The quote of the week: TGIF

The quote of the week: TGIF

Mzee Mwanakijiji

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Katika pita pita zangu nimekutana na nukuu hii hapa na nimeipenda. NI somo tosha:

akaya Kikwete has aped him. Despite the fact that he is about to mark his third year in office, he has spent about a quarter of his time as president outside the country! He reminds me of US president George Bush who used to spent much time in his ranch in Texas (he must have dreamt of controlling Washington from his ranch) until September 11 2001 proved him wrong –sending him back to the capital city. As Tanzania gets credit for solving other peoples’ problems, it is still one of the poorest countries on earth!

The current xenophobic attacks in South Africa have disclosed a hidden feeling that many Africans harbour but fear to publicize. Why did about 80% of Tanzanians vote against the rush to join the East African Political Federation? Don’t they claim that Kenyans and Ugandans are their brothers and sisters? The only answer surrounding this fear is underdevelopment! Most Tanzanians claim that Kenyans are grabbing their jobs. Here in South Africa, the claim is the same. Last year I heard the same story in the US whereby Mexicans were getting the blame! But if we are not developing our countries, who will do it for us? Have we forgotten that “charity begins at home?” Why is President Kikwete learning from Mbeki who has created an unmanageable South Africa ridden with crime and deteriorating in economy?

Is he going to wait until things become worse or begin from now to control his government from a lot of corruption scandals, mistrust from the public and low level of economy for poor Tanzanians?

I would like to get the whole article..
 
I would like to get the whole article..

After Mbeki's Xenophobia, will Kikwete be Next?


THE AFRICAN EXECUTIVE
10 - 17 December 2008

By Boniphace Makene
Journalist, Political Analyst and Masters Student
at University of the Western Cape, South Africa


kiks.jpg

Jakaya Kikwete has spent about a
quarter of his time as president
outside the country


Jean Blondel in Comparative Government argues that politics vary from one country to another. That is to say that issues which are relevant in one country may be irrelevant to the other. But still, there are issues that are common in many countries. One of them is the travelling behavior of President Thabo Mbeki of South Africa and his counterpart, President Jakaya Kikwete of Tanzania, who also is Chairman of the African Union.These two Presidents love travelling abroad, engaging in international matters and paying little attention to their local responsibilities.

While the Xenophobia saga still rages, Mbeki jetted to Japan- the second visit outside the country in a period of two weeks. At first he went to Arusha for the AU summit leaving his subjects writing a new history. This time, race wasn't the big issue but a total selfishness from South African Blacks who decided to forget the liberation movement's history! Yes they killed their fellow comrades from other African countries with impunity while their Commander in Chief remained mum only to talk after over 50 people had given their permanent residence permit to heaven! This is typical Mbeki who has not only created a mess in Zimbabwe through his "Silence Diplomacy" but has failed the very citizens who voted him in power en masse.

My dreams about South Africa were shattered when I arrived in Cape Town and found that apartheid still reigns. Africans still live in poor settlements known as ‘Sharks' while their fellow Whites enjoy life in well planned settlements. John Williams in his article Community Participation: Lessons from Post-apartheid South Africa reveals issues such as high level of disunity among communities and historical negative attitude between blacks and Whites that still exist today!

Whereas top positions in many governmental organizations in South Africa are headed by blacks, most of the operations or decision-making positions are still controlled by the Whites. ESKOM a South African Power company for instance allegedly gives more attention to White settlement areas but forgets the marginalized blacks. Actually, the level of poverty for marginalized blacks is increasing today and issues such as the global rise in gas price, food shortage and the power crisis within South Africa negatively impacts the marginalized blacks.

African countries need statesmen who will help provide sustainable answers to problems facing their countries before becoming problem solvers for international problems! Mbeki seems to have forgotten this! Could he be doing this because he is counting his last days in office? Do his international trips provide tangible returns to the average South African who voted for him?

Jakaya Kikwete has aped him. Despite the fact that he is about to mark his third year in office, he has spent about a quarter of his time as president outside the country! He reminds me of US president George Bush who used to spent much time in his ranch in Texas (he must have dreamt of controlling Washington from his ranch) until September 11 2001 proved him wrong –sending him back to the capital city. As Tanzania gets credit for solving other peoples' problems, it is still one of the poorest countries on earth!

The current xenophobic attacks in South Africa have disclosed a hidden feeling that many Africans harbour but fear to publicize. Why did about 80% of Tanzanians vote against the rush to join the East African Political Federation? Don't they claim that Kenyans and Ugandans are their brothers and sisters? The only answer surrounding this fear is underdevelopment! Most Tanzanians claim that Kenyans are grabbing their jobs. Here in South Africa, the claim is the same. Last year I heard the same story in the US whereby Mexicans were getting the blame! But if we are not developing our countries, who will do it for us? Have we forgotten that "charity begins at home?" Why is President Kikwete learning from Mbeki who has created an unmanageable South Africa ridden with crime and deteriorating in economy?

Is he going to wait until things become worse or begin from now to control his government from a lot of corruption scandals, mistrust from the public and low level of economy for poor Tanzanians?



Hii makala inaongelea "Rais" Mbeki, inawezeka ni ya zamani japo tarehe kwenye chanzo chake ni current. Hata sielewi. Inawezekana jarida hili lina mushkeli, manake mwandishi nae anavyo ramble ... mmh!
 
Lakini Mzee Mwanakijiji, kuna thread yako moja unaonyesha kuwa watanzanias wapo kimya sana licha ya matukio yote yanayopaswa kuleta 'hasira'. Kwa hiyo, sidhani kama haya ya South Africa yanaweza kutusumbua sana watz-tunaendelea na ukondoo wetu
 
It a nice article, and I like the Tanzania-South Africa comparisons but I think the author has been in Cape Town too long: the two countries are hardly the same. I take exception to the idea that President Kikwete is 'aping' Thabo Mbeki. The two men have entirely different leadership styles- Kikwete is a home-grown populist and spent a massive part of his civil service as foreign minister, a role he seems to have continued in his presidency. Mbeki is an intellectual who never seemed to make the popular connection. Mbeki turns a blind eye to internal issues, Kikwete practices an interesting form of oversight where he saves personal interventions for crisis situations. One is removed, the other is present but hidden. Subtle but crucial difference!

That said, even our xenophobia is different. We fear the EAC because we are convinced we will lose out on jobs and land. Given our record of foreign investment so far, can we say this is an unfounded fear? So we were honest and voted against it. Our South African brethren straight up betrayed their fellow Africans- note how they killed the African immigrants. Not any other groups, just Africans. Is it really about xenophobia or has their segregation history twisted even the African populations down south into self-hating? Ask a South African what they mean by 'Kwere kwere.' Even the most racist Tanzanian hardly has a term for fellow non-Tanzanian Africans.
 
Lady capricorn must be a diplomat as she does not want to be very blunt about the stark difference between Thabo Mbeki and Jakaya Kikwete that while the former is an intellectual the later is an intellectual dwarf.!! Thabo Mbeki never shied away from making unpopular/hard decisions like the AIDS controversy, Jakaya Kikwete on the other hand uses his cronies to make unpopular/hard pronoucements; witness how he used Mustapha Mkullo to anounce the unpopular govt. position concerning the benefits due to the East African community retirees!!
 
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