What they say about us

What they say about us

Mkuu nitaendelea kuwaita manyang'au tu kwa sababu tabia yao haibadiliki, wao ni kujiona wako juu ya wengine wakati ki-ukweli hawana cha kuwacheka Watanzania. Hilo gazeti limekuwa mstari wa mbele kuidhalilisha Tanzania kwa muda mrefu sasa, sina sababu zozote za kuona aibu ati nifanye mambo yangu. BTW sisi Tanzania ndio tumeleta Covid-19? Then huyo mwandishi anaandika ''We Should Tame Tanzania Before She Tames Us With COVID-1'' Nashangaa hata Muhariri wa gazeti hili kuruhusu kichwa cha habari kama hicho.
Wakati nikikubaliana nawe katika haya uliyoandika hapa; sioni tofauti yoyote kati yako na wakenya inapokuja kwenye utetezi wa kipuuzi kama ulioonyesha kwenye mada hii toka huko mwanzo.

Najua 'reaction' yako itakuwa vipi juu ya haya niliyoandika hapa kwa sababu nakuelewa vyema toka muda kitambo.

Nikiwa na nafasi tutaliendeleza tu, bila ya wasi!
 
Let them speak against us, let them say whatever they say, we don't care, we don't worry, we don't give a dam!, just let then say, watasema mchana, usiku watalala.
P
 
Wasi wasi wa Kenya ni kwamba speed ya JPM kwenye kuendesha nchi inakwenda kuwaondoa kwenye uchumi mkubwa katika ukanda wa Afrika Mashariki kabla ya 2030. Hivyo wamejipanga na makuwadi wao ili kuiweka Kenya juu, lakini watagonga mwamba kwa sababu uporaji wa rasilimali za Tanzania kupitia Kenya umedhoofika kwa kiasi kikubwa tangu JPM aingie madarakani. Kuanzia kwenye Tanzanite, gold, pamoja na madini mengine. Kenya wana wakati mgumu.
Mkuu Wacha1, kwanza asante kwa bandiko hili.
Kwa ruhusa yako, naomba kulitumia bandiko lako kama mbegu ya kuoteshea bandiko langu fulani.
P
 
Wakati nikikubaliana nawe katika haya uliyoandika hapa; sioni tofauti yoyote kati yako na wakenya inapokuja kwenye utetezi wa kipuuzi kama ulioonyesha kwenye mada hii toka huko mwanzo.

Najua 'reaction' yako itakuwa vipi juu ya haya niliyoandika hapa kwa sababu nakuelewa vyema toka muda kitambo.

Nikiwa na nafasi tutaliendeleza tu, bila ya wasi!
You know me? Try to cheat yourself and friends and those who think we will bend to their ego to steal with impunity. You do not know me and you will never know me. There were people just like you who pretended to know me.
 
Covid 19 coronavirus: Tanzanian president describes test kits as a 'dirty game' after pawpaw tests positive
Credit: Covid 19 coronavirus: Tanzanian president describes test kits as a 'dirty game' after pawpaw tests positive

The testing regime in the African nation of Tanzania has been called into question by its president, after tests there found the presence of coronavirus in a pawpaw and a goat.

In a speech broadcast to the nation, President John Magufuli described imported testing kits as a "dirty game" and said that some laboratories lacked credibility. "The equipment or people may be compromised and sometimes it can be sabotaged," Magufuli said in a Swahili speech reported by AFP.

"That means there is possibility for technical errors or these imported reagents have issues. Probably, the technicians are also bought to mislead."
The testing regime in the African nation of Tanzania has been called into question by its president, after tests there found the presence of coronavirus in a pawpaw and a goat.

None of these things really have coronavirus. Photo / File

None of these things really have coronavirus. Photo / File​

Tanzania has recorded 480 cases of the virus and 16 deaths, according to the Johns Hopkins University, but there are fears that Africa is staring down the barrel of a Covid-19 emergency.
"We are at the beginning in Africa," Dr Mike Ryan, executive director of the WHO's Health Emergencies Programme, said last month.

Last week, Ryan warned that some countries in Africa are still seeing "an upwards trajectory in cases" and availability of reliable tests remains an issue.
 
Opinion: Magufuli's COVID-19 apathy is a recipe for disaster

1588664354484.png

Isaac Mugabi is an editor for DW's English for Africa​
EAC silent

Until now, leaders from the East African Community (EAC) have remained tight-lipped about Magufuli's disingenuous behavior, which also puts the lives of their citizens in danger.

So far, most of the new cases that both Rwandan and Uganda have registered are those of Tanzanian truck drivers entering their territories. Authorities have not been able to track down their contacts for testing, which further jeopardizes the chances of fighting COVID-19.

Leadership comes with responsibility. But Magufuli's effrontery is now putting the whole region at risk. It is high time EAC leaders confronted him and worked together for the sake of their people to make cross-border movements safer for everyone.

But who will rein in Magufuli who has retreated to his country home in Chato, northwestern Tanzania, and is now bulldozing the whole country at will? It is high time that regional leaders — Uganda's Yoweri Museveni, Uhuru Kenyatta of Kenya, and Rwanda's Paul Kagame — spoke with one voice to end Magufuli's unbecoming behavior and attitude towards COVID-19.

Madagascar 'vaccine'

On Sunday, Magufuli said he would send a plane to Madagascar to bring in medicine to treat the coronavirus. Dubbed Covid-organics, the drink is derived from Artemisia — an anti-malaria plant mixed with indigenous herbs. Madagascar has already made deliveries of its purported medicine to Guinea Conakry and Equatorial Guinea.

