The Daily Nation(Kenya): Like others, Tanzania's Magufuli is bound to fail

The Daily Nation(Kenya): Like others, Tanzania's Magufuli is bound to fail

Hatufurahii. Tunajitanabaisha na wanaosema ukweli sio wanaosifia wakati tuendako siko. Huwezi nunua ndege 120bn cash wakati hutoi mkopo wa kutosha kwa wanafunzi wa chuo.

Hivyo ni vipaumbele matope.
anafanya vibaya.

ila anaombewa afanye vibaya zaidi.
 
Tanzania tuna vipaumbele vyetu na sisi ndio tutakaosema kama Rais atafeli ama la! Hao mabwana zenu ambao kila siku mnawakumbatia subirini utawala wa UKAWA ndipo muwape hicho wanachohitaji.
Mikopo ya sh.350 kwa siku kwa vijana wa elimu ya juu ndio kipaumbele?
 
By NIC CHEESEMAN

CHEESEMAN+PHOTO.jpg


Rais wa Tanzania ameanza kazi yake kwa sera na umaarufu mkubwa. Vyombo vya habari vya kitaifa na kimataifa vilipambwa na picha ya Magufuli akisafisha mitaa ya na kuleta nidhamu kwa watumishi wa umma, na kusifia juhudi zake za kubadilisha mfumo wa kisiasa ulioshindwa kutimiza mahitaji ya wananchi kwa miaka mingi.

Hata hivyo chini ya kivuli cha vitendo hivi vya kupongezwa rais amenyesha kukandamiza wakosaoaji na kutofuata taratibu za kitaasisi

======================

Tanzania’s President John Magufuli has begun his time in office with a set of high profile policies and a blaze of publicity. The regional and international media has revelled in images of Magufuli sweeping the streets and disciplining civil servants, praising his efforts to reform a political system that has failed to meet citizens’ needs for many years.

However, in the shadows of these laudable activities the president has demonstrated a worrying authoritarian inclination to repress dissent and reject institutional checks and balances.

It is therefore important to deconstruct Tanzania’s “Magufuli miracle”, and to reflect more critically on the capacity of populist presidents to promote development and democracy in Africa. If history is any guide, the overwhelming popularity that Magufuli enjoys today is unlikely to last.

From the start, Magufuli has positioned himself as a dynamic populist. Positioning himself as an anti-elite figure on the side of the ordinary people, he moved to slash government waste, cutting foreign travel and diverting money from the inauguration ceremony for MPs to pay for hospital beds. At the same time, he announced a war on corruption, promised a crackdown on big businessmen and tax avoiders, and fired a number of civil servants said to be underperforming in one way or another. Many of these policies have improved the quality of life for ordinary Tanzanians in demonstrable ways. A directive to the state-owned energy company to reduce fees and tariffs, for example, has put money back into citizens’ pockets.

We shouldn’t overlook these achievements. Under previous administrations, corruption was so pervasive it undermined the provision of basic public services. Moreover, it had become clear the ruling party was not capable of reforming itself. As Hazel Gray argued in a recent article in African Affairs, the divisions within Chama Cha Mapinduzi, and the inability of any one faction or leader to exert effective central control, undermined the capacity of the government to get a grip on spoils politics.

CHANGE PICTURE

President Magufuli’s rise to power promises to change this picture, in part because of his willingness to lead by example, and in part because of his determination to get the job done by operating outside of official structures. It is therefore unsurprising Magufuli’s approval ratings are the envy of presidents around the world — 96 per cent according to a mobile phone survey of 1,813 respondents conducted in June this year. These figures may be inflated — the methodology of the survey was controversial — but they reflect the public’s belief that the president is doing a good job.

In large part, this seems to be driven by the fact that ordinary citizens feel that a number of key institutions are performing better under the new government. The vast majority of citizens (85 per cent) say the performance of the Tax Revenue Authority has improved, with similar results for schools (75 per cent), police stations (74 per cent), the courts (73 per cent), healthcare (72 per cent) and water access (67 per cent). Perhaps most tellingly, almost all of those surveyed (95 per cent) agreed that government officials and employees had become more accountable and responsive.

In this sense Magufuli has not just delivered a significant blow to the prevailing culture of corruption, he has also started to rebuild public confidence in the capacity of the state to deliver, which is a critical first step to building a more effective social contract.

