HEALTH

by Ben Taylor

Vigilance around Mpox
On August 17th, 2024, the Ministry of Health provided an update on the threat of Mpox outbreak. This followed a recent global upsurge of cases, including in Kenya, Uganda, Rwanda and Burundi, as well as in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) where the disease has long been established. One confirmed case was identified very close to the Tanzanian border, in Taveta, Kenya.

Due to this threat the public was advised to take recommended precautions to protect themselves and prevent the disease from entering the country.

The Minister of Health, Jenista Mhagama, offered reassurance that “until now, no patient has been proven to have Mpox infection in the country,” and that “the Ministry of Health continues to take measures to prevent Mpox from entering the country.”

This includes strengthening port health services through screening of all travellers entering the country through ports, land borders and airports, to identify travellers with signs and symptoms of Mpox and take appropriate action.

The Ministry said it would also strengthen surveillance in the community for early and timely identification of any person with signs or symptoms of Mpox, in order to manage suspect and prevent the spread of infection in community.

Further, the Ministy said it will enhance the preparedness and readiness in health care facilities and provide health education through multi channels communication approach.

The Minister also issued guidance on steps people should take to prevent infection. These included seeking medical attention in case of rashes and swelling, avoiding skin-to-skin contact with patients, cleaning hands regularly and avoiding earing carcasses of animals that may be infected.

Understanding the virus
The World Health Organisation (WHO) on August 14th declared that the upsurge of Mpox in the DRC and a growing number of countries in Africa constitutes a public health emergency of international concern (PHEIC). As of August 17th, there had been 545 alerts of Mpox cases in Burundi, one confirmed case in Kenya, four in Rwanda and two in Uganda.

Confusion around how Mpox spreads and what risks it presents has been exacerbated by the range of viral variants in circulation. In East Africa, a strain known as clade 1b appears to be responsible for the majority of new infections, and has been detected elsewhere in the world in recent travellers.

In western DRC, a separate strain, known as clade 1a, has been in circulation at a relatively low level for over 50 years.

A third variant, known as clade II that had previously been circulating only in west Africa – Nigeria and elsewhere – was responsible since 2022 for a global epidemic. This spread largely among gay men and has thus far caused over 100,000 infections, including in the UK. With vaccination campaigns, this outbreak has been largely brought under control.

While clade II is thought to largely to be sexually transmitted, clade Ib is thought to be transmitted both via sexual contact and likely in other ways. Clade 1a is thought to be transmitted between humans only rarely, with most cases resulting instead from animal-human contact, such as consumption of bush meat.

A key factor in the rise of Mpox cases is thought to be the decline in population immunity after smallpox was eradicated in 1980 and smallpox vaccination—which also protects against monkeypox—was ended. (World Health Organisation, The Citizen, Science.org)

Dr Faustine Ndugulile elected to WHO role

Dr Ndugulile (centre) with Dr Moeti (left) who has completed her term. Photo WHO/Daniel Elombat

Tanzania politician and medical doctor, Dr Faustine Ndugulile, has been elected as the new World Health Organisation (WHO) Regional Director for Africa.

Elected to the position on August 28 during the 74th session of the WHO Regional Committee for Africa in Brazzaville, Congo, Dr Ndugulile, the former Deputy Minister for Health and Kigamboni Member of Parliament, will succeed Dr Matshidiso Moeti.

While acknowledging the progress Africa has made in the health sector, Dr Ndugulile emphasised in a statement to Parliament that substantial challenges remain before the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) deadline.

His campaign focused on four key areas: ensuring access to health services for all Africans, preparing the continent for pandemics such as Covid-19 and Mpox, fostering unique cooperation among African institutions—including parliaments—and strengthening the WHO’s presence in Africa to maximise resource benefits.

“I am currently preparing for my new role. I have been given six months to organise myself, understand the organisation’s operations and develop my vision. This preparation will ensure that I can start effectively when I begin my tenure in March,” Dr Ndugulile said.

