No more dairy products from Kenya in Tanzania

No more dairy products from Kenya in Tanzania

you can even block kila kitu...we will just find another market...we dont need poor lazy idiots from tz....a village😀😀😀 sisi ni watu wa bidii...sio watu wa kuamini kuwa watatajirika kwa mambo ya kishirikina...😀😀😀
Kenyans are living in a poverty line as the country's land is divided to the fewer (landlord's) but in Tanzania a poor is owning a plot of land for economic activities and residence.
Pole sana nyie ila mtakuja jua ifikapo 2050 kuwa Tanzania ni moto mwingine. I hope mtazamia kuja Tanzania kama mnavyoenda Ulaya.
Mngekuwa mnajitambua kama mnavyojinasibu mngebadilisha katiba mkapata haki ya kumiliki ardhi.
 
wewe ushawahi fika nairobi? tembea utadhani uko mji wa London...mtz toka village of dar...😀😀 i will personally host you
No slum dwellers in London.
Acha kufananisha sperm na kamasi wewe. Kamasi halitungi mimba
 
Koinange Street product details layout in London
images
 
Wakenya bhanaaa
A country of no language at all.
Hivi lugha yenu ni IPI hasa kiingereza au kiswahili?
Maana kiswahili chetu watanzania na English ya waingereza. Sasa nyie mnamiliki lugha gani?
OK ninekumbuka mnamiliki Luo na Kikuyu kama sio Kamba
 
Lakini hebu tufikirie hili bila ya kuweka huu utaifa wetu mbele...

Je, hili ambalo Tanzania inafanya iko sawa? Is Kenya really on the wrong here?

Kenya imezuia gesi ya Tanzania kupitia mpakani Namanga kwa sababu hawana uhakika na usalama na gesi hizo, hamna facilities mle wa kukagua uhalali wa gesi hizo pale mpakani. kwahivyo hawa wafanyi biashara wa Tanzania wameambiwa wazipitishe Mombass.

Ngano. Kenya ilizalisha ngano ya kutosha, ilhali Tanzania kuna upungufu.
Lakini sasa eti Tanzania inaagiza ngano kutoka nje, halafu kuuzia tena wakenya.

Hapo angalia masuala haya?

Mkuu hapo nilitaka kumchemsha jamaa tu, lakini Wakenya kutujia juu hasa kuhusu gesi na ngano wapo justified kabisa - uwezi ku-import ngano kutoka Canada na Brazil ukaisaga hapa halafu na kuchanganya kidogo na ngano ya Basuto halafu ukazuga watu eti ni produce ya Tanzania hapo tunakosea.

Kitu kingine LPG inatoka Uarabuni inasafirishwa kwa Meli mpaka Dar sasa logic ya sisi kutaka kusafirisha bidhaa hiyo Kwenda Kenya ikiwa kwenye mitungi ambayo quality yake ni highly questionable na pengine pungufu si unajua tena uchakachuaji wetu, wanawezaje kuamini usalama wa valve za mitungi wakati mwingine gas cylinders zinajazwa kwenye makeshift/backyard na wajanja, kumbuka tukio la juzi juzi huko Kimarana - Kenyans are right kwa nini Meli yenye gesi isitie nanga Mombasa port tukawauzia gesi kiasi wanacho itaji halafu Meli ika-proceed na safari yake kuja Port ya Dar tukawachia wao ndiyo watafute jinsi ya kuisambaza Gesi nchini mwao - hawawezi kukubali ku-risk maisha ya raia wao kwa gesi inayo safirishwa kwa malori kwenda Kenya ikitokea Tanzania, je, malori yakipata ajari mitungi ikalipuka watamlahumu nani - mambo mengine tuwe tunangalia upande wa pili wa shilling??
 
Ujinga wa Wakenya

Tanzania's frost relations with Kenya dates back to early 1960s

By Patrick Alushula | Updated Tue, July 4th 2017 at 12:04 GMT +3 SHARE THIS ARTICLE Share on Facebook Share on Twitter

A good neighbour smiles at you over the back fence, but doesn’t climb over it according to the late American journalist and humourist Arthur Baer. This best sums up the relationship between Kenya and Tanzania.

At the height of Kenya’s longest doctors’ strike, Tanzania’s President John Magufuli assured a Kenyan delegation that his government would allow its doctors to get hired in Kenya. He later on changed his mind letting Kenya to solve its own health sector mess brought about by the 100-day doctors’ strike.

