Tanzania

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For the ship, see MV Tanzania.
United Republic of Tanzania Jamhuri Ya Muungano Wa Tanzania
FlagCoat of armsMotto: "Uhuru na Umoja" (Swahili)
"Freedom and Unity"Anthem: Mungu ibariki Afrika
"God Bless Africa"



CapitalDodomaLargest cityDar es SalaamOfficial languagesSwahili (de facto)
English (Higher courts, higher education)[1]DemonymTanzanianGovernmentRepublic - PresidentJakaya Mrisho Kikwete - Prime MinisterMizengo PindaIndependencefrom the United Kingdom - TanganyikaDecember 9, 1961 - ZanzibarJanuary 12, 1964 - MergerApril 26, 1964 Area - Total945,203 km2 (27th)
364,898 sq mi - Water (%)6.2Population - November 2006 estimate40,000,000 (32nd) - 2005 census37,445,392 - Density41/km2 (124th)
106/sq miGDP (PPP)2008 estimate - Total$53.716 billion[2] - Per capita$1,351[2] GDP (nominal)2008 estimate - Total$20.721 billion[2] - Per capita$521[2] Gini (2000–01)34.6 (medium) HDI (2008)▲ 0.503 (medium) (153th)CurrencyTanzanian shilling (TZS)Time zoneEAT (UTC+3) - Summer (DST)not observed (UTC+3)Drives on theleftInternet TLD.tzCalling code+25521 Estimates for this country explicitly take into account the effects of excess mortality due to AIDS; this can result in lower life expectancy, higher infant mortality and death rates, lower population and growth rates, and changes in the distribution of population by age and sex than would otherwise be expected.
² 007 from Kenya and Uganda.The United Republic of Tanzania (Swahili: Jamhuri ya Muungano wa Tanzania) (pronounced /ˌtænzəˈniːə/),[3] is a sovereign state in central East Africa bordered by Kenya and Uganda to the north, Rwanda, Burundi and the Democratic Republic of the Congo to the west, and Zambia, Malawi and Mozambique to the south. The country's eastern borders lie on the Indian Ocean.
The United Republic of Tanzania is a unitary republic composed of 26 mikoa (regions). The current head of state is President Jakaya Mrisho Kikwete, elected in 2005. Since 1996, the official capital of Tanzania has been Dodoma, where parliament and some government offices are located. Between independence and 1996 the major coastal city of Dar es Salaam had been the country's political capital. Today Dar es Salaam remains the principal commercial city of Tanzania and the de-facto seat of most government institutions.[4][5] It is the major seaport for the country and its landlocked neighbours.
The name Tanzania is a portmanteau of Tanganyika and Zanzibar. The two states united in 1964 to form the United Republic of Tanganyika and Zanzibar, which later the same year was renamed the United Republic of Tanzania.[4]
Years of socialism, including forced relocations to collective farms, left the country as one of the poorest, the least developed and the most aid-dependent in the world.[6] Tanzania started a process of gradual reforms in the mid-1980s.
Contents

[hide]
[edit] History

Main article: History of Tanzania
Formerly a German colony from the 1880s through 1919, the post-World War I accords and the League of Nations charter designated the area a British Mandate (except for a small area in the northwest, which was ceded to Belgium and later became Rwanda and Burundi).
British rule came to an end in 1961 after a relatively peaceful (compared with neighbouring Kenya, for instance) transition to independence. In 1954 Julius Nyerere transformed an organization into the politically oriented Tanganyika African National Union (TANU). TANU's main objective was to achieve national sovereignty for Tanganyika. A campaign to register new members was launched, and within a year TANU had become the leading political organisation in the country. Nyerere became Minister of British-administered Tanganyika in 1960 and continued as Prime Minister when Tanganyika became officially independent in 1961. Soon after independence, Nyerere's first presidency took a turn to the Left after the Arusha Declaration, which codified a commitment to socialism in Pan-African fashion. After the Declaration, banks were nationalised as were many large industries.
After the Zanzibar Revolution overthrew the Arab regime in neighboring Zanzibar, which had become independent in 1963, the island merged with mainland Tanganyika to form the nation of Tanzania on April 26, 1964. The union of the two, hitherto separate, regions was controversial among many Zanzibaris (even those sympathetic to the revolution) but was accepted by both the Nyerere government and the Revolutionary Government of Zanzibar owing to shared political values and goals. Nyerere set up one-party dictatorship. The communist bloc powers of China, East Germany and the USSR established friendly relations with the new regime. Corruption was rampant.[7]
The socialist regime burned villages and forced people to relocate onto collective farms, which greatly disrupted agricultural efficiency and output.[8] Tanzania turned from a nation of struggling sustenance farmers into a nation of starving collective farmers. From the late 1970s, Tanzania's economy took a turn for the worse. Tanzania also aligned with Communist China, seeking Chinese aid in Tanzania's socialist endeavor. The Chinese were quick to comply, but with the catch that all projects be completed by imported Chinese labor.
Years of socialism left the country as one of the poorest, the least developed and the most aid-dependent in the world.[6] From the mid 1980s, the regime financed itself by borrowing from the International Monetary Fund and underwent some reforms as the regime acknowledged that socialism does not work. From the mid 1980s Tanzania's GDP per capita has grown and poverty has been reduced.[9]
Recent economic reforms that have enabled Tanzania to accelerate economic growth.

[edit] Politics

Main article: Politics of Tanzania
Tanzania's president and National Assembly members are elected concurrently by direct popular vote for five-year terms. The president appoints a prime minister who serves as the government's leader in the National Assembly. The president selects his cabinet from among National Assembly members. The Constitution also empowers him to nominate ten non-elected members of Parliament, who also are eligible to become cabinet members. Elections for president and all National Assembly seats were held in December 2005. Tanzania is a one party dominant state with the Chama Cha Mapinduzi in power. Opposition parties are widely considered to have no real chance of gaining power.
The unicameral National Assembly elected in 2000 has 295 members. These 295 members include the Attorney General, five members elected from the Zanzibar House of Representatives to participate in the Parliament, the special women's seats which are made up of 20% of the seats that a given party has in the House, 181 constituent seats of members of Parliament from the mainland, and 50 seats from Zanzibar. Also in the list are forty-eight appointed for women and the seats for the 10 nominated members of Parliament. At present, the ruling Chama Cha Mapinduzi holds about 93% of the seats in the Assembly. Laws passed by the National Assembly are valid for Zanzibar only in specifically designated union matters.
Zanzibar's House of Representatives has jurisdiction over all non-union matters. There are currently seventy-six members in the House of Representatives in Zanzibar, including fifty elected by the people, ten appointed by the president of Zanzibar, five ex officio members, and an attorney general appointed by the president. In May 2002, the government increased the number of special seats allocated to women from ten to fifteen, which will increase the number of House of Representatives members to eighty-one. Ostensibly, Zanzibar's House of Representatives can make laws for Zanzibar without the approval of the union government as long as it does not involve union-designated matters. The terms of office for Zanzibar's president and House of Representatives also are five years. The semiautonomous relationship between Zanzibar and the union is a relatively unusual system of government.
Tanzania has a five-level judiciary combining the jurisdictions of tribal, Islamic, and British common law. Appeal is from the primary courts through the district courts, resident magistrate courts, to the high courts, and Court of Appeals. Judges are appointed by the Chief Justice, except those for the Court of Appeals and the High Court who are appointed by the president. The Zanzibari court system parallels the legal system of the union, and all cases tried in Zanzibari courts, except for those involving constitutional issues and Islamic law, can be appealed to the Court of Appeals of the union. A commercial court was established in September 1999 as a division of the High Court.

