Tag: John Magufuli

  • President of Tanzania lifts ban on political rallies

    President of Tanzania lifts ban on political rallies

    Tanzania’s leader, Samia Suluhu Hassan, has lifted a six-year ban on political rallies that was imposed by the former president, John Magufuli.

    Her decision is part of her “4 R’s” initiative: reconciliation, resilience, reform, and reconstruction.

    She acknowledged parties had the right to hold rallies but she urged them to be “civil” and not to “trade insults”

    Mr Magufuli had banned rallies in between elections in what was seen as an attempt to weaken the opposition.

    He dismissed rallies as a waste of time and money and said they detracted from the key challenge of building the economy.

    Mrs Samia announced the reversal of his policy at a meeting with opposition politicians.

    “Our duty as a government will be offering protection for the rallies,” she said.

    The chairman of the main opposition Chadema party, Freeman Mbowe, said he welcomed the announcement.

    “The move is first of all a return to a right guaranteed in the constitution and our laws,” he added.

    Mr Mbowe spent seven months in prison, before the prosecution dropped charges of terrorism against him in March 2022.

    His arrest had raised doubts about Mrs Samia’s commitment to reforms after she became president following Mr Magufuli’s death in 2021.

    Another opposition politician, Zito Kabwe, told the AFP news agency that the president’s decision to lift the ban was a “big move.”

    “This is the right that was snatched by the state through an illegal presidential decree,” he added.

    Mrs Samia also promised to look into opposition demands for changes to the constitution.

    Opposition parties say the constitution gives too much power to the president. They also want changes to safeguard the independence of the electoral commission and the courts.

    Mrs Samiah is the leader of the ruling party, Chama Cha Mapinduzi (CCM), which has been in power for more than half a century.

    It has often been accused of rigging elections and harassing and intimidating the opposition. It denies the allegations.

    Source: BBC.com
  • Who was John Magufuli?

    John Magufuli was the fifth president of Tanzania since its independence in 1961.

    He was elected president for the first time in October 2015, with 58% of the vote and succeeded Jakaya Kikwete – enjoying a high approval rating.

    His party, the Chama cha Mapinduzi (CCM), which has been in power since the country’s independence, chose him to represent it among more than thirty candidates.

    Before becoming president, John Magufuli, who comes from a modest family and holds a degree in chemistry, was a minister several times from the early 2000s. He was entrusted with the portfolios of livestock and fisheries, housing and public works.

    His resolute action in favour of housing for the poorest had already earned him the nickname of “Tingatinga”, the Bulldozer in Swahili, in reference to the construction programmes he implemented.

    He stands out for his resolute action in favour of the poorest. He wanted to demonstrate this form of empathy as soon as he was invested, taking a whole series of drastic measures.

    In particular, the sums that previously evaporated in tax fraud will be invested in education and the fight against poverty.

    As head of state, he promised to fight corruption, develop the country and its economy and launch major works.

    As soon as he was elected, he divided his own salary by four, making him one of the lowest-paid African heads of state, cut public spending drastically, cancelled independence ceremonies as too costly, and began sweeping the streets of the capital, Dar es Salaam, himself to set an example.

    Elected on the promise to put an end to corruption, he also put pressure on the big companies present in the country to force them to let the Tanzanian state take a stake in their capital, renegotiated the contracts of certain mining and gas companies, and dismissed local executives deemed corrupt or incompetent.

    No area seems to escape presidential vigilance: to put an end to badly parked vehicles in the capital, it is decided that the police will confiscate their tyres.

    John Magufuli was re-elected last October, in a contested election, with more than 84% of the votes.

    According to the Tanzanian constitution, Ms Samia Suluhu Hassan will become the country’s first female president and will consult with the ruling CCM party on the appointment of a new vice president.

    His death leaves Tanzania in an uncertain political situation, according to Nic Cheeseman, professor of democracy at the University of Birmingham.

    “The news of Magufuli’s death will fundamentally reshape Tanzanian politics. Having dominated the political scene since his election, he leaves a kind of political vacuum,” said Cheeseman.

    “This will trigger a new uncertainty and all eyes will be on the internal politics of the CCM to see what agreements have been reached within the ruling party regarding the balance of power after the transition.”

    Source: africanews.com

  • Tanzania’s President Magufuli takes oath of office

    Tanzanian President John Magufuli was sworn in Thursday for his second term in office in a packed stadium in Dodoma.

    The National Electoral Commission (NEC) declared Mr Magufuli winner of the October 28 general election, after garnering 12.5 million votes representing 84.4 per cent of the total votes cast.

    The president took his oath before Chief Justice Prof Ibrahim Juma at Jamhuri Stadium.

    After signing his oath, he was handed the Constitution of the United Republic of Tanzania and was later given a spear and shield as symbols of leadership and head of the armed forces.

    Presidents Yoweri Museveni of Uganda, Emmerson Mnangagwa of Zimbabwe and Azali Assoumani of Comoros were at the ceremony. Kenya sent its Cabinet Secretary for East African Community Adan Mohammed.

    Source: theeastafrican.co.ke

  • Tanzania’s Magufuli cleared for second term bid

    Tanzania’s President John Magufuli has been cleared by the electoral commission to run for re-election in October.

    The president returned his nomination papers to the commission on Tuesday.

    He is expected to face-off with opposition Chadema party nominee Tundu Lissu who returned to the country last month from Europe after surviving an assassination attempt in 2017.

    The electoral commission is on Tuesday expected to publish the final list of presidential candidates.

    The official campaign period begins on Wednesday.

    The ruling party tweeted a video of President Magufuli returning the nomination forms to the electoral commission:

    Source: bbc.com