Despite not being approved by the WHO, Magufuli believes it is the right treatment against COVID-19, instead of the universally recommended guidelines such as social distancing and washing hands regularly. He also took a swipe at imported test kits, saying that they are not effective but rather another form of imperialism.

Magufuli's stubbornness to embrace WHO guidelines further demonstrate his autocratic leadership style, and any attempts by right-thinking citizens to criticize him could land them in jail.

His handling of the pandemic should create a window of opportunity for opposition groups to unseat him in general elections later this year, which is quite unlikely since they have never won any election.

Three lawmakers, including the justice minister, have already died from suspected coronavirus. No autopsy reports have been made public, if at all they were carried out, raising concerns that the virus might have struck at the heart of Magufuli's government.

The country's leading opposition party, Chadema, has called for the suspension and urged its MPs to self-isolate for at least two weeks. But can taking on the bull (Magufuli) by its horns change things inside Tanzania?

Since the outbreak of the virus, Magufuli has drawn criticism for not imposing a lockdown and instead urging people to pray. Videos of Tanzanians enjoying themselves in bars and restaurants have been circulating on social media platforms — raising fears that the country could be sitting on a time bomb.

Ever since, Magufuli has downplayed the severity of the virus and has urged businesses and places of worship to remain open, saying that the economy would otherwise collapse. But perhaps his most unorthodox suggestion to avoid contracting the virus came when he urged people to steam with local herbs.

As countries battle the coronavirus following guidelines set up by the World Health Organization (WHO), Tanzanian President John Magufuli is holding his people at ransom with his unorthodox ways of protecting themselves against the virus.


The latest is that he has now ordered an investigation into the national laboratory and accused it of obtaining non-human samples from pawpaw, a sheep, and a goat and giving them human names.

With 480 confirmed cases of COVID-19 and 17 deaths, Tanzania now has the highest number of cases in the region, and this figure is expected to rise. In a country where authorities rarely release test results, it could become the epicenter of the virus.

Kuwadi wa mabeberu huyu, anashindwa kuwataarifu waafrika jinsi Germany wameambukizwa wangapi na wamekufa raia kiasi gani, yeye kakaza mishipa kwa JPM baada ya kugundua mbinu chafu za kutaka kuuwa Watanzania kwa kutumia dawa wakati hawaumwi.
 


Hon. Dr Energy Mutodi (PhD) @energymutodi


HE John Pombe Magafuli’s Tanzania now has 630 COVID-19 cases with prayers but without a lockdown while His Excellency President ED Mnangagwa’s Zimbabwe only got 31 cases with a lockdown & masks. An insight into how managers can be game changers.

Zimbabwe - Time will tell, juzi tu walikuwa hawana chakula, tutawasikia.
 
You know me? Try to cheat yourself and friends and those who think we will bend to their ego to steal with impunity. You do not know me and you will never know me. There were people just like you who pretended to know me.
I have no need of knowing you. It adds no value to anything for me knowing you. I can't be cheating myself for evaluating and assessing stupidity when I read it.
 
President Uhuru Kenyatta during the Sixth Presidential address on the coronavirus pandemic May16, 2020 at State House, Nairobi.
Image: PSCU

With Kenya entering into the third month since the first coronavirus was reported, the government on Saturday announced additional measures to contain the spread.

President Uhuru Kenyatta in his sixth address announced a cessation of movement of persons and any passenger ferrying automobiles and vehicles into and out of the country through the Tanzania and Somalia international borders except for cargo vehicles with effect from Saturday midnight.
The decision was arrived at after deliberations by the National Emergency Response Committee on Coronavirus and the National Security Council.

“If we do not take additional precautionary measures and get even more serious in implementing existing guidelines, the number of people who will get sick and die is going to rise sharply,” Uhuru said on Saturday at State House..

In addition, the nationwide dusk to dawn curfew has been extended for a further 21 days up to June 6.

The cessation of movement into and out of Nairobi metropolitan area, Mombasa, Kilifi, Kwale and Mandera counties has also been extended for a similar number of days
Kenya has recorded an increase in the number of imported positive cases, especially from Somalia and Tanzania, an issue that has been of great concern.

“All drivers of cargo vehicles shall be subjected to mandatory covid-19 disease testing and will be only be granted entry in the Kenya territory if they test negative,” Uhuru announced.
Kenya has so far recorded 830 positive cases since the first case was reported in the country on March 13. The global figure as at Saturday stood at 4.7 million infections and more than 300,000 deaths.

Three hundred and one patients have been successfully treated and discharged, while 50 people have died from Covid-19 Almost 30 per cent of the recorded deaths occurred at home.
President Kenyatta noted that the country has witnessed increased imported cases among individuals crossing into the country through the borders.

“These areas have become areas of grave concern,” he said.
According to the data, among the positive cases registered in the country this week, 43 cases have recently crossed the border from neighbouring Somalia and Tanzania. Out these 14 were from Wajir, 10 from Isebania, 16 from Namanga border, two from Lungalunga and one at the Loitoktok, data as per Friday shows.
This is a representation of almost a quarter of the 166 confirmed infections this week.
In addition, 78 truck drivers, who are foreign nationals, were denied entry into the country at various border crossing points after testing positive for the virus.

“If we had not undertaken this intervention, the imported cases through our borders would have today accounted for more than 50 per cent of the week’s infections.”
The President noted that it is time for Kenyans to exercise self-responsibility by adhering to the measures laid down by the ministry of health, even as the virus continues to sweep across counties in the country.