[edit] Economy

Main articles: Economy of Tanzania, Transport in Tanzania, and Microfinance in Tanzania

A market near Arusha.


The economy is mostly based on agriculture, which accounts for more than half of the GDP, provides 85% (approximately) of exports, and employs approximately 80% of the workforce. Topography and climatic conditions, however, limit cultivated crops to only 4% of the land area.
The nation has many resources including gold and natural gas. Extraction of natural gas began this decade. Gas is drawn into the commercial capital, Dar Es Salaam and exported to various markets overseas. Lack of overall development however has hampered the extraction of these various resources, and even up to the present there has been effort to develop the natural resource sector but no major quantifiable results.
Industry is mainly limited to processing agricultural products and light consumer goods. Tanzania has vast amounts of natural resources including gold, diamonds, coal, iron ore, uranium, nickel, chrome, tin, platinum, coltan, niobium and other minerals. It is the third-largest producer of gold in Africa after South Africa and Ghana. Tanzania is also known for the Tanzanite gemstones. Tanzania has dozens of beautiful national parks like the world famous Serengeti and the Ngorongoro Conservation Area, that generate income with a large tourism sector that plays a vital part in the economy. Growth from 1991 to 1999 featured a pickup in industrial production and a substantial increase in output of minerals, led by gold. Commercial production of natural gas from the Songo Songo island in the Indian Ocean off the Rufiji Delta commenced 2004,[10] with natural gas being pumped in a pipeline to the commercial capital Dar es Salaam, with the bulk of it being converted to electricity by the public utility and private operators. A new gas field is being brought on stream in Mnazi Bay.
Recent public sector and banking reforms, and revamped and new legislative frameworks have all helped increase private-sector growth and investment. Short-term economic progress also depends on curbing corruption and cutting back on unnecessary public spending.[11]
Prolonged drought during the early years of the 21st century has severely reduced electricity generation capacity (some 60% of Tanzania's electricity supplies are generated by hydro-electric schemes).[12] During 2006, Tanzania suffered a crippling series of "load-shedding" or power rationing events caused by a shortfall of generated power, largely because of insufficient hydro-electric generation. Plans to increase gas- and coal-fueled generation capacity are likely to take some years to implement, and growth is forecast to be increased to seven per cent per year, and perhaps eight or more.[13]
There are 3 major airlines in Tanzania, the Air Tanzania Corporation, Precision Air which provide local flights (Arusha, Kigoma, Mtwara, Mwanza, Musoma, Shinyanga, Zanzibar) and regional flights to Kigali, Nairobi, Mombasa routes and a third one that provides local flights only. There are also several charter aeroplane firms. There are two railway companies: TAZARA caters for service between Dar-es-Salaam and Kapiri-Mposhi, a district of the Central Province in Zambia. The other one is the Tanzania Railways Corporation, which provides services between Dar-es-Salaam and Kigoma, a town on the shores of Lake Tanganyika and between Dar-es-Salaam and Mwanza, a city on the shores of Lake Victoria. There is also a service across the Indian Ocean between Dar-es-Salaam and Zanzibar by several modern hydrofoil boats.
Tanzania is part of the East African Community and a potential member of the planned East African Federation.

[edit] Health

Main articles: Health in Tanzania and HIV/AIDS in Tanzania
The under-five mortality rate in 2006 was 118 out of 1,000. Life expectancy at birth in 2006 was 50 years.[14] The 15-60 year old adult mortality rate in 2006 was 518 out of 1,000 males and 493 out of 1,000 females.[14]
The leading cause of death in children who survive the neonatal period is malaria.[15] For adults, it is HIV/AIDS.[15] Anti-retroviral treatment coverage for people with advanced HIV infection in 2006 was 14%.[14]
2006 data shows that 55% of the population had sustainable access to improved drinking water sources and 33% had sustainable access to improved sanitation.[14]

[edit] Regions and districts

Main articles: Regions of Tanzania and Districts of Tanzania

Regions of Tanzania.


Tanzania is divided into 26 regions (mkoa), twenty-one on the mainland and five in Zanzibar (three on Unguja, two on Pemba). Ninety-eight districts (wilaya), each with at least one council, have been created to further increase local authority; the councils are also known as local government authorities. Currently there are 114 councils operating in 99 districts; 22 are urban and 92 are rural. The 22 urban units are further classified as city councils (Dar es Salaam and Mwanza), municipal councils (Arusha, Dodoma, Iringa, Kilimanjaro, Mbeya, Morogoro, Shinyanga, Tabora, and Tanga) or town councils (the remaining eleven communities).
Tanzania's regions are: Arusha · Dar es Salaam · Dodoma · Iringa · Kagera · Kigoma · Kilimanjaro · Lindi · Manyara · Mara · Mbeya · Morogoro · Mtwara · Mwanza · Pemba North · Pemba South · Pwani · Rukwa · Ruvuma · Shinyanga · Singida · Tabora · Tanga · Zanzibar Central/South · Zanzibar North · Zanzibar Urban/West
For regions ranked by total area, land area and water area, see List of Tanzanian regions by area.

[edit] Geography

Main article: Geography of Tanzania

Map of Tanzania, shown with the old capital.



Landscape in Northern Tanzania, inside the Great Rift Valley.


At 945,087 km²,[16] Tanzania is the world's 31st-largest country (it comes after Egypt). It is comparable in size to Nigeria.
Tanzania is mountainous in the northeast, where Mount Kilimanjaro,[17] Africa's highest peak, is situated. To the north and west are the Great Lakes of Lake Victoria (Africa's largest lake) and Lake Tanganyika (Africa's deepest lake, known for its unique species of fish). Central Tanzania comprises a large plateau, with plains and arable land. The eastern shore is hot and humid, with the island of Zanzibar lying just offshore.
Tanzania contains many large and ecologically significant wildlife parks,[18] including the famous Ngorongoro Crater, Serengeti National Park[19] in the north, and Selous Game Reserve and Mikumi National Park in the south. Gombe National Park in the west is known as the site of Dr. Jane Goodall's studies of chimpanzee behavior.
The government of Tanzania through its department of tourism has embarked on a campaign to promote the Kalambo water falls in southwest Tanzania's region of Rukwa as one of Tanzania's many tourist destinations.[20][21] The Kalambo Falls are the second highest in Africa and are located near the southern tip of Lake Tanganyika.

[edit] Climate

Tanzania has a tropical type of climate. In the highlands, temperatures range between 10˚C and 20˚C during cold and hot seasons respectively. The rest of the country has temperatures rarely falling lower than 20˚C. The hottest period extends between November and February (25˚C - 31˚C) while the coldest period occurs between May and August (15˚C - 20˚C).
Two rainfall regimes exist over Tanzania. One is unimodal (December - April) and the other is bimodal (October -December and March - May). The former is experienced in southern, south-west, central and western parts of the country, and the latter is found to the north and northern coast.
In the bimodal regime the March - May rains are referred to as the long rains or Masika, whereas the October - December rains are generally known as short rains or Vuli.

[edit] Environment

Tanzania has considerable wildlife habitat, including much of the Serengeti plain, where the white-bearded wildebeest (Connochaetes taurinus mearnsi) and other bovids participate in a large-scale annual migration. Up to 250,000 wildebeest perish each year in the long and arduous movement to find forage in the dry season. Tanzania is also home to 130 amphibian and over 275 reptile species, many of them strictly endemic and included in the IUCN Red Lists of different countries.[22] Tanzania has developed a Biodiversity Action Plan to address species conservation. A recently discovered species of elephant shrew called Grey-Faced Sengi was filmed first time in 2005, and it was known to live in just two forests in the Udzungwa Mountains. In 2008, it was listed as "vulnerable" on the 2008 Red List of Threatened Species.

