Don YF
JF-Expert Member
- May 24, 2014
- 10,494
- 9,854
- Thread starter
- #81
Ww unaonekan hujui chochote kusu Tz ....yn uko sifurii kabisa unazani hii ni Kenya ....mm nakwambia hakuna mtu wa aina iyo Tz kubal kata dat's on you ...hiii siyo nchi ya kibeberu kama yenu hii ni mixed economy ikiwa n root za socialism....alafu kuna large peace of fertile land ....so jua huku njaaa tuliwachia nyie paper gdp
Did your government improve on this? Najua haya wengi hamfahamu kazi nikukurupuka bila uhakika
👇👇👇
Solving A Hidden Hunger C
Solving A Hidden Hunger Crisis in Tanzania
Photo: WFP/Mackenzie Rollins
Photo: WFP/Mackenzie Rollins
The Hunger Season
In the villages of rural Tanzania, it’s not uncommon for mothers to wait weeks or even months to name their newborns. Too often their infants won’t survive long enough to need one.
Dr. Borda, a native of Malta whose white hair and fluent Swahili underscores her thirty years of experience living in Tanzania, says some mothers here simply nickname their newborns “buyoya,” a Kiha word meaning “breath.” It’s a poetic reminder of how dangerous life for children can be in low-income countries like this one, where infant mortality rates are five times higher than in the United States due to widespread poverty, inadequate health care and chronic malnutrition. For mothers, the risk of dying during childbirth in Tanzania is twenty times higher than in the U.S.

Photo: WFP/Mackenzie Rollins
Sister-Dr. Maria Borda, far right, and her staff at the Medical Missionaries of Mary Makiungu Hospital in the Singida district of central Tanzania.
One key reason is a lack of access to food. The East African nation is one of the least developed and food-deficient on the planet. According to the United Nations World Food Programme (WFP), more than 40 percent of Tanzania’s population live in regions where food shortages are common, often as a result of irregular rainfall, degraded soil and inadequate farming equipment that yields meager harvests. This is especially problematic in rural areas, where 80 percent of the population relies on rain-fed, subsistence agriculture.