So far, 22 out of the 47 counties have at least reported a case each.
“These numbers and the spread of infection clearly indicate that if no action is taken, all the gains already achieved in combating this pandemic will undoubtedly be lost,” he said.
Uhuru referred to the virus as a brutal and unforgiving enemy at our wall, trying to gain entrance using every door and every window by asking every Kenyan to sneak him in to attack.
“He multiplies his forces rapidly, with one infected person able to infect dozens of others if insufficient measures are in place. Or if all of us do not take heed of the dangers and behave accordingly a lot shall be lost.”

The President said the virus if given enough opportunities will cause havoc and destruction to families, children, parents, neighbours and friends by making use of the least aware to be a career to the most vulnerable in the society. Uhuru further said that despite the economy having being worst hit by the pandemic, and sectors that linked to foreign trade, travel and production are under intense stress the country will not be in a rush to ease the measures already put in place based on lessons learnt from other countries.

For instance, countries such as Singapore, Germany and Ghana that had done extremely well initially, eased the containment measures and then suffered dangerous spikes in new rates of infections.

The head of state, however, noted he dosen't forsee announcing a lockdown.
“Even though the measures we are putting in place are inconvenient to all of us, the far worse outcome is for this pandemic to grow out of control.” He said that cities and countries where the disease raged out of control have suffered near economic collapse due to the terror and paralysis it causes. According to Uhuru, despite there being a national and global pressure to ease measures put in place, the NERC has taken a close look at reopening processes globally and thinks it is not yet the time to do so.
“I am as anxious as all of you, to get back to building this country. However, we will only be able to do this the sooner we sharply suppress the growth of infections.”

Ndugu zangu Watanzania acheni kupeleka ugonjwa huu Kenya!
 
1589908992347.png

Tanzania President John Magufuli shakes legs instead of hands as a precaution
against the spread of Covid-19 but he has his own ideas.
''As the Coronavirus ravages the world changing life as we know it, some presidents have turned into hard-nosed Covid-19 deniers .

As the Coronavirus ravages the world, changing life as we know it, some presidents have turned into hard-nosed Covid-19 deniers blithely ignoring recommendations by the World Health Organization. Such leaders have either failed to enforce the safety recommendations of social distancing or staying at home. Some have chosen to deny the existence of the virus altogether.

Tanzania

The East African country is at loggerheads with its neighbours who fear that the country's casual treatment of the pandemic might put them at risk of Covid-19.
On May 17, its populist President John Pombe Magufuli told worshippers in his home town of Chato that keeping the economy afloat was more important than addressing the threat posed by Covid-19.

“Our economy must come first. It must not sleep. If we allow it to sleep then we will not receive salaries. Life must move on,” said Magufuli. Even though the Tanzanian government has put in place social distancing, the president has remained adamant that the Tanzanian borders will remain open but on Monday, Dar closed its borders to Kenyan truckers but left them wide open to other countries as a Covid-19 testing row with Kenya threatens spiral out of control.

Tanzanians are claiming that its citizens are being denied entry into Kenya on results based on a faulty testing process only to be declared Covid-19 negative when on their side of the border.

Magufuli has also urged the people to use natural remedies and have faith in prayers in order to fight Covid-19. He recently his son had contracted the virus; that “he locked himself in his room and took a lemon and ginger solution before getting well. He is now well and can even do push-ups.”

As an additional measure to the use of natural remedies, the Tanzanian government has also imported the Covid organics- an herbal remedy from Madagascar which is believed to cure and prevent Covid-19 according to the Madagascar President Andry Rajoelina.

Since Tanzania’s first known case of Covid-19 was detected in Arusha in March, the government has officially registered 509 positive cases and 21 deaths. But the last update was more than two weeks ago on 29 April. As of May 18, 51 Tanzanian truck drivers entering Kenyan had tested positive for Covid-19 which forced Kenya to close its borders on May 16.''

JPM has shown how to deal with a pandemic not WHO.
 
What's going on with coronavirus in Tanzania?

Tanzanian President John Magufuli has said the number of coronavirus patients in hospitals is declining, although the government has not released data on infection rates for many weeks.

The president has repeatedly downplayed the risk of the pandemic, causing alarm among neighbouring African countries and international organisations.

The government has even urged Tanzanians to dedicate three days for thanksgiving this weekend as they say they're beating the virus.

So what do we know about the situation in Tanzania?

Where is the data?
The main issue is that there's been no official data on the coronavirus for weeks, and there are concerns that the authorities are trying to downplay the extent of the outbreak.

Doctors and healthcare professionals are afraid to speak out about coronavirus because of a climate of fear.

"Tanzania has always had very repressive laws against freedom of expression and the press," says Roland Ebole, a regional researcher at Amnesty International.

"We are now seeing these laws being used in a more intensive way to target those who are speaking out, especially about Covid-19," says Mr Ebole.

The government stopped releasing daily updates on the number of positive cases in April, with the president saying they were creating panic.

The Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention has "strongly" called on Tanzania to release its latest data on the outbreak.

The last figures, published on 29 April, reported 480 cases and 21 deaths (its island territory Zanzibar has since added 29 more cases in May).

President Magufuli in December 2019 - he has been criticised for not releasing data on coronavirus
 
Tanzania's Magufuli - taking on coronavirus and imperialism

Credit Sammy Awami: The president taking on coronavirus and imperialism
Tanzania's President John Magufuli has been criticised over his repeated attacks on "imperialists" and his recent declaration that prayers had ended coronavirus in the East African state. But this is unlikely to bother him as, throughout his presidency of more than five years, he has styled himself as a stout African nationalist and a devout Catholic waging war against foreign powers seeking to exploit the East African nation.

