blum says, referring to the Korean fried chicken restaurant known for serving wings with Ossetra and Beluga. Some couples go bigger still, bringing beloved institutions like Katz’s Delicatessen to their weddings. “We built a food truck for them,” Blum recalls of one celebration, “but Katz’s brought the chefs and the rye bread.”

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The Mark Hotel in New York has a Jean-Georges “Haute Dog” cart that can be rolled out for weddings and events. (You don’t have to be getting married at the Mark to book it.) The wieners are made with organic chicken and grass-fed beef and topped with condiments like the chef’s signature kimchi relish. (For those who don’t have a party invite but are still hoping for a $6 bite, the original Haute Dog cart is generally parked outside the hotel’s 77th Street entrance.)

But chicken nuggets seem to be most popular at the moment. At the wedding of Carlin Smith and Charlie Corcoran, which opens this section, the couple requested that La Goulue, the Manhattan bistro that recently opened an outpost in Southampton, make the snacks for their afterparty. To be clear, nuggets are not on the restaurant’s regular menu. “Fun food adds to the party ambience,” says Blum.

She also points to another potential reason: GLP-1s. “The reality is, people aren’t actually ordering less,they just don’t eat nearly as much.” In that way fast food, particularly at an otherwise luxurious event—and topped with caviar—is in itself a form of conspicuous consumption.

Top: For $5,000 and up, the Mark’s Haute Dog cart will serve franks at your reception.

This story appears in the April 2026 issue ofTown & Country.SUBSCRIBE NOW

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