EDUCATION

by Ben Taylor

Rollout continues of new education policy
The government’s reforms in the education sector are increasingly taking shape, as teachers’ colleges are restructured to meet the demands of the new curriculum.

During a visit to Rukwa Region, President Samia Suluhu Hassan inaugurated the Sumbawanga Teachers’ College, reinforcing the government’s dedication to supporting teachers nationwide.

“We have revamped the education system,” she said. “While challenges are inevitable during this transition, rest assured the government stands with you. Study diligently, graduate and teach other teachers and students. Your work is invaluable.”

Minister for Education, Professor Adolf Mkenda, highlighted that under President Samia’s leadership, four new teachers’ colleges have been established, including those in Ngorongoro, Kabanga, Mhonda and Sumbawanga.

“The government now operates 35 teachers’ colleges,” he explained. “These colleges are being specialised; for example, Marangu Teachers’ College now focuses on languages like Arabic, French and Chinese, Butimba College specializes in sports and Kleruu offers technical training,” Prof Mkenda explained.

The new policy has eliminated certificate-level training for teachers, allowing current certificate holders to advance to diploma levels before phasing out certificates entirely.

President Samia also laid the foundation stone for a new Vocational Education and Training Authority (VETA) college in Kashai Street, Sumbawanga Municipality, urging local youth to take advantage of this new institution.

Prof Mkenda noted that this project would fulfil President Samia’s directive for each region to have a VETA college. Currently, 64 additional VETA colleges are under construction.

VETA Chief Executive Anthony Kasore said that the Sumbawanga VETA college, constructed at a cost of TSh 6.8bn, includes 24 buildings, eight workshops, three staff houses and dormitories for 248 students.

Education budget increased, criticised as insufficient
The Ministry of Education, Science and Technology is expected to spend TSh 1.96 trillion in 2024/25, just under 200 billion more than its budget for the previous financial year. Part of this increase is intended to fund the implementation of the new education curricula, which began operations in January.

“We intend to expand opportunities and enhance the quality of technical and vocational education and training (TVET), as well as to make more opportunities available and improve the quality of primary, secondary and teacher education,” said the Minister of Education, Science and Technology, Prof Adolf Mkenda, in presenting his ministry’s budget to parliament.

Husna Sekiboko, chair of parliament’s education, culture and sports committee, noted that “despite this increase, the education budget is only 14% of the total government budget, thus not reaching the international goal of 20%.” Moreover, the committee was not satisfied with the funds allocated in some areas, including the implementation of the new education policy and curriculum. “This will result in a lack of learning and teaching infrastructure, a shortage of teachers with qualifications matching the new curricula, and may even affect students’ ability to achieve educational success,” Ms Sekiboko said.

The committee also noted that the majority of the ministry’s budget is allocated to the Higher Education Students Loans Board, which accounts for 60% of the development budget.

Prof. Mkenda mentioned that the government plans to increase loan opportunities from 223,201 to about 252,245. “The government aims to provide loans to 84,500 first-year students, including 80,000 for undergraduate programs, 2,000 for postgraduate programs, 500 for foreign students, and 2,000 for Samia Scholarships.”

Beyond parliament, analysts argued that the budget fails to reflect the reality of the educational reforms needed. “The issues of infrastructure are the same every year. We were not shown how the ministry will implement the new policies and curricula as planned because the approved amount cannot effectively achieve this,” Dr Wilberforce Meena, an education expert from HakiElimu.

Mr John Jafari, a retired teacher, echoed this view. He said the budget did not aim to bring about the changes that the government was talking about yet. “Before the arrival of the new curricula, the budget was already small, and now the needs have increased but not to the same extent as the allocated budget.” He added that “the burden rests squarely on the shoulders of the Ministry of Finance.”

Acute teacher shortage continues
Despite government efforts to recruit and train more teachers at primary and secondary levels, statistics reveal a significant need for more teachers, especially competent ones. As of December 2023, Tanzania had 207,323 primary school teachers for 11,425,482 students – a pupil-teacher ratio (PTR) of 1:57 – according to the Basic Education Statistics 2023, published by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS).