"I want you Tanzanians to believe that you have a real president, a real rock. I cannot be threatened and I am not threatened," Mr Magufuli said in March 2018. He hopes that he has cemented this reputation over the last two years, and it will secure him a second term in elections due in October.

1592457773265.png

Mr Magufuli has been critical of both Western and Chinese investors
One of Mr Magufuli's biggest battles was against Canadian mining giant Barrick Gold Corp. He demanded a 60% stake for the government in three of its gold mines to end the "exploitation" of Tanzania's resources.

The 60-year-old president cast the negotiations as a clash between a cow and a rabbit and, although the government eventually settled for a 16% share, the talks signalled that it was no longer business as usual.

Rejects 'madman's' deal with China
As Barrick boss Mark Bristow walked from the lectern to shake Mr Magufuli's hand at the signing ceremony in January, he said: "What it's done is challenge the mining industry and all of us to embark on something where we win together or lose together."

In his response, Mr Magufuli not only burnished his nationalist credentials, but also his religious credentials, saying: "I thank God for the success of this agreement."
He has also cancelled two deals with China: the building of Tanzania's first electric railway line linking the main commercial city Dar es Salaam to the capital, Dodoma, about 500km (310 miles) away and the construction of East Africa's biggest port in Bagamoyo, once the capital of German East Africa, at a cost of $10bn (£8bn).

Mr Magufuli said only a "madman" would accept the financial terms negotiated by his predecessor Jakaya Kikwete's government for the building of the port.

He has long blamed selfish leadership and a failure to put the nation first for Tanzania's underdevelopment.

But it is Western powers that Mr Magufuli is most suspicious of, and he accuses local "puppets" - usually a cast of opposition politicians, rights activists and critical journalists - of championing the interests of their "masters".

'A brutal pragmatist'
"This healthy suspicion sometimes fuels paranoia, which is strange for a president who has consolidated so much power," Tanzanian analyst Thabit Jacob told the BBC. "His nationalism has also turned illiberal and populist. He is squeezing the opposition, narrowing civic space, cracking down on the media and increasing surveillance."

anzanian writer Elsie Eyakuze said he had a "brutal pragmatism that leans on a particular world view of strong leadership.

"It does not allow for discussion or dissent about methods or outcomes as this would ostensibly weaken the government or introduce an element of chaos."

No trips to the West
Mr Magufuli has revived use of the Swahili word "beberu". It literally means "a male goat", but it was commonly used to refer to "Western imperialists" when Tanzania was fighting for independence, and when a socialist government took office following the end of British colonial rule.

Mr Magufuli has not been on a single official visit to a Western nation since coming to power. Nor has he attended, as president, sessions of the UN General Assembly, which other African leaders see as an opportunity to spell out their vision to a global audience.
He has attended African Union summits and visited a few African countries - including Rwanda and Uganda, whose leaders in many ways share his suspicions of Western nations.

However, he puts his vision for the nation ahead of his pan-African ideals. He did not attend regional summits to discuss the coronavirus crisis, and the temporary border closure of Tanzania's borders with Zambia and Kenya point to diplomatic tensions.
When Uganda's President Yoweri Museveni described the regional body, the East African Community, as a "household" whose "occupants" needed to co-operate to combat the virus, Mr Magufuli - without directly referring to his Ugandan counterpart's comments - said at a church service in his home town that "we co-operate in bringing development. However, in resolving a problem, everyone has their own means".

Unlike Uganda and Rwanda, Mr Magufuli did not impose a lockdown to curb the virus, saying he feared it would cause poverty.

Unfairly singled out?
As a result, he has come under criticism from the main opposition parties, which say densely populated cities should have been under lockdown.

However, Mr Magufuli is not alone in rejecting such measures.

Data collected by the respected Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (Africa CDC) shows that around a quarter of African states, including Ethiopia, did not shut down to curb the spread of the virus.
And soon after the first Covid-19 case was detected in the country in mid-March, Tanzania took measures such as closing schools and banning sports events.
Even before this, Mr Magufuli famously exchanged a foot greeting with opposition politician Maalim Seif Sharif Hamad at the presidential mansion as health experts warned that the virus could spread through handshakes.

Despite this, World Health Organization (WHO) Africa director Matshidiso Moeti accused Tanzania of acting slowly to curb the spread of the virus.

"In Tanzania we have observed that physical distancing, including the prohibition of mass gatherings, took some time to happen and we believe that these might have been probable factors that led to a rapid increase in cases there," the South African-born WHO official said in April.

1592458135535.png


Coronavirus is a devil. It cannot live in the body of Christ"
John Magufuli
President of Tanzania
For his critics, one of Mr Magufuli's biggest mistakes has been to encourage religious services, sometimes without social distancing, despite the fact that most health experts say the risk of infections spreading is extremely high at such gatherings.

"Coronavirus is a devil. It cannot live in the body of Christ," the Tanzanian leader, who has a PhD in chemistry and is a devout Catholic, said in March.

And when Mr Magufuli addressed worshippers earlier this month, he said: "The corona disease has been eliminated thanks to God."

A few days later he appeared to row back on his statement, saying the virus was still around and urging people to continue to take precautions such as washing their hands regularly.

But on Tuesday, in his final parliamentary address before election campaigning started, Mr Magufuli repeated that God had spared Tanzania the virus, and called for all schools to reopen and for a return to normality.