[edit] Demographics

Main article: Demographics of Tanzania
In the Kagera region, one of the newly created districts is Misenyi, which used to be the Misenyi Chiefdom. It extends from the Kyaka (Kagera River) to the Mutukula border with Uganda. That Chiefdom was inhabited by Baganda (known as Baganda Kyaka, i.e. Tanzanian Baganda). However, they do not appear on the list of Tanzanian tribes. It is important to make such a correction because the Babumbilo people of former Misenyi Chiefdom are not Bahaya, they are Baganda (meaning language, culture, everything).

[edit] Religion

Main article: Religion in Tanzania

Mosque in Moshi


Tanzania's population has been estimated to consist of roughly one third each Muslims, Christians and followers of indigenous religious groups. The national census, however, has not asked for religious affiliation since 1967 as the religious balance is seen as a sensitive topic. Thus all figures on religious statistics for Tanzania are at best educated guesswork and differ widely on the question whether there are more Christians or Muslims. Most assume that the share of traditionalists has dwindled.[23]
The Christian population is mostly composed of Roman Catholics, Protestants, Pentecostals, Seventh-day Adventists, members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Mormons), and members of Jehovah's Witnesses. Among Protestants the strong numbers of Lutherans and Moravians point to the German past of the country, the numbers of Anglicans to the British history of Tanganyika. All of them have had some influence in varying degress from the Walokole movement (East African Revival) which has also been fertile ground for the spread of charismatic and Pentecostal groups.
On the mainland, Muslim communities are concentrated in coastal areas, with some large Muslim minorities also in inland urban areas especially and along the former caravan routes. Between 80 and 90 percent of the Muslim population is Sunni; the remainder consists of several Shi'a subgroups, mostly of Asian descent.
There are also active communities of other religious groups, primarily on the mainland, such as Buddhists, Hindus, and Baha'is.
[24]

[edit] Languages

Tanzania has more than 126 ethnic groups and each ethnic group has its own language. No language is de jure official, but Swahili is the de facto national language, used for inter-ethnic communication and for official matters. After gaining independence, English, the language of colonial administration during the era of British rule, was still used for some official issues, and was thus considered de facto national alongside Swahili. Nowadays English is no longer used in the administration, in the parliament or in the government,[1] so it is no longer a de facto official language in the narrow sense. Hence Tanzania is one of the few African states in which a local language has gained importance to the disadvantage of the ex-colonial language. Since English is still the language of higher courts,[1] it can however be considered a de facto official language in the larger sense.
According to the official linguistic policy of Tanzania, as announced in 1984, Swahili is the language of the social and political sphere as well as primary and adult education, whereas English is the language of secondary education, universities, technology and higher courts.[1] Though the British government financially supports the use of English in Tanzania,[1] its usage in the Tanzanian society has diminished over the past decades: In the seventies Tanzanian university students used to speak English with each other, whereas now they almost exclusively use Swahili outside the classroom. Even in secondary school and university classes, where officially only English should be used, it is now quite common to use a mix of Swahili and English.
Other spoken languages are Indian languages, especially Gujarati, and Portuguese (both spoken by Mozambican blacks and Goans) and to a lesser extent French (from neighbouring Rwanda, Burundi and Democratic Republic of the Congo). Historically German was widely spoken during that colonial period, but few remain alive who remember that time.

[edit] Culture

Main articles: Culture of Tanzania and Music of Tanzania

Makonde carvings.


The music of Tanzania stretches from traditional African music to the string-based taarab to a distinctive hip hop known as bongo flava. Famous taarab singers names are Abbasi Mzee, Culture Musical Club, Shakila of Black Star Musical Group.
Internationally known traditional artists are Bi Kidude, Hukwe Zawose and Tatu Nane.
Tanzania has its own distinct African rumba music where names of artists/groups like Tabora Jazz, Western Jazz Band, Morogoro Jazz, Volcano Jazz, Simba Wanyika,Remmy Ongala, Ndala Kasheba,[25] NUTA JAZZ, ATOMIC JAZZ, DDC Mlimani Park, Afro 70 & Patrick Balisidya,[26][27][28] Sunburst, Tatu Nane[29] and Orchestra Makassy[30] must be mentioned in the history of Tanzanian music.
Tanzania has many writers. The list of writers' names includes well-known writers such as Godfrey Mwakikagile, Mohamed Said, Abdulrazak Gurnah, Prof. Julius Nyang'oro, Prof. Clement Ndulute, Prof. Frank Chiteji, Prof. Joseph Mbele,[31] Juma Volter Mwapachu, Prof. Issa Shivji, Jenerali Twaha Ulimwengu, Prof. Penina Mlama,[32] Mwalimu Julius Kambarage Nyerere, Adam Shafi, Dr. Malima M.P Bundala and Shaaban Robert.
Tanzania has remarkable position in art. Two styles became world known: Tingatinga and Makonde. Tingatinga are the popular African paintings painted with enamel paints on canvas. Usually the motives are animals and flowers in colourful and repetitive design. The style was started by Mr. Edward Saidi Tingatinga born in South Tanzania. Later he moved to Dar Es Salaam. Since his death in 1972 the Tingatinga style expanded both in Tanzania and worldwide. Makonde is both a tribe in Tanzania (and Mozambique) and a modern sculpture style. It is known for the high Ujamaas (Trees of Life) made of the hard and dark ebony tree. Tanzania is also a birthplace of one of the most famous African artists – George Lilanga.

[edit] Media

The Daily News is the oldest newspaper and is state-run, as are the public broadcasting service television TVT NOW Tanzania Broadcasting Cooperation TBC and radio networks of Radio Tanzania Dar es Salaam RTD [now TBC Radio]. Since 2007 the state owned television station popularly referred in Swahili as Televisheni Ya Taifa TVT NOW Tanzania Broadcasting Cooperation TBC and Radio Tanzania Dar-es-Salaam RTD are now both under the umbrella of Tanzania Broadcasting Corporation. Tanzania also has many privately run media outlets, for example more than 20 daily newspapers, more than 20 television stations and more than 30 FM radio stations like Radio One, Radio Sibuka- Shinyanga, Radio Faraja -Shinyanga, Radio Times, Radio Saut-Mwanza,Radio Sauti ya Injili-Moshi,Living water FM-Mwanza, Radio Tumaini, Radio Sauti ya Quran, Magic FM, Praise Power Radio,Radio Mwangaza-dodoma,Kifimbo Fm-Dodoma, Radio Maria, Radio Upendo, Wapo Radio, Mlimani Radio, Clouds FM, Passion FM and Radio Free Africa. Some of the private radio stations and newspapers are owned by political parties like the Uhuru newspaper and the Radio Uhuru FM.
International shortwave radio broadcasts from the BBC Radio, Voice of America and Deutsche Welle can be received.[33]
Tanzanians are also active bloggers[citation needed] and there is a blog site launched by Issa Michuzi,[34] that has been visited by more than 3 million bloggers since 2007, and a new blog focusing on children called Mama na Mwana. Internet in Tanzania has become a de facto source of news used both by Tanzanian citizens and other institutions.[citation needed]

 
Tanzania

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


Jump to: navigation, search
For the ship, see MV Tanzania.
United Republic of Tanzania Jamhuri Ya Muungano Wa Tanzania
FlagCoat of armsMotto: "Uhuru na Umoja" (Swahili)
"Freedom and Unity"Anthem: Mungu ibariki Afrika
"God Bless Africa"