The statistics also reveal that some schools have one teacher handling up to 600 students in a class, while others have over 1,000 students with only three teachers. The government has promised to hire 12,000 teachers in the 2024/25 fiscal year. However, analysis shows that over 116,885 teachers would be needed to bring the teacher-student ratio down to 1:45 (the government’s own mandated ratio) in early years and primary education alone. A similar number would also be needed for secondary schooling.

Mwanza and Songwe Regions trail, in having an average of 59 students taught by one teacher in 2023, while Kagera Region has an average of 58 students per teacher. Only five regions (Coast, Njombe, Arusha, Kilimanjaro and Dar es Salaam) had the recommended average PTR of 1:45. The Deputy Minister of the President’s Office Regional Administration and Local Government Authorities (PO-RALG), Ms Zainabu Katimba, explained that the latest recruitment drive is part of ongoing efforts to reduce the existing shortage of teachers. She pointed out that between the 2020/21 and 2022/23 fiscal years, the government had employed 29,879 new teachers, including 16,598 for primary schools and 13,281 for secondary schools.

Tradition blocks girls’ progress in education in coastal areas
Kisarawe, a coastal district, is grappling with a cultural belief that prioritises marriage over education for girls. This entrenched mindset is reportedly hindering government efforts to reintegrate teenage mothers into the school system.

President Samia Suluhu Hassan had previously issued a directive to allow pregnant students to return to school after giving birth, a reversal of her predecessor’s policy on the issue. However, in some areas, implementation of the new approach has faced significant resistance.

One education officer in Kisarawe, who requested to remain anonymous, told The Citizen that “we face a very tough time encouraging them to return to school while the community is resistant. Some of these girls have already been married off and their education dream is lost.”

According to a report by HakiElimu on reintegrating teenage mothers into formal secondary schooling, parents and community members hold traditional or conservative viewpoints that cast teenage pregnancy in a negative light, treating it as a matter of moral failing or social disgrace.

The prevailing attitude is that education for girls is secondary to their roles as wives and mothers, a belief that is deeply rooted and difficult to change, especially in families with strong beliefs in religious customs.

Education experts argue that more intensive and culturally sensitive awareness campaigns are needed. “Changing deep-seated beliefs requires a multifaceted approach,” says education policy specialist, Ms Amina Mwajuma. “We need to engage community leaders, parents, and the girls themselves in dialogue about the long-term benefits of education.”

SPORT

by Philip Richards

Summer Olympics – Paris 2024
As reported in TA 138, Tanzania sent 7 competitors to the XXXIII Olympiad in Paris, made up of four athletes (marathon), two swimmers and one competing in judo. Sadly, the country’s representatives returned empty handed, meaning that it is 44 years since Olympic medals (two silvers) were won in Moscow in 1980, and the glint of a gold medal remains an elusive dream.

In the men’s marathon, Alphonce Simbu finished a disappointing 17th after experiencing muscular pain 31km into the race, whilst Gabriel Geay did not finish the route. In the women’s race, whilst Magdalena Shauri posted a season’s best time, she still finished 40th whilst Jackline Sakilu did not finish.

In the pool, Collins Saliboko and Saphia Latiff did not advance beyond the heats of their 100m and 50m freestyle respectively. On the judo floor, Andrew Mlugu won his contest in the round of 32 for the 73kg class, but failed to progress against his French opponent in the round of 16.

Preparations will no doubt have started already for the Los Angeles 2028 Games. Alphonce Simbu has commented that the standards of other sports in the country need to be raised, rather than pinning the country’s hopes on athletics (The Citizen, 15/8/24). However, the challenge surely is for each sport, including athletics, to focus on raising their own standards, rather than comparing themselves to the perceived weaknesses of other sports, otherwise there is a risk that the only goal will be to meet the standards of the lowest common denominator.