As captured in the history of these two countries, Tanzania’s cold shoulder towards Kenya- traces back as far as 1965.

They may never have been at physical war but policy differences have always been at play - only getting closer to physical confrontation in 1977 when the then President Julius Nyerere closed the Kenya-Tanzania boarder which saw the East African Community collapse.

Since 1919, Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania had a common currency, the East African Shilling managed by the East African Currency Board (EACB). In June 1965, Tanzania dropped a shocker- it quit the board.

“The Central Bank of Kenya would then become Kenya’s bank of last resort, replacing the Currency Board which has served East Africa since 1919 - a move precipitated by Tanzania’s sudden decision to withdraw from the regional currency agreement signed in 1965,” wrote The East African Standard in 1966.

ALSO READ: Shilling eases, eyes on central bank dollar sales

In September 13, the same year, President Jomo Kenyatta unveiled new notes to replace the East African shilling, an easy process that took 12 months since one Kenyan shilling equaled one East African shilling.

However, the debate on whose head should go on the notes or whether to mark them with dead heroes or national symbols heated, cooling down only due to the powerful presidency.

That time, Kenya did not even have capable citizens to serve in the Central Bank but instead, expatriates headed by Leon Baranski were handed the main jobs. That begun the peaceful but suspicious-packed relationship that has persisted into the modern day history.

Non-inflationary

In the book, Tanzania: A Profile of a Nation by John Ndembwike, the first Governor of the Bank of Tanzania and former member of the currency board, downplays the role of the board in ensuring a strong common currency.

“True, East African currency was a strong currency. But, this was because the partner States’ fiscal policies then were cautious and non-inflationary and this stance had nothing to do with EACB.”

He observed that continuation of a common market could not be attributed to the commonness or strength of the currency.

ALSO READ: Shilling eases, eyes on central bank dollar sales

In the 1967 book by Prof Henry Bienen, titled Tanzania: Party Transformation and Economic Development, the scholar argues that the common currency had restricted Tanzania’s ability to use monetary policy as a development tool.

“Tanzania has withdrawn from EACB, thus eliminating one source of constraints which it could eliminate,” wrote Prof Bienen. The clash of cultures, policies and politics has since continued to emerge between Kenya and Tanzania.

The East African Community (EAC) partner States signed the East African Monetary Union Protocol on November 30, 2013 in Kampala, hoping to return to common currency that has been in the pipeline for a while.

This was a rare chance to revive initial plan to have it by 2012. Tanzania has not been keen on the idea, especially that Kenya’s currency is the strongest in the region. In October last year, Dar chose not to be part of the common visa plan for the region, instead leaving it in the hands of Kenya, Uganda and Rwanda - a grouping dubbed “coalition of the willing.”

With the common visa, tourists accessing the three countries pay $100 (Sh10,347) instead of the $150 (Sh15,546) before the deal. Tourism Cabinet Secretary Najib Balala, without direct reference to Dar’s cold shoulder, complained that problem with the region was that countries live with “a fear of the unknown”.

Economic partnership

The development came just months after Tanzania had declined to sign the Economic Partnership Agreement between EAC and European Union (EU), which left Kenya at risk of exporting to EU countries at higher costs.

ALSO READ: Appeal court saves Kenya power firm from paying Sh2m award

Tanzania argued that, with the exit of its core market from the EU during Brexit polls, it had little to gain from the agreement, and that signing up would harm its “national interest”.

In May last year, President Magufuli declared that Tanzania would cut electricity import from Kenya by 67 per cent.

He challenged Tanzanian companies why they were buying power from Kenya yet they had their own locally.

In the same month, despite spirited lobbying by President Uhuru Kenyatta, Tanzania lured Uganda to withdraw its earlier decision to connect oil pipeline with Kenyan oil fields, instead favouring Dar route. Kenya’s attempt to rescue the plan ended in diplomatic scuffle as Tanzanian officials seized passports of Kenyan officials even as a delegation from Uganda was allowed to proceed with their tour.

August last year saw Japan dangle infrastructure projects at East African countries during Tokyo International Conference on African Development forum. Even as over 30 heads of State graced the occasion, President Magufuli only send a representative. In February this year, Tanzania reportedly joined Uganda, Burundi and Djibouti in denying Kenya’s Foreign Affairs Cabinet Secretary Amb Amina Mohamed votes that eventually saw her lose chance to be elected chairperson of the African Union Commission.

