Everything is Political

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The City, The Theatre of Green Perfomativeness.

In our popular imagination and superficial experience, Kigali stands as a symbol of hope, a model of African modernity and urban progress. It is often praised for its cleanliness, orderly aesthetics, trimmed roundabouts, and irrigated flower boulevards. We all celebrate Kigali as the capital of green consciousness in the region. But beyond the celebration lies a veneer of alternative truth; Kigali is green, but only in appearance. Kigali is rapidly turning into a city welcoming trees and automobiles, but not for the majority, the ones who walk to survive. In Kigali, it is safer to be a tree, rooted in place, attended to and irrigated, than to be a pedestrian walking on the edges of a city built for cars. In its current form, Kigali exemplifies what we might refer to as performative green urbanism. A cityscape where sustainability is a spectacle and movement, for the poor, is a painful, perilous afterthought. 

The irony of Kigali’s green reputation resides in its inaccessibility and design priorities. In context, the average flower in the KN 5 Road boulevard receives better shade, water, and respect than a typical pedestrian who walks the same road to work every day. The flowers are irrigated and weeded as needed; the pedestrians are sidelined. Pedestrians, especially those who walk not by choice but by circumstance, exist by design on the literal edges of the city.  

As a serial pedestrian and cyclist, I cannot help but see that walking in Kigali is a necessity for people experiencing poverty and a risk for everyone. The urban design is a literal copy of any other modern town, placing pedestrians at the periphery.  The hope lies in the part that Kigali is a small, young and malleable city. One that can still choose its identity. One that can ignore the extractive model of car-centred development and reimagine itself as a city that centres its most vulnerable, the majority.  

The current pedestrian paths do not prioritise ease, safety, or human experience. They hug the vehicular roads tightly. Pedestrians inhale dust and fumes and often step aside for drainage works and fragmented construction projects. In the city’s most populated areas, the walk paths lack the needed canopies, resting stops, or green corridors that can serve people. In Kigali, walking is turning into a punishment, not a pleasure.

Mobility is currently being designed to fit a car-centric logic. Roads are widened, new flyovers are constructed, and busy intersections are redesigned to ease the movement of cars and reduce traffic. However, this logic does not apply to the pedestrian experience. Cars, which often carry the driver and one other passenger at most, are given options: faster roads, new tunnels and alternative routes. But pedestrians, the basics are neglected. In a city where many people walk to work, pedestrian paths should not parallel the road; they should be liberated from the vehicular logic. Pedestrian paths should seek shortcuts, emphasise scenery, and connect neighbourhoods. Local mobility should prioritise the ease of movement of the body; a direct, beautiful, scaled path.

The green performance is not accidental. To understand this, we must examine the city’s political economy. Kigali’s urban infrastructure is not neutral; it reflects our priorities and values. We have positioned the city as a hub for investments and conferences and a gateway to elite tourism, which is much needed for economic growth. Amidst the search for economic development, we neglected our primary social growth. As such, all the primary infrastructure often caters more to the visiting eyes and pleasure than to local needs and practice. And cars, and their infrastructure, are an objective capital of growth and development, visible markers of growth. 

A quick comparison of the vehicular and pedestrian infrastructure reveals the spatial decisions of the ideological heart of the city. While a driver can easily find free or cheap parking in most areas, a low-income citizen will struggle to find a green park or a peaceful path that separates them from the chaos of the cars.  

We often cite the city’s green spaces as signs of progress, such as wetland areas repurposed for leisure. But they do little to change the imbalance dynamic. The parks are fenced off, expensive to enter, and most do not allow people to sit on the grass. Some are filled with more maintenance staff than citizens enjoying the shade and breeze. Green spaces have turned into tools for aesthetic performance. It feeds into the hierarchy of visibility, and the city becomes a theatre.  The city, and its lush, inaccessible parks, serve as a picture backdrop for international guests and the rich, and the poor pedestrian is left out of the photo frame. Kigali is slowly turning into a stage where nature, like art, is curated, and the human element is left to negotiate silently at the margins.  

Kigali should disinherit the problematic belief that walking is for the poor, and vehicles signify wealth and dignity. It creates a vile perception of a city invested in upward optics, rather than horizontal justice. It imagines the ideal urban dweller to be one who drives, a consumer, a delegate, not a citizen on foot, not a child seeking a playground, or teenagers seeking a green space for a picnic. This notion is very colonial, outdated and ultimately destructive. 
 
Most of this city’s residents rely on walking as their primary means of transportation. They are also the backbone of this city’s informal economy. Their movement should not be informalised, marginalised, or penalised. They should not be placed in situations where they walk longer distances beside speeding cars or endure noisy public spaces that subtly or overly exclude them. They should be at the centre of the design, building, and delivery.  