The main problem with populism is that the early gains secured by leaders like Magufuli are rarely sustained.

In the African context, populists often begin with a burst of energy, attacking corruption and promising political (and often constitutional) reform. The response from both domestic and international audiences is typically high praise, which serves to both consolidate the position of the leader and embolden them. But this often results in populists overreaching, attempting to deliver impossible gains in part because they have started to believe their own political theatre.

Where this occurs, the final act of a populist’s career is often characterised by a desperate attempt to complete what they started amidst falling support, culminating in a very public, and often dramatic, fall from grace.

NEGATIVE CONSEQUENCES

This process can have negative consequences for both democracy and development. As I was recently reminded by Nicolas van de Walle, the John S Knight Professor of International Studies at Cornell University, in a democracy it is not enough for the outcome to be fair, the process needs to be fair also. When it comes to democracy, a fair process is often understood to include open elections, inclusive governance, and respect for the rule of law.

The problem with populism is that leaders rarely follow due process. Instead, they build reputations that are explicitly based on their willingness to break down institutional barriers in order to achieve their goals. Magufuli’s approach exemplifies this tendency. His nickname, the “Bulldozer”, plays on exactly this claim to fame: It was earned when he was responsible for driving a project to build roads across the country but now refers just as much to his reputation as a leader who, when he faces obstacles, smashes his way through them.

In other words, populist government is usually a “you need to break eggs to make an omelette” kind of politics. The problem is that it is rarely just one or two eggs that get broken. It is hard to see this at the start of a populist’s time in office, because the known failings of previous governments, and the popularity of their actions, mask the limitation of their strategies. But in time the refusal to follow or strengthen official rules hollows out institutions, weakening the system of checks and balances and so leaving the political system more open to abuse. This is what happened in Zambia, where President Michael Sata’s idiosyncratic populism put in power a party that has weakened the electoral commission, harassed the opposition, and failed to reduce corruption.

SIMILAR PATH

Magufuli is following a similar path. Many of his most celebrated acts, such as dismissing corrupt or ineffective government employees, did not follow due process. Instead, institutional rules for reviewing performance and removing staff were ignored in favour of presidential directives. Similarly, many of his most eye-catching reforms were announced with little or no prior discussion with his own party. Thus, like Sata, they are only likely to last while the president remains in office and retains his high popularity.

Significantly, the new Tanzanian president has demonstrated some worrying authoritarian tendencies. The first evidence of this was his willingness to endorse the decision to annul the elections for the Zanzibari President and House of Representatives, which the government is widely assumed to have lost. Although the initial decision was made before he took office, Magufuli’s decision to uphold it, and to push ahead with new polls in the face of an opposition boycott, drew criticism from both rival political leaders and the international community.

Despite this, some commentators were tempted to dismiss Magufuli’s actions this on the basis that the politics of Zanzibar are distinctive and elections on the island have often been deeply problematic. When viewed in this light, it was possible to excuse Magufuli on the basis that he was only doing what his predecessors had done before, and that had only just taken office and could not be expected to resolve an intractable problem like Zanzibar in his first year in office.

However, developments on the mainland have followed in a similar vein. Opposition rallies have been prohibited, protestors have been tear gassed, FM radio stations have been closed, and both civil society groups and media outlets have complained about government censorship harassment. Although Magufuli subsequently qualified the ban on opposition rallies following domestic and international pressure, allowing MPs to hold events in their own constituencies, it is clear that the president is no democrat.

WORTH SACRIFICING

One possible response to this point – and a response that I have received a number of times during discussions of this issue over social media – is to argue that in some cases it is worth sacrificing democracy for development. After all, is it not better that women can access maternal care under a leader who does not play by the rules of the game than to go without under a committed democrat? But in reality this is a false trade off, because in the long-run efforts to promote development and to fight corruption will not be successful unless they strengthen the institutions of the state.

Stopping corruption by sacking officials in an ad hoc manner and making decisions on the spur of the moment may look dynamic and effective, but in reality it exacerbates the problem. At root, corruption occurs because institutional checks and balances are not sufficient to prevent individuals from abusing their positions. Dealing with this by further undermining official processes ignores the heart of the problem and actually leaves institutions more, not less, vulnerable to manipulation.