However, when President Magufuli eventually visited Kenya in November last year, he jovially remarked: “My visit today is to cement the good relations between Tanzania and Kenya.”


Read more at: Tanzania's frost relations with Kenya dates back to early 1960s

MY TAKE
Hahah Amina kukosa Chairmanship imewauma! hahah poleni sana tanzania haikupiga kura sasa sijui mnawezaje kulalamika? Looking at the reasons above mna utoto mwingi...
 
Ujinga wa Wakenya

Tanzania's frost relations with Kenya dates back to early 1960s

By Patrick Alushula | Updated Tue, July 4th 2017 at 12:04 GMT +3 SHARE THIS ARTICLE Share on Facebook Share on Twitter

A good neighbour smiles at you over the back fence, but doesn’t climb over it according to the late American journalist and humourist Arthur Baer. This best sums up the relationship between Kenya and Tanzania.

At the height of Kenya’s longest doctors’ strike, Tanzania’s President John Magufuli assured a Kenyan delegation that his government would allow its doctors to get hired in Kenya. He later on changed his mind letting Kenya to solve its own health sector mess brought about by the 100-day doctors’ strike.

As captured in the history of these two countries, Tanzania’s cold shoulder towards Kenya- traces back as far as 1965.

They may never have been at physical war but policy differences have always been at play - only getting closer to physical confrontation in 1977 when the then President Julius Nyerere closed the Kenya-Tanzania boarder which saw the East African Community collapse.

Since 1919, Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania had a common currency, the East African Shilling managed by the East African Currency Board (EACB). In June 1965, Tanzania dropped a shocker- it quit the board.

“The Central Bank of Kenya would then become Kenya’s bank of last resort, replacing the Currency Board which has served East Africa since 1919 - a move precipitated by Tanzania’s sudden decision to withdraw from the regional currency agreement signed in 1965,” wrote The East African Standard in 1966.

ALSO READ: Shilling eases, eyes on central bank dollar sales

In September 13, the same year, President Jomo Kenyatta unveiled new notes to replace the East African shilling, an easy process that took 12 months since one Kenyan shilling equaled one East African shilling.

However, the debate on whose head should go on the notes or whether to mark them with dead heroes or national symbols heated, cooling down only due to the powerful presidency.

That time, Kenya did not even have capable citizens to serve in the Central Bank but instead, expatriates headed by Leon Baranski were handed the main jobs. That begun the peaceful but suspicious-packed relationship that has persisted into the modern day history.

Non-inflationary

In the book, Tanzania: A Profile of a Nation by John Ndembwike, the first Governor of the Bank of Tanzania and former member of the currency board, downplays the role of the board in ensuring a strong common currency.

“True, East African currency was a strong currency. But, this was because the partner States’ fiscal policies then were cautious and non-inflationary and this stance had nothing to do with EACB.”

He observed that continuation of a common market could not be attributed to the commonness or strength of the currency.

ALSO READ: Shilling eases, eyes on central bank dollar sales

In the 1967 book by Prof Henry Bienen, titled Tanzania: Party Transformation and Economic Development, the scholar argues that the common currency had restricted Tanzania’s ability to use monetary policy as a development tool.

“Tanzania has withdrawn from EACB, thus eliminating one source of constraints which it could eliminate,” wrote Prof Bienen. The clash of cultures, policies and politics has since continued to emerge between Kenya and Tanzania.

The East African Community (EAC) partner States signed the East African Monetary Union Protocol on November 30, 2013 in Kampala, hoping to return to common currency that has been in the pipeline for a while.

This was a rare chance to revive initial plan to have it by 2012. Tanzania has not been keen on the idea, especially that Kenya’s currency is the strongest in the region. In October last year, Dar chose not to be part of the common visa plan for the region, instead leaving it in the hands of Kenya, Uganda and Rwanda - a grouping dubbed “coalition of the willing.”

With the common visa, tourists accessing the three countries pay $100 (Sh10,347) instead of the $150 (Sh15,546) before the deal. Tourism Cabinet Secretary Najib Balala, without direct reference to Dar’s cold shoulder, complained that problem with the region was that countries live with “a fear of the unknown”.