CapitalDodomaLargest cityDar es SalaamOfficial languagesSwahili (de facto)
English (Higher courts, higher education)[1]DemonymTanzanianGovernmentRepublic - PresidentJakaya Mrisho Kikwete - Prime MinisterMizengo PindaIndependencefrom the United Kingdom - TanganyikaDecember 9, 1961 - ZanzibarJanuary 12, 1964 - MergerApril 26, 1964 Area - Total945,203 km2 (27th)
364,898 sq mi - Water (%)6.2Population - November 2006 estimate40,000,000 (32nd) - 2005 census37,445,392 - Density41/km2 (124th)
106/sq miGDP (PPP)2008 estimate - Total$53.716 billion[2] - Per capita$1,351[2] GDP (nominal)2008 estimate - Total$20.721 billion[2] - Per capita$521[2] Gini (2000–01)34.6 (medium) HDI (2008)▲ 0.503 (medium) (153th)CurrencyTanzanian shilling (TZS)Time zoneEAT (UTC+3) - Summer (DST)not observed (UTC+3)Drives on theleftInternet TLD.tzCalling code+25521 Estimates for this country explicitly take into account the effects of excess mortality due to AIDS; this can result in lower life expectancy, higher infant mortality and death rates, lower population and growth rates, and changes in the distribution of population by age and sex than would otherwise be expected.
² 007 from Kenya and Uganda.The United Republic of Tanzania (Swahili: Jamhuri ya Muungano wa Tanzania) (pronounced /ˌtænzəˈniːə/),[3] is a sovereign state in central East Africa bordered by Kenya and Uganda to the north, Rwanda, Burundi and the Democratic Republic of the Congo to the west, and Zambia, Malawi and Mozambique to the south. The country's eastern borders lie on the Indian Ocean.
The United Republic of Tanzania is a unitary republic composed of 26 mikoa (regions). The current head of state is President Jakaya Mrisho Kikwete, elected in 2005. Since 1996, the official capital of Tanzania has been Dodoma, where parliament and some government offices are located. Between independence and 1996 the major coastal city of Dar es Salaam had been the country's political capital. Today Dar es Salaam remains the principal commercial city of Tanzania and the de-facto seat of most government institutions.[4][5] It is the major seaport for the country and its landlocked neighbours.
The name Tanzania is a portmanteau of Tanganyika and Zanzibar. The two states united in 1964 to form the United Republic of Tanganyika and Zanzibar, which later the same year was renamed the United Republic of Tanzania.[4]
Years of socialism, including forced relocations to collective farms, left the country as one of the poorest, the least developed and the most aid-dependent in the world.[6] Tanzania started a process of gradual reforms in the mid-1980s.
Contents


[hide]
[edit] History


Main article: History of Tanzania
Formerly a German colony from the 1880s through 1919, the post-World War I accords and the League of Nations charter designated the area a British Mandate (except for a small area in the northwest, which was ceded to Belgium and later became Rwanda and Burundi).
British rule came to an end in 1961 after a relatively peaceful (compared with neighbouring Kenya, for instance) transition to independence. In 1954 Julius Nyerere transformed an organization into the politically oriented Tanganyika African National Union (TANU). TANU's main objective was to achieve national sovereignty for Tanganyika. A campaign to register new members was launched, and within a year TANU had become the leading political organisation in the country. Nyerere became Minister of British-administered Tanganyika in 1960 and continued as Prime Minister when Tanganyika became officially independent in 1961. Soon after independence, Nyerere's first presidency took a turn to the Left after the Arusha Declaration, which codified a commitment to socialism in Pan-African fashion. After the Declaration, banks were nationalised as were many large industries.
After the Zanzibar Revolution overthrew the Arab regime in neighboring Zanzibar, which had become independent in 1963, the island merged with mainland Tanganyika to form the nation of Tanzania on April 26, 1964. The union of the two, hitherto separate, regions was controversial among many Zanzibaris (even those sympathetic to the revolution) but was accepted by both the Nyerere government and the Revolutionary Government of Zanzibar owing to shared political values and goals. Nyerere set up one-party dictatorship. The communist bloc powers of China, East Germany and the USSR established friendly relations with the new regime. Corruption was rampant.[7]
The socialist regime burned villages and forced people to relocate onto collective farms, which greatly disrupted agricultural efficiency and output.[8] Tanzania turned from a nation of struggling sustenance farmers into a nation of starving collective farmers. From the late 1970s, Tanzania's economy took a turn for the worse. Tanzania also aligned with Communist China, seeking Chinese aid in Tanzania's socialist endeavor. The Chinese were quick to comply, but with the catch that all projects be completed by imported Chinese labor.
Years of socialism left the country as one of the poorest, the least developed and the most aid-dependent in the world.[6] From the mid 1980s, the regime financed itself by borrowing from the International Monetary Fund and underwent some reforms as the regime acknowledged that socialism does not work. From the mid 1980s Tanzania's GDP per capita has grown and poverty has been reduced.[9]
Recent economic reforms that have enabled Tanzania to accelerate economic growth.

[edit] Politics

Main article: Politics of Tanzania
Tanzania's president and National Assembly members are elected concurrently by direct popular vote for five-year terms. The president appoints a prime minister who serves as the government's leader in the National Assembly. The president selects his cabinet from among National Assembly members. The Constitution also empowers him to nominate ten non-elected members of Parliament, who also are eligible to become cabinet members. Elections for president and all National Assembly seats were held in December 2005. Tanzania is a one party dominant state with the Chama Cha Mapinduzi in power. Opposition parties are widely considered to have no real chance of gaining power.
The unicameral National Assembly elected in 2000 has 295 members. These 295 members include the Attorney General, five members elected from the Zanzibar House of Representatives to participate in the Parliament, the special women's seats which are made up of 20% of the seats that a given party has in the House, 181 constituent seats of members of Parliament from the mainland, and 50 seats from Zanzibar. Also in the list are forty-eight appointed for women and the seats for the 10 nominated members of Parliament. At present, the ruling Chama Cha Mapinduzi holds about 93% of the seats in the Assembly. Laws passed by the National Assembly are valid for Zanzibar only in specifically designated union matters.
Zanzibar's House of Representatives has jurisdiction over all non-union matters. There are currently seventy-six members in the House of Representatives in Zanzibar, including fifty elected by the people, ten appointed by the president of Zanzibar, five ex officio members, and an attorney general appointed by the president. In May 2002, the government increased the number of special seats allocated to women from ten to fifteen, which will increase the number of House of Representatives members to eighty-one. Ostensibly, Zanzibar's House of Representatives can make laws for Zanzibar without the approval of the union government as long as it does not involve union-designated matters. The terms of office for Zanzibar's president and House of Representatives also are five years. The semiautonomous relationship between Zanzibar and the union is a relatively unusual system of government.
Tanzania has a five-level judiciary combining the jurisdictions of tribal, Islamic, and British common law. Appeal is from the primary courts through the district courts, resident magistrate courts, to the high courts, and Court of Appeals. Judges are appointed by the Chief Justice, except those for the Court of Appeals and the High Court who are appointed by the president. The Zanzibari court system parallels the legal system of the union, and all cases tried in Zanzibari courts, except for those involving constitutional issues and Islamic law, can be appealed to the Court of Appeals of the union. A commercial court was established in September 1999 as a division of the High Court.

[edit] Economy

Main articles: Economy of Tanzania, Transport in Tanzania, and Microfinance in Tanzania

A market near Arusha.