Again, the experience of Sata is instructive. Many of the studies that have been conducted of his time in public office, whether at the Ministry of Health or the Presidency, have concluded that although Sata did not steal much himself, the way in which he broke down institutional checks and balances facilitated corruption by others. In this way, populist anti-corruption measures served to facilitate looting.

This, ultimately, is the true tragedy of populism in Africa. Although populist leaders often start well, they rarely sustain either democracy or development.
Wakenya watasubiri saana. Kwakua Magufuli kawa outsmart kwenye Bomna la mafuta na Reli ya kuelekea Rwanda basi kila siku ni vilio!?
Don't worry Kenyan The Best is yet to come, Magufuli ana mapungufu kama Binadamu yeyote na anastrengh zake tena nyingi. Na mojawapo ni kutokua kibaraka wa Wakenya.
 
Watasubiri sana, ndio kwanza Tanzania inazidi kuchanja mbuga kuelekea uchumi wa kati!

Wazungu huwa ni waoga sana wanapoona kuna anayewakaribia kwa maendeleo. Mfano mzuri ni namna wanavyotunishiana misuli na China na Rusia mpaka leo kisa tu wanajitahidi kimaendeleo. Kifupi hawataki mpinzani. Wanataka kutawala milele!

Usipoelewa hili, utapata tabu sana kuwaelewa hao watu!
Na wewe ndio nyumbu kweli kweli eti Tanzania inaelekea uchumi wa kati.
 
Ameguswa asiyeguswa ngoja wenyewe waje huyu mwandishi lazima aipate kwa kweli!
 
Tuna safari ndefu sana kufikia tunapopataka kama tutaendelea kuwa na watu kama wewe..sasa na wewe umekuwa very selective katika kumchambua huyo mwandishi..umeangalia very rare things na kuignore the rest kama rule of law na democracy au kwako wewe hivo vitu havina maana???usiwe mtumwa wa fikra kiasi hicho or else you wil find yourself in a deepp shit aome days
Wewe rudi shule! uko chini sana! nilichoandika ulikiielewa? Kama lugha inagoma uliza. Unajua maana ya rule of law? Unadhani hiyo inasimamiwa na Rais peke yake? Kwa mazingira ya TZ ktk awamu iliyopita, legal structures zilikuwa zimesimama wapi?

Uwe analytical badala ya ku- criticize wanaokuzidi ufahamu. Jamani hiyo english yako sasa, dah!
 
How about other dictatorships that do not measure up to Singapore? You can't make the exception, the rule.
When you dictate, that ain't be dictatorship! Every world leader must have power to veto decisions. That is not dictatorship. Our president has power to hire and fire. Eti akimfukuza au kumsimamisha mtu anayedhaniwa kudokowa pesa za wahanga wa tetemeko, vimtu fulani vinaguswa na kudai eti dictator. Nonsense!
 
Kama maelezo haya yangetolewa na mtanzania tungesema Bavicha, kama angejitambulisha kuwa ni mwanasisiem tungesema ni CCM negative! Lets avoid subjectivity! No matter post au maelezo haya yameandikwa na Mkenya au Mtanzania, kinachotakiwa ni critical analysis whether it is true or not!
 
Cheesman had a point in that article. I agree with most of the things he wrote. Populism is currently eating this government inside out. You can read it here, for those who need a credible source.
 
Aliyekwambia kuna binadamu aliyekamilika ni nani taahira wewe! Kushindwa kuongoza nchi hakuna uhusiano wowote wa binadamu kukamilika. Dikteta uchwara kashindwa kuongoza nchi na huhitaji Mungu ashuke ili kukwambia hivyo ndiyo uamini kwamba nchi imepoteza mwelekeo. Acha kudumaza akili yako kusubiri Mungu akwambie ndiyo uamini ukweli wa jambo.

Taahira Ni wewe unayeshindana Na uhalisia, Kama ulizoea vya kunyonga, kwa utawala huu havipo!
Usiyempenda ndio rais wa Jamhuri ya Muungano wa Tanzania, jinyee,jikojolee, hutobadili hilo!
Ukiona huwezi kasi ya utawala huu, Hama nchi!
 
Aliyekwambia kuna binadamu aliyekamilika ni nani taahira wewe! Kushindwa kuongoza nchi hakuna uhusiano wowote wa binadamu kukamilika. Dikteta uchwara kashindwa kuongoza nchi na huhitaji Mungu ashuke ili kukwambia hivyo ndiyo uamini kwamba nchi imepoteza mwelekeo. Acha kudumaza akili yako kusubiri Mungu akwambie ndiyo uamini ukweli wa jambo.