Economic partnership

The development came just months after Tanzania had declined to sign the Economic Partnership Agreement between EAC and European Union (EU), which left Kenya at risk of exporting to EU countries at higher costs.

ALSO READ: Appeal court saves Kenya power firm from paying Sh2m award

Tanzania argued that, with the exit of its core market from the EU during Brexit polls, it had little to gain from the agreement, and that signing up would harm its “national interest”.

In May last year, President Magufuli declared that Tanzania would cut electricity import from Kenya by 67 per cent.

He challenged Tanzanian companies why they were buying power from Kenya yet they had their own locally.

In the same month, despite spirited lobbying by President Uhuru Kenyatta, Tanzania lured Uganda to withdraw its earlier decision to connect oil pipeline with Kenyan oil fields, instead favouring Dar route. Kenya’s attempt to rescue the plan ended in diplomatic scuffle as Tanzanian officials seized passports of Kenyan officials even as a delegation from Uganda was allowed to proceed with their tour.

August last year saw Japan dangle infrastructure projects at East African countries during Tokyo International Conference on African Development forum. Even as over 30 heads of State graced the occasion, President Magufuli only send a representative. In February this year, Tanzania reportedly joined Uganda, Burundi and Djibouti in denying Kenya’s Foreign Affairs Cabinet Secretary Amb Amina Mohamed votes that eventually saw her lose chance to be elected chairperson of the African Union Commission.

However, when President Magufuli eventually visited Kenya in November last year, he jovially remarked: “My visit today is to cement the good relations between Tanzania and Kenya.”


Read more at: Tanzania's frost relations with Kenya dates back to early 1960s

MY TAKE
Hahah Amina kukosa Chairmanship imewauma! hahah poleni sana tanzania haikupiga kura sasa sijui mnawezaje kulalamika? Looking at the reasons above mna utoto mwingi...
Nimeisoma hiyo nimebaki kucheka tu. Yaani wakenya wamekuwa kama watoto. Wamekuwa watu wa kulaumu laumu tu. Yaani hawa wenzetu hawa mh!!
 
List of some of diaries produced in Tanzania

Serengeti
Mara milk
Azam
Tanga fresh
Meatu milk
Asas diary
Lake milk
Kilimanjaro diary
Dar fresh etc
Acha zako wewe,eti Lake milk?Hayo yatakuwa ni maziwa yanayotoka kwa viboko wanaoishi Ziwa Tanganyika nini?Jina lenyewe la Meatu milk linatisha tu.Labda hayo yatakuwa ni Popo milk maanake tz kwa ushirikina mnatisha!Kama ni kurusha majina tu,Kenya tunayo pia.Kuna maziwa ya Mama Njeri,maziwa ya Mama Nyambura bila kusahau maziwa freshi ya Mama Nduta kutoka hapa hapa Thika,....etc..etc.Haha!
 
Nimeisoma hiyo nimebaki kucheka tu. Yaani wakenya wamekuwa kama watoto. Wamekuwa watu wa kulaumu laumu tu. Yaani hawa wenzetu hawa mh!!
Wanalazimishia kutuuzia umeme
 
Acha zako wewe,eti Lake milk?Hayo yatakuwa ni maziwa yanayotoka kwa viboko wanaoishi Ziwa Tanganyika nini?Jina lenyewe la Meatu milk linatisha tu.Labda hayo yatakuwa ni Popo milk maanake tz kwa ushirikina mnatisha!Kama ni kurusha majina tu,Kenya tunayo pia.Kuna maziwa ya Mama Njeri,maziwa ya Mama Nyambura bila kusahau maziwa freshi ya Mama Nduta kutoka hapa hapa Thika,....etc..etc.Haha!

wewe ni mpumbavu na huna akili.
 
Ujinga wa Wakenya

Tanzania's frost relations with Kenya dates back to early 1960s

By Patrick Alushula | Updated Tue, July 4th 2017 at 12:04 GMT +3 SHARE THIS ARTICLE Share on Facebook Share on Twitter

A good neighbour smiles at you over the back fence, but doesn’t climb over it according to the late American journalist and humourist Arthur Baer. This best sums up the relationship between Kenya and Tanzania.

At the height of Kenya’s longest doctors’ strike, Tanzania’s President John Magufuli assured a Kenyan delegation that his government would allow its doctors to get hired in Kenya. He later on changed his mind letting Kenya to solve its own health sector mess brought about by the 100-day doctors’ strike.