Paris 2024 Paralympic Games

Hilmy Shawwal in Ealing (photo Oliver Monk)

Hilmy Shawwal represented the country as its the sole competitor in the Paralympics in August/September in the T54 100m wheelchair racing category. He has made history by becoming the first wheelchair racer to represent Tanzania and is hoping will inspire others to follow. The T54 class includes people with spinal cord injuries who compete using a wheelchair in track events. Although currently located in Ealing, UK, where he is a tutor and mentor to young people, Hilmy qualifies to represent Tanzania on account of it being his mother’s country of birth.

In the event, he finished 6th in the heats so did not progress in the competition but his consistency and determination will surely inspire himself to greater heights and an example for others to follow (Kingston Nub News 2/9/2024)

Football
The men’s national team, Taifa Stars, kicked off their 2025 Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON) Group H campaign against Ethiopia in early September. The match played in Dar es Salaam ended in a goalless draw which was characterised by cautious play and a lack of clear-cut chances (CAF Online, 4/9/24). The team faces further group matches against Guinea and DR Congo in an attempt to reach the finals in Egypt in Morocco next year.

Beach soccer

Jaruph Juma, coach of the beach soccer team in action (FIFA)


The conventional field-based game may be the most popular sport in the country, but competitive beach-based “soccer” is gaining popularity both in Tanzania and across the world. In Tanzania, you may see the game being played on the popular beaches of Kigamboni, Kwenda, Nungwi and Paje.

This popularity has led to an Africa-wide (AFCON) tournament to be held in Eqypt in October. Tanzania’s campaign began with a match against Uganda in the qualifiers and has culminated in them reaching the 8-team finals. (AllAfrica.com, 18/7/24). Coach Jaruph Juma (pictured) is reported to be aiming progress the sport through qualification for the World Cup in Seychelles in 2025.

TANZANIA IN THE INTERNATIONAL MEDIA

by Donovan McGrath

Rapidly urbanising Africa to have six cities with populations above 10m by 2035
(Guardian online – UK) Extract: … Angola’s capital, Luanda, and Tanzania’s commercial hub, Dar es Salaam, will join the metropolises of Cairo, Kinshasa, Lagos and Greater Johannesburg with populations of more than 10 million, the Economist Intelligence Unit said in a report on African cities… This fast-paced urbanisation, which will result in more than half of Africans living in towns and cities by 2035, is expected to create wealth, dynamism and business opportunities, the report says. But, it adds: “Overcrowding, informal settlements, high unemployment, poor public services, stretched utility services and exposure to climate change are just some of the major challenges that city planners will have to grapple with.” By 2035, on top of the six megacities, the continent will have 17 urban areas with more than 5 million people and about another 100 with more than 1 million. Of the largest cities by 2035, Addis Ababa is expected to grow at an average annual rate of 10.6%, followed by Kampala, Dar es Salaam and Abidjan at above or near 9%… (22 August 2024)

I spent three days with one of the world’s last hunter-gatherer tribes where they stalk squirrels and baboons with bows and arrows

Ruhi Çenet and Hadza hunters


(Daily Mail online – UK) Extract: An intrepid filmmaker has revealed how he spent three days living with one of the world’s last hunter-gatherer tribes in a bid to document their stripped-back existence. Ruhi Çenet ventured to near Lake Eyasi in Northern Tanzania with a guide and translator where he met with members of the Hadza tribe. He explains in a YouTube documentary detailing his trip, that the Hadza people ‘survive by hunting their food with bows and arrows just like our ancestors did thousands of years ago deep into the wild savannah.’ Some of the animals they hunt for food, Ruhi says, include rock hyrax, squirrels, antelopes, and baboons, and to wash it down, they drink ‘muddy water,’ as their ‘immune system is strong enough to deal with the bacteria and parasites.’ Along with a unique diet, Ruhi reveals that the Hadza people speak a complex language called Hadzane which combines spoken words with clicking noises. After being introduced to the tribe’s chief, Sakoro, Ruhi prepares to go on a hunt with the male tribe members. They wake up very early in the morning in the darkness with around 10 hunting dogs in tow. Their weapons of choice include knives and arrows, with some rubbed in poison. As a form of camouflage, the men wear baboon furs and other animal skins on their head as well as around their torsos. The main portion of Ruhi’s short film then focuses on the arduous and tiring task of hunting for food. The dogs help sniff out rock hyrax and mongoose in their underground dwellings, before the tribesmen go in and spear the animals… During their breaks, the men eat from honeycombs and Ruhi explains that honey is the tribe’s ‘liquid gold’ and is ‘packed with energy and vital nutrients to keep them going strong in the wild.’ … Ruhi reveals that there has been a drop in animal population in the region where the Hadza people live due to ‘neighbouring tribes cutting down trees and driving away wildlife for crops and livestock.’ … (7 June 2024)