Taahira Ni wewe unayeshindana Na uhalisia, Kama ulizoea vya kunyonga, kwa utawala huu havipo!
Usiyempenda ndio rais wa Jamhuri ya Muungano wa Tanzania, jinyee,jikojolee, hutobadili hilo!
Ukiona huwezi kasi ya utawala huu, Hama nchi!
 
Hata kusoma
By NIC CHEESEMAN

CHEESEMAN+PHOTO.jpg


Rais wa Tanzania ameanza kazi yake kwa sera na umaarufu mkubwa. Vyombo vya habari vya kitaifa na kimataifa vilipambwa na picha ya Magufuli akisafisha mitaa ya na kuleta nidhamu kwa watumishi wa umma, na kusifia juhudi zake za kubadilisha mfumo wa kisiasa ulioshindwa kutimiza mahitaji ya wananchi kwa miaka mingi.

Hata hivyo chini ya kivuli cha vitendo hivi vya kupongezwa rais amenyesha kukandamiza wakosaoaji na kutofuata taratibu za kitaasisi

======================

Tanzania’s President John Magufuli has begun his time in office with a set of high profile policies and a blaze of publicity. The regional and international media has revelled in images of Magufuli sweeping the streets and disciplining civil servants, praising his efforts to reform a political system that has failed to meet citizens’ needs for many years.

However, in the shadows of these laudable activities the president has demonstrated a worrying authoritarian inclination to repress dissent and reject institutional checks and balances.

It is therefore important to deconstruct Tanzania’s “Magufuli miracle”, and to reflect more critically on the capacity of populist presidents to promote development and democracy in Africa. If history is any guide, the overwhelming popularity that Magufuli enjoys today is unlikely to last.

From the start, Magufuli has positioned himself as a dynamic populist. Positioning himself as an anti-elite figure on the side of the ordinary people, he moved to slash government waste, cutting foreign travel and diverting money from the inauguration ceremony for MPs to pay for hospital beds. At the same time, he announced a war on corruption, promised a crackdown on big businessmen and tax avoiders, and fired a number of civil servants said to be underperforming in one way or another. Many of these policies have improved the quality of life for ordinary Tanzanians in demonstrable ways. A directive to the state-owned energy company to reduce fees and tariffs, for example, has put money back into citizens’ pockets.

We shouldn’t overlook these achievements. Under previous administrations, corruption was so pervasive it undermined the provision of basic public services. Moreover, it had become clear the ruling party was not capable of reforming itself. As Hazel Gray argued in a recent article in African Affairs, the divisions within Chama Cha Mapinduzi, and the inability of any one faction or leader to exert effective central control, undermined the capacity of the government to get a grip on spoils politics.

CHANGE PICTURE

President Magufuli’s rise to power promises to change this picture, in part because of his willingness to lead by example, and in part because of his determination to get the job done by operating outside of official structures. It is therefore unsurprising Magufuli’s approval ratings are the envy of presidents around the world — 96 per cent according to a mobile phone survey of 1,813 respondents conducted in June this year. These figures may be inflated — the methodology of the survey was controversial — but they reflect the public’s belief that the president is doing a good job.

In large part, this seems to be driven by the fact that ordinary citizens feel that a number of key institutions are performing better under the new government. The vast majority of citizens (85 per cent) say the performance of the Tax Revenue Authority has improved, with similar results for schools (75 per cent), police stations (74 per cent), the courts (73 per cent), healthcare (72 per cent) and water access (67 per cent). Perhaps most tellingly, almost all of those surveyed (95 per cent) agreed that government officials and employees had become more accountable and responsive.

In this sense Magufuli has not just delivered a significant blow to the prevailing culture of corruption, he has also started to rebuild public confidence in the capacity of the state to deliver, which is a critical first step to building a more effective social contract.

The main problem with populism is that the early gains secured by leaders like Magufuli are rarely sustained.

In the African context, populists often begin with a burst of energy, attacking corruption and promising political (and often constitutional) reform. The response from both domestic and international audiences is typically high praise, which serves to both consolidate the position of the leader and embolden them. But this often results in populists overreaching, attempting to deliver impossible gains in part because they have started to believe their own political theatre.