Walking is the optimum human performance. There is a reason why we all wait to watch children take their first steps. To walk is to be free, to be alive, and to be healthy. We do not need to stop all cars, block the paths, and declare, “The roads are now free for all to walk.” It just exemplifies that a walker is marginal, neglected, and a peripheral action. One should be able to walk confidently any day, any time.  

To transform Kigali and hold the title of its green spaces, we must ask ourselves critical questions. What kind of city are we building? One where pedestrians walk on the edges? One where aesthetics matter more than access? Is one where being green is a performance for the elite? It is not just enough to plant more trees or curate more parks. It is not enough to build more roads or expand the old ones. We need to recenter the human being in the logic of urban design, not the car. Pedestrian infrastructure should be planned with the same rigour and funding as vehicle roads. Parks should be open, touchable and designed for rest, play and community. Grass should be for sitting, picnics and leisure, a nd paths must be for walking. And none should serve only a decorative purpose.
  
Kigali is a young city, still small and moldable. If we continue designing for cars, we are carving inequality into stone and undoing all we stand for. But if we design for the people, the children, the parents, and everyone, we are planting the seeds of collective dignity. The trees and green spaces in Kigali should not only absorb carbon; they must also absorb the people. They should be welcoming the Kwita-Izina delegate and the vegetable vendor in Kimironko.

To build Kigali and a community that values and respects green spaces, we must step away from the low-trust environment that treats citizens as potential violators of the park rather than co-owners of the city, because in Kigali, we share.

We share history, hope and pride. We share hills, homes and discourses. We should also share access. We should create inclusive green spaces, independent pedestrian paths and mobility systems.

We should recognise that walking is not failure, but a fundamental practice. Until then, Kigali remain a paradox, a theatre, a presentation. A city celebrated for its green credentials, one where green is a privilege, walking is turning into a risk, and mobility is a margin.  

(As I write this, I caution Kigali residents to resist the “at-least mentality,’ the temptation to compare Kigali with other failed regional cities. We have done more before, and we cannot settle for less. The “at-least mentality” breeds laziness and complacency. We do not accept the status quo because it surpasses complete inaction. We have shown our capacity for bold, transformative change. Settling for less dishonours our legacy and underestimates our capacity. The bar should not be survival or small wins, but a sustained, meaningful impact. We have done it before, we are doing it now, and we can do it again. )


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6 responses to “The City, The Theatre of Green Perfomativeness.”

  1. Interesting read! It got me reflecting on a theme I’ve often sat with: how we design cities for the people who live in them, rather than for aesthetics or touristic appeal. I found myself wondering where Kigali’s urban efforts, like the Car-Free Zone/Days, or even the increasingly popular Green Track, might fit into the conversation. That said, I definitely recognized the underlying contrast you highlighted between pedestrians and drivers, and the rather sobering thought that it’s “safer to be a tree.” Still, I have to commend Kigali for the strides it’s making. Maybe it’s me slightly slipping into the “at least mentality”, but Kigali feels like it’s positioning itself to become a beacon for progressive African cities.

    1. Thank you for sharing this Awoke. And yes, Kigali is one of the few African cities that has worked towards improving its transport modality, which is commendable. Our collective hope is that we do not end up trying so much to be like another city, or focusing so much on form and not function. Ideally, the city has the potential to serve all the Kigali residents, despite their economic differences.

  2. Annick La Reine Avatar
    Annick La Reine

    First of all, what a read!! Thank you for putting your thoughts here with such poetic conviction. But I must say, as someone who has watched this city rise, I couldn’t help but sense a tinge of arrogance in how you framed Kigali’s green transformation.

    You describe sidewalks, tree planting, and green city efforts as performative. The streets you now walk on aren’t new. They were remnants of a city that was never meant to serve everyone. Sidewalks back then were informal footpaths beaten into the earth by people walking because they had no other choice.

    So what did this young city do after 94, with zero budget? It repaired broken roads with the help of prisoners and volunteers for free. And later, yes, we brought in Chinese contractors to build proper sidewalks: sidewalks that didn’t exist before.

    So what’s performative, I ask, about a city trying to build sidewalks for the first time in its history, with no money, no infrastructure, and only the sheer will of its people? Calling these efforts “green performance” without acknowledging that context feels dismissive. It assumes the people who made these decisions were driving around in black sedans, detached from the reality of those who walk. But in truth, they were walkers too. We know it because these people are now our parents, who were 20, 30, back then with nothing.