Conspiracy theories

However on the same day, Prime Minister Kassim Majaliwa said Tanzania had 66 active coronavirus cases, releasing data for the first time since April when Mr Magufuli questioned the reliability of the figures.
Tanzania's Magufuli - taking on coronavirus and imperialism
"https://static.bbc.co.uk/news/1.316.03603/icons/generated/icons.fallback.css"
JamiiForums
Coronavirus pandemic
John Pombe Magufuli
Image copyrightGetty Images
Tanzania's President John Magufuli has been criticised over his repeated attacks on "imperialists" and his recent declaration that prayers had ended coronavirus in the East African state.
But this is unlikely to bother him as, throughout his presidency of more than five years, he has styled himself as a stout African nationalist and a devout Catholic waging war against foreign powers seeking to exploit the East African nation.
"I want you Tanzanians to believe that you have a real president, a real rock. I cannot be threatened and I am not threatened," Mr Magufuli said in March 2018.
He hopes that he has cemented this reputation over the last two years, and it will secure him a second term in elections due in October.
Image copyrightAFPImage caption Mr Magufuli has been critical of both Western and Chinese investors
One of Mr Magufuli's biggest battles was against Canadian mining giant Barrick Gold Corp.

He demanded a 60% stake for the government in three of its gold mines to end the "exploitation" of Tanzania's resources.
The 60-year-old president cast the negotiations as a clash between a cow and a rabbit and, although the government eventually settled for a 16% share, the talks signalled that it was no longer business as usual.

Believers pray without taking social distancing during a Palm Sunday mass at the Full Gospel Bible Fellowship Church in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, on April 5, 2020.

'A brutal pragmatist'
"This healthy suspicion sometimes fuels paranoia, which is strange for a president who has consolidated so much power," Tanzanian analyst Thabit Jacob told the BBC.
"His nationalism has also turned illiberal and populist. He is squeezing the opposition, narrowing civic space, cracking down on the media and increasing surveillance."
John Magufuli

Getty
John Magufuli: Key facts

  • Bornto a peasant farmer on 29 October 1959​
  • Became a school teacher and industrial chemist​
  • ElectedMP for the ruling party in 1995​
  • Served in various ministries until elected president in 2015​
  • Famously helped clean streets and pick up rubbish after taking office​
  • NicknamedThe Bulldozer and Chuma (Swahili for Piece of Iron) ​
Source: BBC
Presentational white space

Tanzanian writer Elsie Eyakuze said he had a "brutal pragmatism that leans on a particular world view of strong leadership.
"It does not allow for discussion or dissent about methods or outcomes as this would ostensibly weaken the government or introduce an element of chaos."

No trips to the West
Mr Magufuli has revived use of the Swahili word "beberu". It literally means "a male goat", but it was commonly used to refer to  "Western imperialists" when Tanzania was fighting for independence, and when a socialist government took office following the end of British colonial rule.
Mr Magufuli has not been on a single official visit to a Western nation since coming to power. Nor has he attended, as president, sessions of the UN General Assembly, which other African leaders see as an opportunity to spell out their vision to a global audience.
Presentational grey line

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He has attended African Union summits and visited a few African countries - including Rwanda and Uganda, whose leaders in many ways share his suspicions of Western nations.
However, he puts his vision for the nation ahead of his pan-African ideals. He did not attend regional summits to discuss the coronavirus crisis, and the temporary border closure of Tanzania's borders with Zambia and Kenya point to diplomatic tensions.
p08gqc7q.jpg
Media playback is unsupported on your device

Several doctors in Tanzania insist that Covid-19 is spreading fast despite government's denial.

Exit playerMedia captionSeveral doctors in Tanzania insist that Covid-19 is spreading fast, reports the BBC's Andrew Harding
When Uganda's President Yoweri Museveni described the regional body, the East African Community, as a "household" whose "occupants" needed to co-operate to combat the virus, Mr Magufuli - without directly referring to his Ugandan counterpart's comments - said at a church service in his home town that "we co-operate in bringing development. However, in resolving a problem, everyone has their own means".
Unlike Uganda and Rwanda, Mr Magufuli did not impose a lockdown to curb the virus, saying he feared it would cause poverty.

Unfairly singled out?

As a result, he has come under criticism from the main opposition parties, which say densely populated cities should have been under lockdown.
However, Mr Magufuli is not alone in rejecting such measures.
Data collected by the respected Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (Africa CDC) shows that around a quarter of African states, including Ethiopia, did not shut down to curb the spread of the virus.
And soon after the first Covid-19 case was detected in the country in mid-March, Tanzania took measures such as closing schools and banning sports events.

Tanzanian President John Magufuli (R) greets Tanzanian opposition politician Maalim Seif Sharif Hamad (L) by tapping his feet against theirs to avoid themselves from coronavirus in Zanzibar, Tanzania on March 03, 2020


Tanzanian presidencyImage caption

Shaking hands carries the risk of spreading coronavirus
Even before this, Mr Magufuli famously exchanged a foot greeting with opposition politician Maalim Seif Sharif Hamad at the presidential mansion as health experts warned that the virus could spread through handshakes.
Despite this, World Health Organization (WHO) Africa director Matshidiso Moeti accused Tanzania of acting slowly to curb the spread of the virus.
"In Tanzania we have observed that physical distancing, including the prohibition of mass gatherings, took some time to happen and we believe that these might have been probable factors that led to a rapid increase in cases there," the South African-born WHO official said in April.