The economy is mostly based on agriculture, which accounts for more than half of the GDP, provides 85% (approximately) of exports, and employs approximately 80% of the workforce. Topography and climatic conditions, however, limit cultivated crops to only 4% of the land area.
The nation has many resources including gold and natural gas. Extraction of natural gas began this decade. Gas is drawn into the commercial capital, Dar Es Salaam and exported to various markets overseas. Lack of overall development however has hampered the extraction of these various resources, and even up to the present there has been effort to develop the natural resource sector but no major quantifiable results.
Industry is mainly limited to processing agricultural products and light consumer goods. Tanzania has vast amounts of natural resources including gold, diamonds, coal, iron ore, uranium, nickel, chrome, tin, platinum, coltan, niobium and other minerals. It is the third-largest producer of gold in Africa after South Africa and Ghana. Tanzania is also known for the Tanzanite gemstones. Tanzania has dozens of beautiful national parks like the world famous Serengeti and the Ngorongoro Conservation Area, that generate income with a large tourism sector that plays a vital part in the economy. Growth from 1991 to 1999 featured a pickup in industrial production and a substantial increase in output of minerals, led by gold. Commercial production of natural gas from the Songo Songo island in the Indian Ocean off the Rufiji Delta commenced 2004,[10] with natural gas being pumped in a pipeline to the commercial capital Dar es Salaam, with the bulk of it being converted to electricity by the public utility and private operators. A new gas field is being brought on stream in Mnazi Bay.
Recent public sector and banking reforms, and revamped and new legislative frameworks have all helped increase private-sector growth and investment. Short-term economic progress also depends on curbing corruption and cutting back on unnecessary public spending.[11]
Prolonged drought during the early years of the 21st century has severely reduced electricity generation capacity (some 60% of Tanzania's electricity supplies are generated by hydro-electric schemes).[12] During 2006, Tanzania suffered a crippling series of "load-shedding" or power rationing events caused by a shortfall of generated power, largely because of insufficient hydro-electric generation. Plans to increase gas- and coal-fueled generation capacity are likely to take some years to implement, and growth is forecast to be increased to seven per cent per year, and perhaps eight or more.[13]
There are 3 major airlines in Tanzania, the Air Tanzania Corporation, Precision Air which provide local flights (Arusha, Kigoma, Mtwara, Mwanza, Musoma, Shinyanga, Zanzibar) and regional flights to Kigali, Nairobi, Mombasa routes and a third one that provides local flights only. There are also several charter aeroplane firms. There are two railway companies: TAZARA caters for service between Dar-es-Salaam and Kapiri-Mposhi, a district of the Central Province in Zambia. The other one is the Tanzania Railways Corporation, which provides services between Dar-es-Salaam and Kigoma, a town on the shores of Lake Tanganyika and between Dar-es-Salaam and Mwanza, a city on the shores of Lake Victoria. There is also a service across the Indian Ocean between Dar-es-Salaam and Zanzibar by several modern hydrofoil boats.
Tanzania is part of the East African Community and a potential member of the planned East African Federation.

[edit] Health

Main articles: Health in Tanzania and HIV/AIDS in Tanzania
The under-five mortality rate in 2006 was 118 out of 1,000. Life expectancy at birth in 2006 was 50 years.[14] The 15-60 year old adult mortality rate in 2006 was 518 out of 1,000 males and 493 out of 1,000 females.[14]
The leading cause of death in children who survive the neonatal period is malaria.[15] For adults, it is HIV/AIDS.[15] Anti-retroviral treatment coverage for people with advanced HIV infection in 2006 was 14%.[14]
2006 data shows that 55% of the population had sustainable access to improved drinking water sources and 33% had sustainable access to improved sanitation.[14]

[edit] Regions and districts

Main articles: Regions of Tanzania and Districts of Tanzania

Regions of Tanzania.


Tanzania is divided into 26 regions (mkoa), twenty-one on the mainland and five in Zanzibar (three on Unguja, two on Pemba). Ninety-eight districts (wilaya), each with at least one council, have been created to further increase local authority; the councils are also known as local government authorities. Currently there are 114 councils operating in 99 districts; 22 are urban and 92 are rural. The 22 urban units are further classified as city councils (Dar es Salaam and Mwanza), municipal councils (Arusha, Dodoma, Iringa, Kilimanjaro, Mbeya, Morogoro, Shinyanga, Tabora, and Tanga) or town councils (the remaining eleven communities).
Tanzania's regions are: Arusha · Dar es Salaam · Dodoma · Iringa · Kagera · Kigoma · Kilimanjaro · Lindi · Manyara · Mara · Mbeya · Morogoro · Mtwara · Mwanza · Pemba North · Pemba South · Pwani · Rukwa · Ruvuma · Shinyanga · Singida · Tabora · Tanga · Zanzibar Central/South · Zanzibar North · Zanzibar Urban/West
For regions ranked by total area, land area and water area, see List of Tanzanian regions by area.

[edit] Geography

Main article: Geography of Tanzania

Map of Tanzania, shown with the old capital.



Landscape in Northern Tanzania, inside the Great Rift Valley.


At 945,087 km²,[16] Tanzania is the world's 31st-largest country (it comes after Egypt). It is comparable in size to Nigeria.
Tanzania is mountainous in the northeast, where Mount Kilimanjaro,[17] Africa's highest peak, is situated. To the north and west are the Great Lakes of Lake Victoria (Africa's largest lake) and Lake Tanganyika (Africa's deepest lake, known for its unique species of fish). Central Tanzania comprises a large plateau, with plains and arable land. The eastern shore is hot and humid, with the island of Zanzibar lying just offshore.
Tanzania contains many large and ecologically significant wildlife parks,[18] including the famous Ngorongoro Crater, Serengeti National Park[19] in the north, and Selous Game Reserve and Mikumi National Park in the south. Gombe National Park in the west is known as the site of Dr. Jane Goodall's studies of chimpanzee behavior.
The government of Tanzania through its department of tourism has embarked on a campaign to promote the Kalambo water falls in southwest Tanzania's region of Rukwa as one of Tanzania's many tourist destinations.[20][21] The Kalambo Falls are the second highest in Africa and are located near the southern tip of Lake Tanganyika.

[edit] Climate

Tanzania has a tropical type of climate. In the highlands, temperatures range between 10˚C and 20˚C during cold and hot seasons respectively. The rest of the country has temperatures rarely falling lower than 20˚C. The hottest period extends between November and February (25˚C - 31˚C) while the coldest period occurs between May and August (15˚C - 20˚C).
Two rainfall regimes exist over Tanzania. One is unimodal (December - April) and the other is bimodal (October -December and March - May). The former is experienced in southern, south-west, central and western parts of the country, and the latter is found to the north and northern coast.
In the bimodal regime the March - May rains are referred to as the long rains or Masika, whereas the October - December rains are generally known as short rains or Vuli.

[edit] Environment

Tanzania has considerable wildlife habitat, including much of the Serengeti plain, where the white-bearded wildebeest (Connochaetes taurinus mearnsi) and other bovids participate in a large-scale annual migration. Up to 250,000 wildebeest perish each year in the long and arduous movement to find forage in the dry season. Tanzania is also home to 130 amphibian and over 275 reptile species, many of them strictly endemic and included in the IUCN Red Lists of different countries.[22] Tanzania has developed a Biodiversity Action Plan to address species conservation. A recently discovered species of elephant shrew called Grey-Faced Sengi was filmed first time in 2005, and it was known to live in just two forests in the Udzungwa Mountains. In 2008, it was listed as "vulnerable" on the 2008 Red List of Threatened Species.

[edit] Demographics

Main article: Demographics of Tanzania
In the Kagera region, one of the newly created districts is Misenyi, which used to be the Misenyi Chiefdom. It extends from the Kyaka (Kagera River) to the Mutukula border with Uganda. That Chiefdom was inhabited by Baganda (known as Baganda Kyaka, i.e. Tanzanian Baganda). However, they do not appear on the list of Tanzanian tribes. It is important to make such a correction because the Babumbilo people of former Misenyi Chiefdom are not Bahaya, they are Baganda (meaning language, culture, everything).