‘I am their voice now’: the Tanzanian rapper with a mission to spread pride in his own colour

Singeli artist K-Zungu at Sisso Records, Dar es Salaam. Guardian


(Guardian online – UK) K-Zungu, an up and coming singeli artist with albinism, says he was lucky to have a protective family because so many with the condition in Africa have not been so fortunate. Extract continues: Every day during school break, Ramadhani Idrisa Muhando and his friends would turn on their radio to listen to 20 Percent or Jose Chameleone, stars of bongo flava, a Tanzanian music genre influenced by hip-hop and R&B. So his love of music, he says, “has its roots in that schoolyard” in Tanga, on Tanzania’s east coast, but it was singeli, a style developed 125 miles away in Dar es Salaam, that changed the course of his life. “Boda boda [motorcycle] drivers played singeli on loudspeakers. Those new rhythms flooded our neighbourhoods and I couldn’t help but fall into its nets,” he says. Muhando – know as K-Zungu – is a singeli artist, the first the country has known with albinism. “Zungu means ‘white’ in Swahili, and K is the first letter of my grandfather’s name, Kaniki. That’s why I chose that name,” he says. Albinism, a hereditary condition that results in a lack of pigmentation in skin, hair and eyes, affecting one in 1,400 Tanzanians, is bound up with superstition. Some people believe myths that the body parts of people with the condition can bring wealth or cure illness, which has led to attacks and killings. UN statistics show 75 people with albinism were murdered in Tanzania between 2000 and 2016… K-Zungu … is using his music to challenge the fears around albinism… His song, Albino, describes someone returning home to find a gang of boys threatening to cut off his hands and sell them. “We deserve peace and happiness. I’m proud of my colour, this is me,” he raps in the song, appealing to the government to take action against those “who brutally attack and kill us”… (17 June 2024)

Idris Elba’s studio plan sparks dreams of ‘Zollywood’
(BBC News online – UK) Extract: Hollywood star Idris Elba has been allocated land in Zanzibar … to launch a film studio. The British actor, who has roots in Sierra Leone and Ghana, has previously voiced his ambitions to develop Africa’s expanding film industry. Roughly a year­ and-a-half after discussing his plans with Tanzanian President Samia Suluhu Hassan, the authorities in the East African nation have given Elba the green light. The studio would be similar to any in “Hollywood, Nollywood or Bollywood” – and may give rise to “Zollywood”, Zanzibar’s investment minister is quoted by local media as saying. “I’m not sure how we will call it in Zanzibar, whether Zollywood or Zawood,” Shariff Ali Shariff joked as he addressed industry figures at the Zanzibar International Film Festival … President Samia spoke with Elba, best known for his roles in Luther and the Wire, about the studio in January 2023 at the World Economic Forum in Switzerland. Following discussions, the president’s spokesperson said “if successful, the project will help not only Tanzania but also eastern and central Africa”… (2 August 2024)