A man on a cross


Coronavirus is a devil. It cannot live in the body of Christ"John Magufuli
President of Tanzania
Presentational white space

For his critics, one of Mr Magufuli's biggest mistakes has been to encourage religious services, sometimes without social distancing, despite the fact that most health experts say the risk of infections spreading is extremely high at such gatherings.
"Coronavirus is a devil. It cannot live in the body of Christ," the Tanzanian leader, who has a PhD in chemistry and is a devout Catholic, said in March.
And when Mr Magufuli addressed worshippers earlier this month, he said: "The corona disease has been eliminated thanks to God."
A few days later he appeared to row back on his statement, saying the virus was still around and urging people to continue to take precautions such as washing their hands regularly.
But on Tuesday, in his final parliamentary address before election campaigning started, Mr Magufuli repeated that God had spared Tanzania the virus, and called for all schools to reopen and for a return to normality.
Conspiracy theories
However on the same day, Prime Minister Kassim Majaliwa said Tanzania had 66 active coronavirus cases, releasing data for the first time since April when Mr Magufuli questioned the reliability of the figures.
People walk at a market without adhering to the rules of social distancing despite the confirmed Covid-19 coronavirus cases in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, on April 15, 2020.


Mr Magufuli has insisted that businesses remain open despite the threat of Covid-19
In at least two previous speeches, Mr Magufuli described Tanzania's fight against the disease as "warfare", hinting that he saw it as a "Western plot". "There are so many unbelievable things being done in this country. Either the imperialists have bought off the laboratory technicians, or they are not competent, which is not true," he said. He also questioned the credibility of testing kits, without saying who had supplied them. "So many times, I have insisted that not everything that you are given is good. There could be people being used, that equipment could be used… but it could also be sabotage because this is warfare," he said, lurching towards a conspiracy theory.




A woman leaves the steam inhalation booth installed by Tanzanian herbalist Msafiri Mjema in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, on May 22, 2020 after using the treatment as a preventive measure against COVID-19 coronavirus

Steam inhalation booths have been set up in the main city Dar es Salaam by herbalists​
"Magufuli sees African nations as allies, or at least, not 'mabeberu', and therefore, prefers to deal with them and seek out medical remedies from them rather than from elsewhere," Tanzanian political analyst Dan Paget said.

Many health experts believe the leaders - who also include Liberia's George Weah - are creating false hopes, but herbal medicine is part of the lives of most Africans. WHO data shows that 80% of them use it.

Whether Mr Magufuli's strategy has paid off will become clear in the coming months.

For now, he has strengthened his support among many African nationalists, religious conservatives, and businessmen, bolstering his chances of securing a second term in the October election. When Mr Kikwete handed power to him in 2015, he said: "I'm leaving, but we've brought this chuma [Swahili for a piece of iron]."

It was an apt description of Mr Magufuli's style of leadership, which has been applauded by his supporters and loathed by his critics.
 
Africa’s ‘Bulldozer’ Runs Into Covid-19, Claims God on His Side

Credit: Antony Sguazzin, Bloomberg News

(Bloomberg) -- Tanzania’s maverick President John Magufuli has used his strong personality to cow corrupt civil servants and force foreign mining companies to pay millions of dollars in outstanding tax. The coronavirus may be less responsive.

Last week, he became the first African leader to declare victory over the virus, even though health data haven’t been released for more than a month. He’s criticized the national laboratory for exaggerating the number of infections, dismissed health experts and discouraged the wearing of masks, all the while saying God will protect Tanzania. Restrictions on social gatherings such as weddings will be lifted from June 29, when schools can reopen.

But the president’s optimism is belied by reports of deaths and nighttime burials by health officials wearing personal protective equipment. Dozens of Tanzanian truck drivers who had to undergo screening at border posts have tested positive. The U.S. Embassy warned last month that the risk of contracting the virus in the main city, Dar es Salaam, was “extremely high” and that hospitals were overwhelmed.

Tanzania’s approach to the pandemic “has caused panic and tension within the East African community,” Haningtone Amol, chief executive officer of the East African Law Society, said from Kenya’s capital, Nairobi. “The truth is, cemeteries are busy across Tanzania.”

Neighbors are worried. Kenya has shut the border to all but cargo, Zambia temporarily did the same and Rwanda is insisting on tests before entry. Uganda is “concerned” about the rise in cases in Tanzania, Spellanza Muhenda Baguma, vice chairwoman of the parliamentary committee on health, said in a June 4 interview. Magufuli skipped two recent summits where he would have met with regional heads of state.

Intimidation, Bravado

“President Magufuli has decided to please the crowd by not locking down the country and allowing people to continue to scratch out a living,” said Fatma Karume, a lawyer and former president of the Tanganyika Law Society.

“It’s a high-risk game.”

Nicknamed “the bulldozer” for his no-nonsense approach when he was minister of works, Magufuli has made intimidation and bravado a feature of his presidency since assuming office in 2015. His campaign to fight graft -- he often fired people while cameras were rolling -- earned him widespread praise and elevated his authority within the ruling Chama Cha Mapinduzi party.

Crackdowns on the media and those who poke fun at the government mean that criticism of how Magufuli is handling the outbreak is mostly restricted to social media. Official information is limited and tightly controlled. At least 13 journalists, students and politicians have been detained since March 23 for distributing information about the virus, Tanzania’s Legal and Human Rights Centre said.

When the health ministry stopped releasing data, the country had 480 cases and 16 deaths. That compares to almost 4,000 cases and more than 100 deaths in neighbouring Kenya as of Tuesday. Last week, Tanzania’s parliament passed a resolution to praise Magufuli for “exemplary leadership” in handling the pandemic. CCM lawmaker Ally Kessy urged fellow parliamentarians to abolish presidential term limits and allow the 60-year-old to rule indefinitely, saying he was irreplaceable.