[edit] Religion

Main article: Religion in Tanzania

Mosque in Moshi


Tanzania's population has been estimated to consist of roughly one third each Muslims, Christians and followers of indigenous religious groups. The national census, however, has not asked for religious affiliation since 1967 as the religious balance is seen as a sensitive topic. Thus all figures on religious statistics for Tanzania are at best educated guesswork and differ widely on the question whether there are more Christians or Muslims. Most assume that the share of traditionalists has dwindled.[23]
The Christian population is mostly composed of Roman Catholics, Protestants, Pentecostals, Seventh-day Adventists, members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Mormons), and members of Jehovah's Witnesses. Among Protestants the strong numbers of Lutherans and Moravians point to the German past of the country, the numbers of Anglicans to the British history of Tanganyika. All of them have had some influence in varying degress from the Walokole movement (East African Revival) which has also been fertile ground for the spread of charismatic and Pentecostal groups.
On the mainland, Muslim communities are concentrated in coastal areas, with some large Muslim minorities also in inland urban areas especially and along the former caravan routes. Between 80 and 90 percent of the Muslim population is Sunni; the remainder consists of several Shi'a subgroups, mostly of Asian descent.
There are also active communities of other religious groups, primarily on the mainland, such as Buddhists, Hindus, and Baha'is.
[24]

[edit] Languages

Tanzania has more than 126 ethnic groups and each ethnic group has its own language. No language is de jure official, but Swahili is the de facto national language, used for inter-ethnic communication and for official matters. After gaining independence, English, the language of colonial administration during the era of British rule, was still used for some official issues, and was thus considered de facto national alongside Swahili. Nowadays English is no longer used in the administration, in the parliament or in the government,[1] so it is no longer a de facto official language in the narrow sense. Hence Tanzania is one of the few African states in which a local language has gained importance to the disadvantage of the ex-colonial language. Since English is still the language of higher courts,[1] it can however be considered a de facto official language in the larger sense.
According to the official linguistic policy of Tanzania, as announced in 1984, Swahili is the language of the social and political sphere as well as primary and adult education, whereas English is the language of secondary education, universities, technology and higher courts.[1] Though the British government financially supports the use of English in Tanzania,[1] its usage in the Tanzanian society has diminished over the past decades: In the seventies Tanzanian university students used to speak English with each other, whereas now they almost exclusively use Swahili outside the classroom. Even in secondary school and university classes, where officially only English should be used, it is now quite common to use a mix of Swahili and English.
Other spoken languages are Indian languages, especially Gujarati, and Portuguese (both spoken by Mozambican blacks and Goans) and to a lesser extent French (from neighbouring Rwanda, Burundi and Democratic Republic of the Congo). Historically German was widely spoken during that colonial period, but few remain alive who remember that time.

[edit] Culture

Main articles: Culture of Tanzania and Music of Tanzania

Makonde carvings.


The music of Tanzania stretches from traditional African music to the string-based taarab to a distinctive hip hop known as bongo flava. Famous taarab singers names are Abbasi Mzee, Culture Musical Club, Shakila of Black Star Musical Group.
Internationally known traditional artists are Bi Kidude, Hukwe Zawose and Tatu Nane.
Tanzania has its own distinct African rumba music where names of artists/groups like Tabora Jazz, Western Jazz Band, Morogoro Jazz, Volcano Jazz, Simba Wanyika,Remmy Ongala, Ndala Kasheba,[25] NUTA JAZZ, ATOMIC JAZZ, DDC Mlimani Park, Afro 70 & Patrick Balisidya,[26][27][28] Sunburst, Tatu Nane[29] and Orchestra Makassy[30] must be mentioned in the history of Tanzanian music.
Tanzania has many writers. The list of writers' names includes well-known writers such as Godfrey Mwakikagile, Mohamed Said, Abdulrazak Gurnah, Prof. Julius Nyang'oro, Prof. Clement Ndulute, Prof. Frank Chiteji, Prof. Joseph Mbele,[31] Juma Volter Mwapachu, Prof. Issa Shivji, Jenerali Twaha Ulimwengu, Prof. Penina Mlama,[32] Mwalimu Julius Kambarage Nyerere, Adam Shafi, Dr. Malima M.P Bundala and Shaaban Robert.
Tanzania has remarkable position in art. Two styles became world known: Tingatinga and Makonde. Tingatinga are the popular African paintings painted with enamel paints on canvas. Usually the motives are animals and flowers in colourful and repetitive design. The style was started by Mr. Edward Saidi Tingatinga born in South Tanzania. Later he moved to Dar Es Salaam. Since his death in 1972 the Tingatinga style expanded both in Tanzania and worldwide. Makonde is both a tribe in Tanzania (and Mozambique) and a modern sculpture style. It is known for the high Ujamaas (Trees of Life) made of the hard and dark ebony tree. Tanzania is also a birthplace of one of the most famous African artists – George Lilanga.

[edit] Media

The Daily News is the oldest newspaper and is state-run, as are the public broadcasting service television TVT NOW Tanzania Broadcasting Cooperation TBC and radio networks of Radio Tanzania Dar es Salaam RTD [now TBC Radio]. Since 2007 the state owned television station popularly referred in Swahili as Televisheni Ya Taifa TVT NOW Tanzania Broadcasting Cooperation TBC and Radio Tanzania Dar-es-Salaam RTD are now both under the umbrella of Tanzania Broadcasting Corporation. Tanzania also has many privately run media outlets, for example more than 20 daily newspapers, more than 20 television stations and more than 30 FM radio stations like Radio One, Radio Sibuka- Shinyanga, Radio Faraja -Shinyanga, Radio Times, Radio Saut-Mwanza,Radio Sauti ya Injili-Moshi,Living water FM-Mwanza, Radio Tumaini, Radio Sauti ya Quran, Magic FM, Praise Power Radio,Radio Mwangaza-dodoma,Kifimbo Fm-Dodoma, Radio Maria, Radio Upendo, Wapo Radio, Mlimani Radio, Clouds FM, Passion FM and Radio Free Africa. Some of the private radio stations and newspapers are owned by political parties like the Uhuru newspaper and the Radio Uhuru FM.
International shortwave radio broadcasts from the BBC Radio, Voice of America and Deutsche Welle can be received.[33]
Tanzanians are also active bloggers[citation needed] and there is a blog site launched by Issa Michuzi,[34] that has been visited by more than 3 million bloggers since 2007, and a new blog focusing on children called Mama na Mwana. Internet in Tanzania has become a de facto source of news used both by Tanzanian citizens and other institutions.[citation needed]
 


tehe tehe tehee kama ndoa sio!!

Kimsingi, that is what should lead the discussion na sio nini cha muungano na nini sio cha muungano.
 
tehe tehe tehee kama ndoa sio!!

Kimsingi, that is what should lead the discussion na sio nini cha muungano na nini sio cha muungano.

Kuna watu wana ulalamikia mfano wangu tu lakini naamini it's a practical comparison. Sasa ngoja tusubiri tuone kama kuna member anaweza kuja na kusema makubaliano yana semaje in the case that Muungano unabidi uvunjwe.
 
Document hiko kimya kuhusu kuvunjwa kwa muungano kwahiyo ndoa ilikuwa for good and for worse, hakuna muungano kuvunjika hata kidogo unless bara ndio waamue lakini wazanzibar wakiamua hawawezi kufanya chochote kwani kila sehemu yao imeshikiliwa na bara kuanzi kwenye jeshi, polisi na miundo mbinu yote ya kuwawezesha kujitenga.

Wakae kimya kama vile walifiwa na wazazi wao na hawana ndugu wa kukimbilia huku bara wakiamu kila kitu juu yao, hawawezi hata kidogo kujitenga.
 