    Now let’s talk about the parks. I assume you’re referring to Nyandungu, a park designed for eco-tourism and birdwatching.

    You lament the rising entrance fees and restricted access; as if you’re the first to think about the “ordinary Rwandan.” But here’s the thing: when Nyandungu was free, the very people you say you’re advocating for were not visiting it. Why? Because their idea of leisure isn’t birdwatching. It’s resting at home, watching football, catching up on YouTube, or visiting family in the village where; by the way, nature is free and abundant.

    You position yourself as a serial pedestrian and cyclist. I respect that. But cyclists who ride for a living prefer wider, safer roads, not winding scenic lanes designed for leisure. Your vision, is rooted in a different class experience. Your cycling isn’t the same as their cycling. Their bikes are tools for survival, not weekend exercise.

    And yes, you’re right that Kigali is still moldable. That’s the beauty of it. We can and must do better for pedestrians. Have you seen the latest running tracks popping up? They’re free. But don’t expect people who walk 10km a day for work, to show up on the track at 6 AM. Their entire lives are a marathon.

    So no, this is not one of those “at least Kigali isn’t like X city” responses. It’s to give more context. Every inch of this city’s infrastructure was fought for; often with no money, but with incredible consideration of everyone.

    Were you wrong to ask us to do better? No. That’s the point of dialogue. Were you wrong to critique car-centric planning? Not at all. But calling all this performative? That’s where you lost me. Because what you see as optics, many of us see as progress. Hard-earned, imperfect, but deeply intentional progress.

    So yes, let’s keep asking: Who is the city for? But let’s also remember: it wasn’t built in a vacuum. And for shoooooo, not just for the photo op.

    Warmly,
    A Friend Who Walks Too

    1. Hi Annick,

      Thank you for the thoughtful and passionate comment. Your words carry the weight of lived experience, a nuance most of us lack.

      On some clarification, calling Kigali’s transformation performative does not diminish the very real effort, labour, and vision that have shaped the city. Nor does it diminish the sacrifices of those who have literally walked its transformation into being. Instead, the performative in a socio-political sense is not as fake or superficial but as something that does the work of symbol-making, more like a visual and material communication of order, progress and presence of capacity. Kigali performs modernity as it builds it. It is this duality that makes Kigali’s greenness and accessibility. Performance and function coexist; one does not cancel the other.

      I am following your line with the question “for whom?.” Not to dismiss the hard-fought gains but to invite the constant reflection of inclusion. The mention of performativity opens a space to ask how symbolism sometimes outpaces access, not to deny the sweat and blood behind the achievements. The Nyandungu example shows this; perhaps birdwatching is a leisure for everyone, but in there lies the conversation of how leisure and nature are being curated and the collective need to provide access without creating room for social stratification.

      And yes, movement is shaped by different class experiences. My question on the cycling provisions does not come from detachment but from a desire to deepen the city’s care for all. Whether we cycle for pleasure, health or survival. When talking about wider, safer scenic lanes for cyclists, it is not about the joy that comes from the scenery but, again, from the sociopolitical need for the inclusion of the people who ride for a living. A cyclist earning their daily bread cannot afford to be squeezed to the edge of the road by speeding vehicles or compete with motorized traffic that doesn’t always see them as equal users of space. As most of us must have noticed, many cyclists who do this for a living ride their bicycles in constant negotiation with cars, dodging, waiting and wielding. Ironically, the areas that have dedicated cycling lanes do not connect the places where these cyclists live and work. Creating protected lanes and broader road shoulders is not just infrastructure improvement; it’s a statement of inclusion. In my head, it shouts, “Your labour, safety, and right to the city matter; you also belong here”. It gives dignity to those who move the economy with their legs pedalling. This kind of lane distribution would centre the city on equity, not just selective efficiency.

      The city holds two truths. Green order and distribution are intentional performances of modernity, and they also deliver the material function of growth. This does not render it dysfunctional, but instead highlights the complexity of a city that requires engagement and agency.
      Let’s keep walking and talking together.

  3. Great read and I can’t agree more!
    The hope is that Kigali is young and malleable.
    #KigaliWeShare [insert wink emoji]
    We should equally share access.
    Many thanks for this piece, I am definitely hitting that subscribe button.

    1. Thank you so much for reading and subscribing!

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About the blog

Managu – Everything is Political.

This blog is a space where I, Raini Sydney, share my opinions, analysis, and commentary on politics, culture, and other intersections that shape our daily lives. Through essays, reflections, and analysis of governance, democracy, climate justice, and social change, ‘Managu’ is a space for critical thinking and engaged discourse.

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