‘Divine Intervention’

Still, residents aren’t convinced the authorities have the disease under control.
“I think we still have a lot of coronavirus infections out there, despite the government saying we now have very few cases,” said Hamisi Thabiti, a mechanic in Dar es Salaam. “That’s why I’m still taking precautions and take a lemon and ginger drink every day to boost my immunity.”

Infections are down and some hospitals in Dar es Salaam are empty, said government spokesman Hassan Abbasi. That success is due to measures the state has taken “but also our firm belief in divine intervention, that’s why churches and mosques were open throughout,” he said by text message.

Magufuli was one of few African leaders to refuse a lockdown or curfew, saying the country couldn’t afford it. His announcement this month that the outbreak has been defeated paves the way for campaigning for presidential and parliamentary elections in October.

The vote is likely to take place with little foreign attention as the international community is distracted by the crisis, and with limited opposition -- one senior leader was found guilty of sedition last month and another is launching his campaign from self-imposed exile in Europe. “The president doesn’t want to postpone his inevitable election victory,” Amol said. “We are staring at the bigger picture of someone preparing for the elections without observers.”

Africa’s ‘Bulldozer’ Runs Into Covid-19, Claims God on His Side - BNN Bloomberg
©2020 Bloomberg L.P.

Tanzania doesn't depend on foreign nations to undertake its duties under its constitution to make sure that the country is run democratically and the coming elections will be free and fair. The same white men are in forefront to try to teach us democracy which they failed to undertake for years. They stole the African wealthy with impunity and today they want to be the champions for democracy, what a shame.
 
Important COVID-19 Exceptional Travel Advisory Notice

The Foreign & Commonwealth Office currently advises British nationals against all but essential international travel. This advice is being kept under constant review.

Summary
  1. Return to the UK
  2. Staying during coronavirus
  3. Safety and security
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  3. Natural disasters
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  5. Travel advice help and support
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Summary
Still current at: 19 June 2020 Updated: 19 June 2020 Latest update:
This page has been reviewed in full and reissued without amendment

Coronavirus: stay up to date
The Government of Tanzania announced on 18 May that it had lifted the ban on international flights arriving and departing Tanzania. See Return to the UK.
If you’re visiting Tanzania and are unable to return to the UK, see Staying during coronavirus
The Government of Tanzania is implementing temperature scanning and collecting tracking information for all international passengers arriving into Tanzania but have removed mandatory 14 day quarantine requirements on arrival.

Given the rapidly changing situation in Tanzania we have temporarily withdrawn a limited number of UK staff and their dependents from our High Commission. The High Commission will continue to carry out essential work including providing 24/7 consular assistance and support to British people in Tanzania.
Around 75,000 British nationals visit Tanzania every year.

Although most visits to Tanzania are trouble-free, violent and armed crime is increasing. Take sensible precautions to protect yourself and your belongings. See Crime

During the rainy seasons, end of March till May and October to middle of December, exceptionally heavy rainfall and strong winds can occur. See Natural disasters
As of 1 June 2019, plastic bags are banned for environmental reasons. See Local laws and customs
Terrorists are likely to try to carry out attacks in Tanzania. See Terrorism
If you need to contact the emergency services, dial 112 and ask for the emergency service you require.
There is a threat of piracy in the Gulf of Aden and Indian Ocean. See River and sea travel
In the last few years there have been several ferry disasters in which hundreds of people have died. If you believe a ferry is overloaded or not seaworthy, do not get on. See River and sea travel
Long distance buses are often involved in accidents which can be fatal. See Road travel
If you’re abroad and you need emergency help from the UK government, contact the nearest British embassy, consulate or high commission.

Take out comprehensive travel and medical insurance before you travel.
 
If black lives matter, then why are African leaders with a different take on Covid-19 being taunted?

Credit: Neil Clark
is a journalist, writer, broadcaster and blogger. His award winning blog can be found at www.neilclark66.blogspot.com. He tweets on politics and world affairs @NeilClark66


Tanzanian President John Pombe Magufuli gestures while arriving at the Loftus Versfeld Stadium in Pretoria, South Africa, for the inauguration of Incumbent South African President Cyril Ramaphosa on May 25, 2019 © AFP / Michele Spatari
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The criticism of Tanzania’s and Madagascar’s presidents, John Magufuli and Andry Rajoelina, for challenging the Covid ‘consensus’ shows that, for some, Black Lives Matter counts only if black voices are saying the ‘right’ things.

YouTube has ‘Black Lives Matter’ as its Twitter bio. Pretty worthy, eh? But that didn’t stop the internet platform removing a video made by a Canadian activist who calls herself ‘Amazing Polly’ that featured claims made about Covid-19 and its treatment by the leaders of Tanzania and Madagascar. It has subsequently restored it, but the fact it took it down in the first place, alongside the sneering, hostile reaction from others to what the African leaders said, speaks volumes about the double standards currently on display.

Magufuli’s great crime was that he decided to test the testers. He instructed his country's security services to send to Covid-19 testing labs samples taken from a pawpaw, a goat, some engine oil and a type of bird called a kware, among other non-human sources, but to assign them human names and ages. The pawpaw sample was given the name ‘Elizabeth Ane, 26 years, female.’ And guess what? The sample came back positive for Covid-19. As did those from the kware and the goat.

The testing kits had been imported from abroad. Clearly, as Magufuli – a PhD in chemistry – stated, something wasn’t quite right. “When you notice something like this, you must know there’s a dirty game played in those tests,” he said.

Tanzania President John Magufuli - a PhD in chemistry—has encouraged citizens to go to church because coronavirus cannot survive in the body of Christ. Strong contender for world’s most asinine coronavirus crisis leader.

