Hope Hostel, a four-story lodging facility located in Kigali, Rwanda. It opened in October 2014 to house college students who had been orphaned after their parents were killed during the Rwandan genocide of 1994; it provided a place for them to reside when school was not in session. In 2022 the hostel was designated as one of the Rwandan facilities that would serve as temporary lodging for migrants who had entered the United Kingdom without authorization, part of a proposed agreement between the two countries, though the plan was never implemented and ultimately abandoned in 2024.
In the years after the 1994 genocide, Rwandans recognized the need to support young survivors. One such initiative, the One Dollar Campaign, was announced in December 2008. Sponsored by the Rwandan Diaspora Global Network, the campaign had the goal of collecting at least $1 from all Rwandans living in the diaspora in order to build housing for students who had survived the 1994 genocide but had been left orphaned. The campaign was officially launched in April 2009 and was originally planned to be a 100-day initiative that mirrored the duration of the 1994 genocide, but it grew to include larger donations, drew from other parties, and continued beyond the initial time frame. The Association of Student Survivors of the Genocide (Association des Etudiants et Elèves Rescapés du Genocide; AERG) and the Association of Former Student Survivors of the Genocide (Groupe des Anciens Etudiants et Elèves Rescapés du Génocide; GAERG) were also involved with the planning of the hostel.
In July 2010 ground was cleared to prepare for construction, which began later that year, at the site in Kigali’s Kagugu neighborhood, located in the Kinyinya sector of Gasabo district. Although the opening date of the hostel was initially planned for late 2011, it was delayed in part because of changes made to the building’s plans after construction had started. Construction was completed in 2014, and the facility was turned over to AERG in March. Final preparations were made, and in October the first college students began to move in. The hostel was home to 192 students: 96 women and 96 men. The student residents were also provided with social support services and vocational counseling.
After several years and after the majority of student residents had moved out, AERG began making plans to find another use for the building. In 2022 it was announced that the hostel would serve as temporary lodging for migrants who had entered the United Kingdom without authorization and were seeking asylum; this was part of a proposed plan between the U.K. and Rwanda that, if approved, would see the aforementioned migrants transported to Rwanda, where they would reside in Hope Hostel or other facilities while their asylum claims were processed. Within the U.K., many objections were raised to the plan, which became mired in legal challenges; the plan was not approved by the British Parliament until April 2024. It was never implemented, however—after the U.K.’s general election in July, the new government quickly killed the plan.
The facility contains 50 dormitory-style rooms, each capable of housing up to four residents, as when the hostel was used for students, though the U.K.–Rwandan migrant plan anticipated having two residents per room. There are also laundry facilities, communal bathrooms, a kitchen and dining room, and sports and recreation areas.