Where this occurs, the final act of a populist’s career is often characterised by a desperate attempt to complete what they started amidst falling support, culminating in a very public, and often dramatic, fall from grace.

NEGATIVE CONSEQUENCES

This process can have negative consequences for both democracy and development. As I was recently reminded by Nicolas van de Walle, the John S Knight Professor of International Studies at Cornell University, in a democracy it is not enough for the outcome to be fair, the process needs to be fair also. When it comes to democracy, a fair process is often understood to include open elections, inclusive governance, and respect for the rule of law.

The problem with populism is that leaders rarely follow due process. Instead, they build reputations that are explicitly based on their willingness to break down institutional barriers in order to achieve their goals. Magufuli’s approach exemplifies this tendency. His nickname, the “Bulldozer”, plays on exactly this claim to fame: It was earned when he was responsible for driving a project to build roads across the country but now refers just as much to his reputation as a leader who, when he faces obstacles, smashes his way through them.

In other words, populist government is usually a “you need to break eggs to make an omelette” kind of politics. The problem is that it is rarely just one or two eggs that get broken. It is hard to see this at the start of a populist’s time in office, because the known failings of previous governments, and the popularity of their actions, mask the limitation of their strategies. But in time the refusal to follow or strengthen official rules hollows out institutions, weakening the system of checks and balances and so leaving the political system more open to abuse. This is what happened in Zambia, where President Michael Sata’s idiosyncratic populism put in power a party that has weakened the electoral commission, harassed the opposition, and failed to reduce corruption.

SIMILAR PATH

Magufuli is following a similar path. Many of his most celebrated acts, such as dismissing corrupt or ineffective government employees, did not follow due process. Instead, institutional rules for reviewing performance and removing staff were ignored in favour of presidential directives. Similarly, many of his most eye-catching reforms were announced with little or no prior discussion with his own party. Thus, like Sata, they are only likely to last while the president remains in office and retains his high popularity.

Significantly, the new Tanzanian president has demonstrated some worrying authoritarian tendencies. The first evidence of this was his willingness to endorse the decision to annul the elections for the Zanzibari President and House of Representatives, which the government is widely assumed to have lost. Although the initial decision was made before he took office, Magufuli’s decision to uphold it, and to push ahead with new polls in the face of an opposition boycott, drew criticism from both rival political leaders and the international community.

Despite this, some commentators were tempted to dismiss Magufuli’s actions this on the basis that the politics of Zanzibar are distinctive and elections on the island have often been deeply problematic. When viewed in this light, it was possible to excuse Magufuli on the basis that he was only doing what his predecessors had done before, and that had only just taken office and could not be expected to resolve an intractable problem like Zanzibar in his first year in office.

However, developments on the mainland have followed in a similar vein. Opposition rallies have been prohibited, protestors have been tear gassed, FM radio stations have been closed, and both civil society groups and media outlets have complained about government censorship harassment. Although Magufuli subsequently qualified the ban on opposition rallies following domestic and international pressure, allowing MPs to hold events in their own constituencies, it is clear that the president is no democrat.

WORTH SACRIFICING

One possible response to this point – and a response that I have received a number of times during discussions of this issue over social media – is to argue that in some cases it is worth sacrificing democracy for development. After all, is it not better that women can access maternal care under a leader who does not play by the rules of the game than to go without under a committed democrat? But in reality this is a false trade off, because in the long-run efforts to promote development and to fight corruption will not be successful unless they strengthen the institutions of the state.

Stopping corruption by sacking officials in an ad hoc manner and making decisions on the spur of the moment may look dynamic and effective, but in reality it exacerbates the problem. At root, corruption occurs because institutional checks and balances are not sufficient to prevent individuals from abusing their positions. Dealing with this by further undermining official processes ignores the heart of the problem and actually leaves institutions more, not less, vulnerable to manipulation.

Again, the experience of Sata is instructive. Many of the studies that have been conducted of his time in public office, whether at the Ministry of Health or the Presidency, have concluded that although Sata did not steal much himself, the way in which he broke down institutional checks and balances facilitated corruption by others. In this way, populist anti-corruption measures served to facilitate looting.

This, ultimately, is the true tragedy of populism in Africa. Although populist leaders often start well, they rarely sustain either democracy or development.
Hata kusoma sisomi hawa watu wana wivu wa kike,hata siku moja hawataipenda TZ
 
Ndiyo tatizo lako taahira na ufinyu wako wa akili kila mtu anayemsemea hovyo fisadi na dikteta uchwara basi naye ni fisadi.