Tanzanian artist who burnt president’s picture freed
(BBC News online – UK) Extract: A young Tanzanian portrait artist who was convicted … of cybercrimes has been released from prison after social media users raised more than $2,000 (£1,600) to pay his fine. Shadrack Chaula was ordered by a court to pay the fine or face two years in prison after he admitted recording a video that went viral on social media, showing him burning a picture of President Samia Suluhu Hassan while insulting her. “Thank you very much fellow Tanzanians for coming to my rescue,” Mr Chaula told journalists shortly after his release … The case sparked an uproar in the country, with some lawyers saying the 24-year-old painter did not break any law by burning the picture. Police said they arrested him for using “strong words” against President Samia in the TikTok video he recorded in Ntokela village near the south-western city of Mbeya. When he appeared in court … Mr Chaula was charged with spreading false information about the president, contravening the country’s cybercrime laws. The court ruled that his actions constituted cyber-harassment and incitement. Mr Chaula said the sentence was too harsh but the prosecution had pushed for a more severe penalty, saying this was necessary to deter others from “disrespecting” the president… (9 July 2024)

Tanzania police commander transferred over sex work comment
(BBC News online – UK) Extract: A police commander in Tanzania’s capital, Dodoma, has been removed from her post following controversial comments in which she linked an alleged gang-rape victim to sex work… [A] video appearing to show a young woman being assaulted went viral, prompting an outcry in the East African nation. Four men … denied charges over the alleged attack… [The] police commander in … Dodoma, was quoted in a Tanzanian newspaper as saying the “woman in question appeared to be engaged in sex work”. Following a backlash and accusations that the comment minimised the woman’s ordeal, Tanzania’s national police force apologised and said the commander had been transferred. “The police force would like to apologise to everyone who was touched and offended by the statement circulating in the media while monitoring is being done to find its accuracy,” national police spokesperson David Misime said … Mr Msime added that in her comments to local newspaper Mwananchi, Dodoma Regional Commander Theopista Mallya had said that even if the woman was a sex worker, “she did not deserve to be treated that way”. These words did not appear in Mwananchi’s report – the BBC has contacted the newspaper for comment. In response to Mwananchi’s report, lawyer Peter Madeleka said on social media platform X that Ms Mallya’s comments were “proof of police cruelty to women’s rights”. Fatma Karume, a lawyer and prominent activist, also expressed outrage on X, writing: “Those who sell themselves can not be raped in this country?” In the video that appeared to show the woman being raped, the suspects reportedly interrogated her, forcing her to apologise to someone referred to as “afande”. In Tanzania “afande” is often used to refer to a soldier or police officer, so many activists and social media users expressed outrage that a sexual assault could have been carried out on the orders of a member of the security forces… (19 August 2024)

‘We don’t need more concrete’: A new village in Tanzania will use 3D printer and soil to build its community
(CNN online – USA) Extract: Building with 3D printers has matured rapidly in recent years, as advances in technology and material science allow for grander and more ambitious designs. The potential uses are also increasingly varied, from affordable housing to a planned NASA base on the Moon. Most 3D-printed structures are built using concrete or other pourable, cementitious substances that are cheap, reliable and durable – although, almost invariably, with a hefty carbon footprint attached. But a nascent development in the field may offer a more sustainable approach: 3D printing with earth. In Kibaha, Tanzania, just west of the capital Dar es Salaam, a group of pioneering architects are set to build a new village with “earth printing” at its heart. Created by architecture firms Hassell and ClarkeHopkinsClarke, alongside charity foundation One Heart Hope Village has been designed to help and house children from across the country who have experienced hardship or unsafe home environments… Nearly 50 buildings are planned for the site… The landmark building for Hope Village is its community center, a 3D-printed design that will serve as a school hall and cafeteria during the week and open to the wider community for events at weekends. The architects knew they wanted to use locally sourced earth for the community center, but were wary of the limitations of rammed earth, which is typically compacted into thick, flat walls. “We wanted to make sure that we’re able to create walls that could ventilate the building, but at the same time also bring in light,” said Hassell’s head of design and innovation, Xavier De Kestelier, in a video call with CNN… Building with earth dates back to prehistory and has taken many forms, including mudbricks, adobe and rammed earth. 3D printing with soil was first attempted in 2018, and the first 3D printed home made from entirely from earth, called TECLA, was designed by Mario Cucinella Architects and constructed near Ravenna, Italy in 2021… In Tanzania, the printer will build up layers of compacted soil in interconnected curved columns that leaves negative space for light and air to filter through. Beyond shape, engineering durability is a key challenge when working with earth. Concrete is a resilient material that can endure the elements; earth less so. But De Kestelier insists that when it comes to 3D-printed architecture, “we don’t need to use more concrete,” and that more sustainable options are the future – when used correctly… (1 August 2024)