As captured in the history of these two countries, Tanzania’s cold shoulder towards Kenya- traces back as far as 1965.

They may never have been at physical war but policy differences have always been at play - only getting closer to physical confrontation in 1977 when the then President Julius Nyerere closed the Kenya-Tanzania boarder which saw the East African Community collapse.

Since 1919, Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania had a common currency, the East African Shilling managed by the East African Currency Board (EACB). In June 1965, Tanzania dropped a shocker- it quit the board.

“The Central Bank of Kenya would then become Kenya’s bank of last resort, replacing the Currency Board which has served East Africa since 1919 - a move precipitated by Tanzania’s sudden decision to withdraw from the regional currency agreement signed in 1965,” wrote The East African Standard in 1966.

ALSO READ: Shilling eases, eyes on central bank dollar sales

In September 13, the same year, President Jomo Kenyatta unveiled new notes to replace the East African shilling, an easy process that took 12 months since one Kenyan shilling equaled one East African shilling.

However, the debate on whose head should go on the notes or whether to mark them with dead heroes or national symbols heated, cooling down only due to the powerful presidency.

That time, Kenya did not even have capable citizens to serve in the Central Bank but instead, expatriates headed by Leon Baranski were handed the main jobs. That begun the peaceful but suspicious-packed relationship that has persisted into the modern day history.

Non-inflationary

In the book, Tanzania: A Profile of a Nation by John Ndembwike, the first Governor of the Bank of Tanzania and former member of the currency board, downplays the role of the board in ensuring a strong common currency.

“True, East African currency was a strong currency. But, this was because the partner States’ fiscal policies then were cautious and non-inflationary and this stance had nothing to do with EACB.”

He observed that continuation of a common market could not be attributed to the commonness or strength of the currency.

ALSO READ: Shilling eases, eyes on central bank dollar sales

In the 1967 book by Prof Henry Bienen, titled Tanzania: Party Transformation and Economic Development, the scholar argues that the common currency had restricted Tanzania’s ability to use monetary policy as a development tool.

“Tanzania has withdrawn from EACB, thus eliminating one source of constraints which it could eliminate,” wrote Prof Bienen. The clash of cultures, policies and politics has since continued to emerge between Kenya and Tanzania.

The East African Community (EAC) partner States signed the East African Monetary Union Protocol on November 30, 2013 in Kampala, hoping to return to common currency that has been in the pipeline for a while.

This was a rare chance to revive initial plan to have it by 2012. Tanzania has not been keen on the idea, especially that Kenya’s currency is the strongest in the region. In October last year, Dar chose not to be part of the common visa plan for the region, instead leaving it in the hands of Kenya, Uganda and Rwanda - a grouping dubbed “coalition of the willing.”

With the common visa, tourists accessing the three countries pay $100 (Sh10,347) instead of the $150 (Sh15,546) before the deal. Tourism Cabinet Secretary Najib Balala, without direct reference to Dar’s cold shoulder, complained that problem with the region was that countries live with “a fear of the unknown”.

Economic partnership

The development came just months after Tanzania had declined to sign the Economic Partnership Agreement between EAC and European Union (EU), which left Kenya at risk of exporting to EU countries at higher costs.

ALSO READ: Appeal court saves Kenya power firm from paying Sh2m award

Tanzania argued that, with the exit of its core market from the EU during Brexit polls, it had little to gain from the agreement, and that signing up would harm its “national interest”.

In May last year, President Magufuli declared that Tanzania would cut electricity import from Kenya by 67 per cent.

He challenged Tanzanian companies why they were buying power from Kenya yet they had their own locally.

In the same month, despite spirited lobbying by President Uhuru Kenyatta, Tanzania lured Uganda to withdraw its earlier decision to connect oil pipeline with Kenyan oil fields, instead favouring Dar route. Kenya’s attempt to rescue the plan ended in diplomatic scuffle as Tanzanian officials seized passports of Kenyan officials even as a delegation from Uganda was allowed to proceed with their tour.

August last year saw Japan dangle infrastructure projects at East African countries during Tokyo International Conference on African Development forum. Even as over 30 heads of State graced the occasion, President Magufuli only send a representative. In February this year, Tanzania reportedly joined Uganda, Burundi and Djibouti in denying Kenya’s Foreign Affairs Cabinet Secretary Amb Amina Mohamed votes that eventually saw her lose chance to be elected chairperson of the African Union Commission.

