Out of the 309,368 survivors of 1994 genocide still alive, more than one third are impoverished and need assistance, according to a report by the Rwandan government.
They are primarily orphans and widows numbering 119,385, according to the secretariat of state for social affairs.
These figures were made public last week at the close of recent census carried out jointly with survivor associations.
The new census came to correct the preceding lists of impoverished survivors of which included people who did not enter into this category, observed the secretariat of state charged with social affairs.
According to the latest report, it is the South Province which counts the greatest number of impoverished survivors (43, 481 people).
In addition, 51% of children who survived the genocide stopped their schooling, because of poverty.
Directed against ethnic Tutsis, the genocide, from April to July 1994, resulted, according to the UN, in nearly 800,000 killed.
Meanwhile, the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR), Justice Hassan Jallow, has appealed against the 15 years jail sentence handed down last month to Rwanda's former famous composer and singer, Simon Bikindi, for his role to incite killings of ethnic Tutsis during the 1994 genocide.
"The sentence is inadequate against crimes committed by the accused," Justice Jallow told Hirondelle Agency Tuesday, adding that in the prosecution's opinion, Bikindi deserved a much higher imprisonment.
The date for hearing of the appeal has yet to be fixed.
Delivering the judgment on 2 December, Presiding judge of Chamber III, Monica Weinberg de Roca, said that Bikindi was guilty of direct and public incitement to commit genocide towards end of June, 1994, but was found not guilty of five other charges of conspiracy to commit genocide; genocide or alternatively complicity in genocide; murder and persecution as crimes against humanity.
"The Chamber recalls its finding that towards the end of June 1994, in Gisenyi Prefecture, on the main road between Kivumu and Kayove, Bikindi used public address system to state that the majority population, the Hutu, should rise up to exterminate the minority, the Tutsi," the judge observed, adding that the accused used the same system to ask if people had been killing Tutsi, who he referred as "snakes".
"The Chamber finds that both statements, over loudspeakers, were made publicly'', she said, underscoring that the address constituted a direct call to destroy the Tutsi ethnic group.
She reminded that direct and public incitement to commit genocide was by definition, a crime of the most serious gravity which affects the very foundations of the society and shocks the conscience of humanity.
"... You have abused your stature as a well-known and popular artist perceived to be an influential member of the MRND and an important figure in the Interahamwe movement by using your influence to incite genocide," underlined the Argentinean judge.
The three-bench Chamber also has ruled that Bikindi would get credit of seven years that he has already served in the prison while waiting for his trial, which started in September, 2006 and concluded in November, last year.
Bikindi was arrested in The Netherlands in July 2001 and transferred to the UN Detention Facility in Arusha in March 2002.
Before the genocide, Bikindi was working at the Ministry of Youth and Association Movements of the Rwandan government and was also Director of the performance group, Irindiro Ballet. He left Rwanda 4 April, just two days before the genocide, but returned via Zaire (now Democratic Republic of Congo) around 12 June, 1994.
The UN Court was established in November 1994 by Security Council to try the key suspects of the genocide, which according to the UN estimates claimed lives of about 800,000 people, mostly ethnic Tutsis and moderate Hutus.