Kwa mujibu wa mkuu wa majeshi Gen Jacob John Mkunda amemueleza Rais kuwa Kuna wakimbizi wapo Hadi Serikalini na wamepewa nafsi za juu kabisa za kimaamuzi
Hili inashangza na kufikirisha Sana inakuwaje Hadi mkuu wa majeshi anawajua wakimbizi na wameteuliwa na wala hajawasiliana na mamlaka za uteuzi kuzuia uteuzi wao yeye amekaa kimya Hadi leo ndio Kuja kumueleza Rais by suprise.
Mimi najiuliza hivi Rais leo atapata usingizi Kweli? Atakuwa anajiuliza ni Nani huyu nimemteua ambae Ni mkimbizi?
Lazima Rais atapitia mafail yake kwa upya mnk kwa taarifa ya leo wa kamanda wake CDF kusema wasiwasi kuwa unawateua hadi wakimbizi inamaana kwamba wasaidizi wake wanamuingiza Chaka.
Anyway Kama Kuna kiongozi au afsa tunamuhisi siyo mtanzania mwenzetu Basi tumtaje hapa hajui kuwa siyo mwenzetu.
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Mtikila: Kagame amepenyeza Wanyarwanda 35,000 Tanzania, Burigi, katika Wilaya ya Muleba
Pitieni huu uzi
Ouattara was born on 1 January 1942,
[2][3] in
Dimbokro in
French West Africa.
[6] He is a descendant on his father's side of the
Muslim rulers of Burkina Faso, then part of the
Kong Empire—also known as the Wattara (Ouattarra) Empire. Ouattara is
Muslim[7] and is a member of the
Dyula people.
[8] He received a Bachelor of Science degree in 1965 from the
Drexel Institute of Technology (now
Drexel University), in
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
[2] Ouattara then obtained both his master's degree in economics in 1967 and a Ph.D. in economics in 1972 from the
University of Pennsylvania.
[2]
Ouattara has two children, David Dramane Ouattara and Fanta Catherine Ouattara, from his first marriage to American Barbara Jean Davis. In 1991, Ouattara married
Dominique Nouvian, a French Algerian-born
Catholic businesswoman of maternal Jewish descent.
[9] Their wedding was held in the town hall of the
16th arrondissement of Paris.
Kenneth Kaunda was born on 28 April 1924
[4] at Lubwa Mission in
Chinsali, then part of
Northern Rhodesia, now Zambia,
[5] and was the youngest of eight children.
[6] His father, the Reverend David Kaunda, was an ordained
Church of Scotland[7] missionary
[8] and teacher, who had been born in
Nyasaland (now Malawi) and had moved to Chinsali, to work at Lubwa Mission.
[9] His mother was also a teacher and was the first African woman to teach in colonial Northern Rhodesia.
[9] They were both teachers among the
Bemba ethnic group which is located in northern Zambia.
[9] His father died when Kenneth was a child.
[7] This is where Kenneth Kaunda received his education until the early 1940s. He later on followed in his parents' footsteps and became a teacher;
[7] first in Northern Rhodesia
[7] but then in the middle of the 1940s he moved to
Tanganyika Territory (now part of Tanzania). He also worked in
Southern Rhodesia.
[7] He attended Munali Training Centre in
Lusaka between 1941 and 1943.
[8][10] Early in his career, he read the writings of
Mahatma Gandhi that he said: "went straight to my heart."
[11]
Kaunda was a teacher at the Upper Primary School and Boarding Master at Lubwa and then Headmaster at Lubwa from 1943 to 1945.
[8] For a time, he worked at the Salisbury and Bindura Mine.
[8] In early 1948, he became a teacher in
Mufulira for the United Missions to the Copperbelt (UMCB).
[8] He was then assistant at an African Welfare Centre and Boarding Master of a Mine School in Mufulira. In this period, he was leading a
Pathfinder Scout[12] Group and was Choirmaster at a Church of Central Africa congregation. He was also Vice-Secretary of the Nchanga Branch of Congress.
[8
Chiluba Supreme Court ruling in 2000.
Some candidates in the
1996 presidential elections challenged his eligibility on these grounds, claiming that he or his real father was born in
Zaire. However, he was raised in the Copperbelt of Zambia and this contributed to his taking up of unionism