Hôtel des Mille Collines

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Hôtel des Mille Collines by Kempinski
File:Facade of Hotel des Mille Collines - a.k.a. Hotel Rwanda - Kigali - Rwanda.jpg
Hôtel des Mille Collines front entrance
General information
Location Kigali, Rwanda
Address 2KN 6th Ave
Opening 1973
Owner MIKCOR Hotel Holding
Management Kempinski Hotels
Other information
Number of rooms 112
Website
Official website

The Hôtel des Mille Collines (French pronunciation: ​[otɛl dɛ mil kɔlin]) is a large hotel in Kigali, Rwanda. It became famous after 1,268 people took refuge inside the building during the Rwandan Genocide of 1994. The story of the hotel and its manager at that time, Paul Rusesabagina, was used as the basis of the film Hotel Rwanda.

History

The Belgian airline Sabena built the Hôtel des Mille Collines in 1973 and owned it during the Genocide. According to the film, Rusesabagina bribed the Interahamwe militia with money and alcohol to keep them from killing the refugees in the hotel, and to obtain food and water. The United Nations mission, foreign governments, and the Rwandan Patriotic Front exerted pressure on the Rwandan government forces to ensure the safety of those trapped in the complex.

The four-star hotel has 112 rooms, a bar, a café, three conference rooms, a restaurant, a swimming pool, and tennis courts.[1][2]

On August 10, 2005, SABENA Hotels sold the Hotel des Mille Collines to MIKCOR Hotel Holding[3] for USD $3.2million (approx. RWF 1.8 billion).[4][5] Miko Rwayitare, the Managing Director of the MIKCOR group, said during the handover held at the hotel on Thursday 16, that the group now owns 89% of the Hotel with 8.5% and 2.5% owned by Rwanda Development Bank (BRD) and the government of Rwanda, respectively. Rwayitare is also the Executive Chairman of Telecel International, a communications company.[6] In July 2014, Mickor Investment Holdings Ltd turned management of the hotel over to Kempinski Hotels[7] and it was renamed the Hôtel des Mille Collines by Kempinski.[8]

In popular culture

The hotel is the setting for the film Hotel Rwanda, but it does not actually appear in the movie, which was largely shot in South Africa. The hotel does however appear in the 2005 HBO film Sometimes in April and the 2007 Canadian film Shake Hands with the Devil, which were shot on location in Rwanda. It also appears in "The State of Oklahoma".

References

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External links