However, when President Magufuli eventually visited Kenya in November last year, he jovially remarked: “My visit today is to cement the good relations between Tanzania and Kenya.”


Read more at: Tanzania's frost relations with Kenya dates back to early 1960s

MY TAKE
Hahah Amina kukosa Chairmanship imewauma! hahah poleni sana tanzania haikupiga kura sasa sijui mnawezaje kulalamika? Looking at the reasons above mna utoto mwingi...
Na kweli huu ni ujinga uliopitiliza. Yani wanapindisha maneno ili na sisi tukurupuke ndio wapate chakupigizana makelele, Navipongeza vyombo vya habari vya Tanzania, hawajazipa kipaumbele habari za Kenya vs Tanzania.
 
Acha zako wewe,eti Lake milk?Hayo yatakuwa ni maziwa yanayotoka kwa viboko wanaoishi Ziwa Tanganyika nini?Jina lenyewe la Meatu milk linatisha tu.Labda hayo yatakuwa ni Popo milk maanake tz kwa ushirikina mnatisha!Kama ni kurusha majina tu,Kenya tunayo pia.Kuna maziwa ya Mama Njeri,maziwa ya Mama Nyambura bila kusahau maziwa freshi ya Mama Nduta kutoka hapa hapa Thika,....etc..etc.Haha!
14520538_1089902567790902_3306290968059794845_n.jpg
 
Njaa zinawauwa mmekalia tu kula mirungi kama mbuzi kulima hamtaki mnazunguka Nairobi na masuti ya oversize na mibaasha ya kaki mikuubwa kumbe ndani mmepaki mirungi na big G mnaenda kuzitafunia uhuru Park.
Hahaa tangu lini tanzania ikaweza vita baridi dhidi ya Kenya?
Nyinyi bado watoto wachanga ndio maana nimeandika jina la nchi yenu kutumia small t.
 
Mkuu hapo nilitaka kumchemsha jamaa tu, lakini Wakenya kutujia juu hasa kuhusu gesi na ngano wapo justified kabisa - uwezi ku-import ngano kutoka Canada na Brazil ukaisaga hapa halafu na kuchanganya kidogo na ngano ya Basuto halafu ukazuga watu eti ni produce ya Tanzania hapo tunakosea.

Kitu kingine LPG inatoka Uarabuni inasafirishwa kwa Meli mpaka Dar sasa logic ya sisi kutaka kusafirisha bidhaa hiyo Kwenda Kenya ikiwa kwenye mitungi ambayo quality yake ni highly questionable na pengine pungufu si unajua tena uchakachuaji wetu, wanawezaje kuamini usalama wa valve za mitungi wakati mwingine gas cylinders zinajazwa kwenye makeshift/backyard na wajanja, kumbuka tukio la juzi juzi huko Kimarana - Kenyans are right kwa nini Meli yenye gesi isitie nanga Mombasa port tukawauzia gesi kiasi wanacho itaji halafu Meli ika-proceed na safari yake kuja Port ya Dar tukawachia wao ndiyo watafute jinsi ya kuisambaza Gesi nchini mwao - hawawezi kukubali ku-risk maisha ya raia wao kwa gesi inayo safirishwa kwa malori kwenda Kenya ikitokea Tanzania, je, malori yakipata ajari mitungi ikalipuka watamlahumu nani - mambo mengine tuwe tunangalia upande wa pili wa shilling??

True. Kenya haina sababu zozote za kuwakandamiza wafanyi biashara wa Tz. Lakini biashara ni lazma ifanywe kwa njia sawa. Mfano, hili suala la ngano, si basi inamanisha Tz inatuuzia ngano kwa bei maradufu kuliko ya kawaida kama kweli hao wenyewe wanaagiza kutoka nje?

Lakn I hope that suala hili litaakuwa resolved as soon as possible. Hii tension baina ya serikali za nchi hizi si nzuri kwa eneo hili.
 
Hongera serikali yetu kwa kufanya kweli, ss na waswahili hatupikiki kwenye chungu kimoja! Naomba imigration wetu watupe rukhsa ss kama wazalendo, tuwashulikie waswahili wanaokatiza katiza huku kitaa bila stakabadhi muhimu za kuwa nchini, binafsi nitajitolea kuwahasi..
 
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