Ime shikiliwa na Bara au Muungano?
 
Unaposema muungano na bara wana tofauti gani ndio maana hakuna serikali ya bara bali kuna serikali ya muungano, ambayo maamuzi ya zanzibar hayawezi kupita bila bara kuamua kwani hakuna power ya kuenforce either kwa amani au kwa nguvu
 
Hawa wazenj walalamishi kweli kweli! Badala ya kuendelea kucheza bao, kunywa kahawa na kuota misaada toka Uarabuni wangetumia fursa za kiuchumi zilizoko bara, km kujitwalia ardhi ya kutosha na kuacha kung'ang'ania ardhi ambayo siku moja watazaana na kuijaza yote na kubaki ndogo ikilinganishwa na wingi wa watu mithili ya kisiwa cha Migingo!
 


Nionavyo mimi Muungano kuvunjika sio rahisi labda Bara waamue hivyo. Kulichanganya Jeshi la Wananchi Bara na Visiwani hapo Mwalimu alicheza kama Pele. Dola inanguvu kuliko maneno maneno ya wanasiasa wanayotoa kutafuta umaarufu kwa maslai yao binafsi bila kujali impact yake.
Kuuvunja Muungano itabidi tuanze kwa vyombo vya ulinzi na usalama kwanza.
 
We dont need all this rubbish above; What we are saying "MUUNGANO UVUNJWE". We are just fed up with these Zanzibaris.
 
Ni ngumu pia for a sitting head of state yaani iwekwe ktk historia kuwa yeye ndo aliamua kuvunja huu Muungano! Mfano JK iwekwe ktk historia ndo akiwa raisi aliamua kuvunja Muungano!

Sii rahisi hivyo kuvunjika! Hakuna sababu za kimsingi! Ni maneno tu ya wanasiasi tena wakiongozwa za hisia za ubnafsi!
 
Kama wazanzibar wanataka tuuvuje, tutauvunja, kama hawataki, mbona sisi hatuna tatizo?
 
Kwa upande wangu kwanza sioni faida ya muungano kwetu sisi wa bara siji wenzetu Zenji. Tunatumia gharama kubwa sana kuutunza muungano usiokuwa hata na faida yeyote kwetu na wakati mwingine tunapoteza watanzania wenzetu au kuwajeruhi bila sababu. Kwa mtazamo wangu kuuvunja muungano kutasaidia kuenda mbele kimaendeleo japo kwa nusu hatua. Migogoro mingi isiyoishaisha na kero zake juu ya muungano ni sababu tosha ya kuuvunja muungano. Sijui wengine mnasemaje?
 
Mimi sikubaliani na hii mambo,nimeangalia Articles of the Union interpretation section hakuna neno Tanzania ila kuna Government of Republic of Tanganyika.Sasa neno Tanzania lilizaliwa wapi na kwa sheria gani.Na kwa nini kwenye muungano huo Government of Republic of Tanganyika ili kubali kudesolve lakini government of the Peoples Republic of Zanzibar ilibaki.

Mimi naona kuna mikanganyiko mingi tuu ndani ya huu muungano,hapa cha muhimu kuwe na Serikali moja ya Tanzania,Rais 1 na Makamu wa Rais 1 kama watu wa Zanzibar hawataki basi waondoke kwenye Muungano na sisi tufufue Serikali yetu ya Tanganyika ili tuweze kujitawala na kujiletea maendeleo wenyewe.Kelele kelele hizi za nini?
 
11th August 2009

Mfanyabiashara Maarufu, Mohamed Raza akizungumza na waandishi wa habari jijini Dar es Salaam jana.

Mfanyabiashara maarufu, ambaye pia, ni mshauri wa zamani wa masuala ya michezo wa Rais Mstaafu wa Zanzibar, Dk. Salmin Amour, Mohamed Raza, amepinga wazo la kuanzishwa serikali moja katika mfumo wa Muungano wa Tanzania akisema jambo hilo ni uhaini kwa vile linalenga kufuta utaifa wa Wazanzibari.

Raza, alitoa kauli hiyo alipozungumza na waandishi wa habari jijini Dar es Salaam jana na kusisitiza kwamba wazo hilo pia ni utovu wa maadili, ukiukwaji wa sera ya Chama Cha Mapinduzi (CCM), Katiba ya nchi na pia ni hatari kwa mustakabali wa CCM, kwani inaweza kupoteza kura zote, ikiwamo kura yake Zanzibar katika Uchaguzi Mkuu mwakani.

Alisema viongozi wa serikali ya Muungano wamekuwa wakidai kuwa serikali ya Tanganyika imefutwa, lakini ukweli ni kwamba, bado ipo na kwamba, imejificha ndani ya Tanzania.

Alisema sera ya CCM inatambua serikali mbili katika mfumo wa Muungano, na si moja wala tatu na kuongeza kuwa suala la kiongozi wa serikali ndani ya Muungano kutaka kuanzishwa serikali moja, ni ishara kwamba, wamepotoka kimaadili.

“Ndio maana G55 (kundi la wabunge 55) ilipokuja na hoja ya kuanzishwa serikali tatu, Mwalimu Nyerere alisimama na kuipinga kwa nguvu zake zote kwa vile sera ya CCM na Katiba ya nchi inazungumzia serikali mbili. Kuzungumza serikali moja ni uhalifu sababu unataka kumfutia mtu utaifa wake. Ninahofu sana ushindi kwa CCM.

Kama chama hakijawekwa sawa halafu tunakwenda kwenye uchaguzi, ni hatari. Wallahi leo CCM iseme kuna serikali moja, tuone kama watapata hata kura moja Zanzibar, yangu ikiwamo,” alisema.

Hata hivyo, alisema kama kumeonekana hapana budi kuanzishwa serikali moja katika mfumo wa Muungano, ni vema wananchi wakatangaziwa mgogoro wa Katiba na kwa sababu hiyo, hata kamati iliyoundwa kushughulikia kero za Muungano, Wazanzibari hawawezi kuwa na imani nayo.

Hata hivyo, alisema ili kuimarisha Muungano, Watanganyika waiachie Zanzibar ijitegemee kiuchumi ambapo alisema: “Hata Dubai kuna Muungano wa Umoja wa Nchi za Kiarabu (UAE), unaoziunganisha nchi kama vile Sharja na nyinginezo, lakini kila moja inajitegemea.”

Alisema wanachokitaka Wazanzibari ni “kuheshimiana, kuvumiliana na kujadiliana” inapokuja hoja kuhusu Muungano na kusisitiza kuwa hakuna anayetaka kuvunja Muungano.

Alisema jambo lingine analopinga, ni kundi la watu kudhani kwamba lenyewe tu ndilo linaweza kuongoza nchi au wanafikiria wao ni bora wa kuongoza nchi.

Alimtaka Waziri Mkuu, Mizengo Pinda kueleza walikofikia wanasheria wa pande mbili za Muungano katika kushughulikia utata wa hoja ya kama Zanzibar ni nchi au la. “Mmetamka hadharani, iko wapi ripoti?,” alihoji Raza.

Juzi akihutubia mkutano wa hadhara katika viwanja vya Culture, Vuga Mji Mkongwe, Zanzibar, Maalim Seif alisema kauli ya Pinda aliyoitoa bungeni mjini Dodoma hivi karibuni kwamba anatamani kuwe na serikali moja sio ngeni na kwamba mpango huo upo siku nyingi, kama ambavyo Rais Mstaafu Ali Hassan Mwinyi alivyowahi kusema siku za nyuma. http://www.ippmedia.com/
 
Imekuwa kama ada, kila uchao kuna jambo jipya linajitokeza kama moja ya changamoto za Muungano wa Tanganyika na Zanzibar. Mwelekeo wa siku za hivi karibuni unatoa picha kwamba Muungano wa nchi hizi mbili ni kama umejengwa juu ya urafiki wa kutokuaminiana.