Fungua akili yako uone jinsi nchi inavyoenda mrama kutokana na utendaji wa hovyo wa huyu mkurupukaji wa mwendo kasi anayedhani atafanikiwa kuendesha nchi kwa kuikanyaga katiba ya nchi, kutotaka ushauri, kudharau sheria na taratibu za manunuzi ya Serikali na kutaka kutumia style ya uongozi ya one man show.

Butiku, Warioba na Mwinyi hawakukosea ila taahira wewe Buku 7 zako lazima uzipate ili usilale njaa. Acha kudumaza akili yako kwa kuimba nyimbo kama kasuku kumpigia debe huyu dikteta uchwara aliyeshindwa kuiongoza nchi.

Taahira Ni wewe unayeshindana Na uhalisia, Kama ulizoea vya kunyonga, kwa utawala huu havipo!
Usiyempenda ndio rais wa Jamhuri ya Muungano wa Tanzania, jinyee,jikojolee, hutobadili hilo!
Ukiona huwezi kasi ya utawala huu, Hama nchi!
 
Mama Obama,
Despite your praises and worship to make your Magufuli more popular it won't work!

Let me say this to you and the rest of all who looks and supports Magufuli as their role modal President. Magufuli is nothing but just a mere dictator driving Tanzania like an insober driver...
Ni afadhali ukaandika kwa Kiswahili. Hautapungukiwa kitu.
 
Ndiyo tatizo lako taahira na ufinyu wako wa akili kila mtu anayemsemea hovyo fisadi na dikteta uchwara basi naye ni fisadi.

Fungua akili yako uone jinsi nchi inavyoenda mrama kutokana na utendaji wa hovyo wa huyu mkurupukaji wa mwendo kasi anayedhani atafanikiwa kuendesha nchi kwa kuikanyaga katiba ya nchi, kutotaka ushauri, kudharau sheria na taratibu za manunuzi ya Serikali na kutaka kutumia style ya uongozi ya one man show.

Butiku, Warioba na Mwinyi hawakukosea ila taahira wewe Buku 7 zako lazima uzipate ili usilale njaa. Acha kudumaza akili yako kwa kuimba nyimbo kama kasuku kumpigia debe huyu dikteta uchwara aliyeshindwa kuiongoza nchi.

Simpigii debe ila naongea ukweli, Na labda nikupe tu taarifa silipwi Na mtu yeyote Na wala Mimi si mwanachama wa chama chochote, naongea kile ninachoona Ni ukweli!
Kwa utaahira nadhani wewe Ni chimbuko hasa, watu gani msio Na jema? Hata angewalamba miguu Na kuwaogesha bado mngetafuta namna ya kumkosoa! Narudia tena, JPM ana mapungufu yake lakini isiwe sababu ya kuponda kila anachofanya!
Kwa unachoandika tu tayari nimegundua naongea Na mtu wa aina gani, taahira Ni wewe unayesubiri ufanyiwe kila kitu, umeifanyia nini nchi yako hadi sasa? Au Unajua kula Na kunya tu? Retard!
 
He had a point.!! Can you analyse and critically evaluate ideas, arguments and points in this post?

You're just encouraging them to do more trolling. You're again stooping on their level of accusations and generalisations, but nothing so important!
Accusations? He cited the recent conducted opinion poll by Twaweza on several matters about the president.
He is generally loved my most of the people in Tanzania and the world at large as the writer noted in most part of the article.
The main question here is on the leadership style. Is it sustainable? Or will just create modernized loopholes and perhaps resulting to a new form of plundering and looting public resources? Are the respective institutions stronger? Is the one man show a kind of leadership we need?
 
How do I know if this link is not a troll? Because there was contradiction here since one day before!

You can peruse it for your own pleasure, how come for a single post to have different titles?

[emoji23] [emoji23] [emoji23] it's extremely stupid but some of them are actually paid shills, they get paid to fight the truth and spread the disinformation.
There are two articles written by the same person but published in two different news outlets.

The Content is the same. Have you even tried to click it for God's sake? Posting blah! blah! Is the only thing you can.
 
naona profesa kaamua kumchana makufuri live kwa kuwa haogopi kupelekwa mabwepande.
 
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