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The oft-repeated claim in reports on Tanzania is that there’s been a cover-up. Right on cue, the US Embassy to Tanzania weighed in on May 13, claiming the risk of contracting Covid-19 in Dar es-Salaam was “extremely high.” The intimation was that the Tanzanian leader couldn’t possibly be telling the truth about Covid. But wasn’t that assumption, just a tiny bit, er, racist?

Another African leader who challenged the ‘consensus’ on Covid-19 was Burundi’s Pierre Nkurunziza. Burundi, which didn’t impose a lockdown, actually expelled the WHO’s team from the country in May, accusing it of “unacceptable interference.” On June 8, Nkurunziza died suddenly, aged 55. Yet again, this didn’t get too much coverage, save for some articles in the West claiming he had died of coronavirus, even though the official cause was given as a heart attack. African leaders can be lauded, but only if they toe the politically correct line set by self-proclaimed ‘anti-racist’ men in suits in the West, it seems.

And this colonial mindset permeates even the ‘anti-imperialist’ movement. A friend of mine told me he went on a demonstration against the NATO’s attack on Libya in 2011. Some Libyans present had banners of their country’s president, Muammar Gaddafi. They were told to take them down by the non-Libyan organisers. That’s right: Africans weren’t allowed to display banners of their country’s leader at a march opposing the bombing of their country.

Rajoelina hit the nail on the head when he said the only reason the rest of the world has refused to treat what he believes is his country’s cure for the coronavirus with the urgency and respect it deserves is that the remedy comes from Africa. Isn’t it ironic that, at a time when Western establishment figures are trying to show us every day how wonderfully ‘anti-racist’ they are, black voices outside the US and Britain are being ignored, even laughed at?

Only last week, UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson expressed his disapproval that Britain gave 10 times as much aid to Tanzania as “we do to the six countries of the Western Balkans, who are acutely vulnerable to Russian meddling.” How interesting that aid money sent to Tanzania gets questioned only now, after the country didn’t follow the script on Covid-19.

One wonders how many of the celebrities, politicians and pundits publicly expressing support for Black Lives Matters today have actually read the work of inspirational black African leaders such as Ghana’s Kwame Nkrumah and Tanzania’s Julius Nyerere, or, in fact, have even heard of them? I imagine the answer would be very few, if any.

The arrogant dismissal of voices from Africa that dare to defy Western-elite orthodoxy, and the failure to even consider the possibility that African leaders have got it right and their Western counterparts might have got it wrong, is in itself a form of neo-colonialism. And, lest we forget, Nkrumah described that as “the worst form of imperialism.”

If Black Lives Matter, then ‘politically incorrect’ black opinions ought to be listened to with respect, and not with a smug, superior facial expression before being loftily dismissed in the way a teacher might deal with a naughty child. But in this dumbed-down era in which many unthinkingly follow the dominant globalist narrative, it’s simpler for some to ‘take a knee’ and post a photo of themselves on social media doing so than it is to take a moment to see the bigger picture.

If black lives matter, then why are African leaders with a different take on Covid-19 being taunted?


Right to the point, Good article from someone afar, but our own Africans (not all) are colluding with some people in Europe/USA and failing to support their own kind.
 
Tanzanian miner becomes overnight millionaire

Tanzanite: Tanzanian miner becomes overnight millionaire

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A small-scale miner in Tanzania has become an overnight millionaire after selling two rough Tanzanite stones - the biggest ever find in the country. Saniniu Laizer earned £2.4m ($3.4m) from the country's mining ministry for the gemstones, which had a combined weight of 15kg (2.3 lb).

"There will be a big party tomorrow," Mr Laizer, a father of more than 30 children, told the BBC.
Tanzanite is only found in northern Tanzania and is used to make ornaments.

It is one of the rarest gemstones on Earth, and one local geologist estimates its supply may be entirely depleted within the next 20 years. The precious stone's appeal lies in its variety of hues, including green, red, purple and blue.

Its value is determined by rarity - the finer the colour or clarity, the higher the price Mr Laizer mined the stones, weighing 9.2kg and 5.8kg, last week, but he sold them on Wednesday during a trading event in the northern region of Manyara. Until now the largest Tanzanite rock to be mined weighed 3.3kg.

President John Magufuli phoned in to congratulate Mr Laizer on the find. "This is the benefit of small-scale miners and this proves that Tanzania is rich," the president said. Mr Magufuli came to power in 2015 promising to safeguard the nation's interest in the mining sector and increase the government's revenue from it.

What did the new millionaire say?
Mr Laizer, 52, who has four wives, said he would slaughter one of his cows to celebrate. He also plans to invest in his community in Simanjiro district in Manyara. "I want to build a shopping mall and a school. I want to build this school near my home. There are many poor people around here who can't afford to take their children to school."

"I am not educated but I like things run in a professional way. So I would like my children to run the business professionally."
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He said the windfall would not change his lifestyle, and that he planned to continue looking after his 2,000 cows. He said he did not need to take any extra precautions despite his new-found riches. "There is enough security [here]. There won't be any problem. I can even walk around at night without any problem."

Some small-scale miners like Mr Laizer acquire government licences to prospect for Tanzanite, but illegal mining is prevalent especially near mines owned by big companies. In 2017, President Magufuli ordered the military to build a 24km (14-mile) perimeter wall around the Merelani mining site in Manyara, believed to be the world's only source of Tanzanite.

A year later, the government reported an increase in revenue in the mining sector and attributed the rise to the construction of the wall, the BBC's Sammy Awami in Dar es Salaam reports.
 
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