Inawezekana uhuru wa kutoa maoni kwa njia za uwazi zaidi umetoa fursa kwa watu wengi zaidi kuzungumzia kasoro zilizoko katika Muungano wa huu, hali ambayo miaka kabla ya 90 haikuwako.



Tunaamini kwamba watu kuwa na uhuru wa kuzungumzia Muungano na changamoto zake ni njia moja sahihi ya kujenga; kwa maana kwamba kama udhaifu ukijulikana na kuzungumzwa basi watu watakuwa tayari kutatua hitilafu hizo. Wahenga walisema kujua tatizo ni nusu ya kupata utatuzi wake.



Pamoja na changamoto zote zinazoweza kutajwa kuwa ni kero hasa za Muungano, uamuzi wa hivi karibuni wa kuwataka Watanzania wenye asili ya Bara kulipa kodi ya ardhi ya Dola za Marekani 5,000 kwa mwaka sawa na raia wengine wa kigeni, hakika ni kielelezo kwamba wapo watu wanaochokonoa kadri wawezavyo ili kuudhoofisha Muungano!



Maamuzi haya yanadaiwa kuwa yanatokana na sheria ya ardhi ya mwaka 1992 ya Zanzibar ambayo inamtaja Mzanzibari pekee kuwa na haki ya kumiliki ardhi visiwani humo, wengine wote wanahesabika kama wageni, yaani hata Watanzania wanaotoka Bara wanatambuliwa kama wageni!



Kutokana na sheria hiyo, Watanzania kutoka Bara waliolowea na kujiendeleza Zanzibar kwa miaka, wakapata kipande cha ardhi na kuiendeleza sasa watalazimika kulipa kodi hiyo kwa mwaka kama walivyo wageni wengine wowote kutoka kona yoyote ya dunia hii.



Haya yakitokea Zanzibar, sheria za ardhi namba nne na tano za Tanzania za mwaka 1998, zinahalalisha kila Mtanzania kuwa na haki ya kumiliki ardhi. Mtanzania huyu aweza kuwa yule wa kuzaliwa au wa kuomba; wote wanaruhusiwa kumiliki ardhi kwa mujibu wa sheria. Kigezo hiki kinawapa hata Wazanzibari haki ya kumiliki ardhi Bara.



Tunatambua kwamba wapo Wazanzibari wengi tu wajasiriamali waliobobea wamejiendeleza na sasa wanamiliki si tu ardhi, bali mali za uhakika zisizohamishika Tanzania Bara. Hawa wana haki kabisa mbele ya sheria kumiliki wanachomiliki na kuendelea kuwekeza zaidi na zaidi, sisi tunawatia shime wawekeze zaidi na zaidi kwa ajili ya ustawi wa nchi yao.



Lakini wakati tukitambua sheria na hali halisi ya ardhi kwa pande zote za Muungano, yaani Zanzibar yenye ardhi finyu na Tanzania Bara yenye ardhi kubwa na fursa nyingi, tunapatwa na wasiwasi kwamba kwa nini katika kipindi hiki ambacho Muungano unapita katika kipindi cha majaribu makubwa, suala la kuwaweka kundi moja Watanzania wa Bara kundi moja na wageni linawekewa mkakati?



Tunashindwa kujua kama kweli msukumo pekee wa kuwaweka Watanganyika katika kundi la wageni visiwani Zanzibar ni matokeo ya mahitaji ya kodi kwa ajili ya maendeleo ya visiwa hivyo, au ni njia nyingine ya mapambano kama nyingine nyingi ambazo zimeshuhudiwa katika siku za hivi za karibuni za Zanzibar kutaka kujionyesha kwamba ni taifa linalojitegemea?



Tunasema haya si kwa sababu tunaunga mkono mbinu zozote mbaya za kukandamiza haki za Wazanzibari, ila tunasukumwa na kitu kimoja; kwamba baada ya miaka 45 ya Muungano kila uchao tofauti zinatafutwa, kukuzwa na kupigiwa mbiu kana kwamba kufanya hivyo ndiyo njia ya kuujenga.



Tunapata hofu kwamba kama viongozi wetu wasipokaa kitako na kutafakari kwa mapana mambo yanayotengenezwa, kusukumwa na kupigiwa kampeni kuhusu udhaifu wa Muungano, kuna kila dalili kwamba huko tuendako mambo yatakuwa mabaya zaidi.



Tunafikiri huu si wakati wa kuendelea kubaguana baina ya Wazanzibari na Watanganyika, pia si wakati wa kuhoji nani ananufaika zaidi na kwa nini, ila kwa upeo wetu tunaamini huu ni wakati wa kushikamana zaidi, kuvuta kwa pamoja zaidi na kurekebisha kasoro zilizopo hata kama ni za kisheria ili kujenga Muungano imara zaidi. Tujitahidi kutibu kuliko kuendelea kubomoa.
CHANZO: NIPASHE
 

Ni wanasiasa haohao ndio wanaamrisha jeshi. Inategemea ni wa upande gani. Hakuna jeshi huru Tanzania, Hao kina Mwamnyange ni mbwa tu ambao hawajui kuwa wanatetwa. Vyeo vyao vyote ni zawadi tu hivyo lazima waipe fadhila. Waasiasa unaowapuuza wakiamua muungano unavunjika. Kwani ingekuwa jeshi letu lina uchungu na taifa letu bila shaka Mkapa asingemaliza awamu ya pili. Kwa kifupi wanajeshi ni vibaraka tu wa wanasiasa. Tangu lini kibaraka akamkatalia tajiri wake?
 
Nnajisikia uchungu sana na hawa wanaopiga kelele na kutaka kutupeperushia kakoloni ketu ka Zanzibar. Wamelala 444 hao, msiwashike mkono wakaamka. Kwa nini tuesiendelee kuwa na serikali mbili na kuwafanya wajisikie kuwa nao ni huru, ili tuendelee kuwakandamiza kizenji? Muhimu ni kutafuta namna tofauti ya kuhakikisha kuwa hawashtuikii dili.

Unajua ukoloni wetu una udhaifu kidogo ukilinganisha na ule wa nchi za magharibi. Wao wakazifanya nchi wanazozitawala zijickie ziko huru, lakini kikweli bado wanazikandamiza kiaina yaani. Kwa nini tusiazime hilo desa?

Hakika tukikubali kuvunja muungano bara tutaluuz kichiiz yaan.

Muungano hoyee! nyerere hoyee! abdu jumbe hoyee! lowassa hoyee! sefu sharif hoyee. sisiemu hoyeee. kilimo cha kufariki na kupona hoyee! c asa ya ujama na kuwategemea juuu! kingungengombaremwiiru oyee. tanu oyee. juwata oyee. afuroshiraazi oye! sisiemu juu? ndiyoo juu juu juuuu zaidiii kaaaziii!
 
Jamani mbona mnanichanganya?Hiyo kitu mbona imesainiwa na Nyeree peke yake,sijaona saini ya Abeid?

Alafu chini kabisa mwishoni inasema walisaini makubaliano th 22/04/1964,tunaomba basi makubaliano hayo pengine ndo yana saini ya Abeid!

Ukweli hayo makubaliano ni utata mtupu,bora tu MUUNGANO UVUNJWE!Kwanza Wanzanzibari wanchonga sana wanataka wajitenge,mtoto ukimweka mgongoni na bado anasumbua anataka ashuke unamshusha hata kidogo avute hewa ya nje aione ilivyo!
 
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