Chilli bombs and honeybees: Weapons in Tanzania’s human-elephant conflict
(Aljazeera online – Qatar) Extract: Mwana Athumani Msemo’s homestead sits encased in the undulating grasslands that surround Mount Kilimanjaro, an area so quiet and remote that clucking and bleating from her chicken and goat farm are the only sounds to be heard for kilometres. The landscape, with its crisp air and lush greens, holds glorious beauty. But for Msemo, it also holds ever-present anguish. It was somewhere in this wilderness that her husband took their cattle out to graze one afternoon two years ago and never returned. By the time the village search team found him at the end of a long trail of elephant footprints, it was dark and he had been dead for hours – a gaping hole where his stomach once was… “He left me with five kids,” the 55-year-old said in Swahili, sitting in her living room, her hands over face. A sob escaped her pursed lips … Across Tanzania … expanding human populations are encroaching more and more on wildlife spaces, putting people on a collision course with roaming animals in increasingly fatal events. In many rural communities like Ngulu Kwakoa, which sits near a wildlife corridor, the most common are clashes with elephants – animals that must migrate in search of food and that can turn from gently giants to charging aggressors in an instant. The giant mammals are a massive pain for farmers, too… Finding solutions to elephant-human conflicts must focus on expanding and freeing up wildlife corridors, so the animals can roam more freely without encountering humans, analysts say… In Tanzania, some have taken to filling up rubber condoms with chilli powder – a spice the elephants hate – and hauling it at raiding invaders like bombs. Others use sound as a means of distraction, beating loudly on steel buckets at intervals to scare elephants away. Six hours west of the Kilimanjaro region, communities are scaling another method pioneered by [Lucy] King herself [a researcher with Save the Elephants, a non-profit based in southern Kenya], with the help of an unlikely character – tiny honeybees. In her research, King found that elephants are mightily scared of bees. Stings on the sensitive insides of their trunks, the sides of their mouths, and behind their ears are so painful, that the intelligent animals know to scram when they hear the buzz of a hive. Playing on that fear, King came up with the idea to position bees strategically around farms and realised that it could deter elephants from going ahead with raids. After testing the method in Kenya, the researcher created a manual and published it so that conservationists from Tanzania to India are now making use of it… (11 June 2024)

‘Women have always been sidelined. So we’re radical’: the Zawose Queens go from Tanzania to Glastonbury

Leah and Pendo Zawose – the Zawose Queens – Photo Michael Mbwambo


(Guardian online – UK) The multi-talented musicians were held back in their home country where even certain instruments were off limits … Extract continues: Walking into an industrial estate in Peckham, I can hear impassioned cries coming out of a rehearsal space located here. Soaring vocals are punctuated by the gentle strum of a thumb piano along with bells that are strapped to the shaking ankles of Pendo and Leah Zawose, who make up the Zawose Queens. It’s their first time playing this music outside Tanzania … The remarkable singing that fills the room has a long history in the Zawose family, with Pendo’s father and Leah’s grandfather Hukwe being a pioneer of Gogo music, which is specific to the tribe they belong to… Pendo sang and performed with her father, who died in 2003, since she was a child. However, for years her role was limited. “The women were always in the background,” she says… “This is an opportunity to be at the forefront, prove myself, and shine.” Now singing and playing a range of instruments, the Zawose Queens came to be after a British Council-funded project connecting Tanzanian and British artists put Leah and Pendo together with UK producers Tome Excell and Oli Barton-Wood. They have made an album together, the recently released Maisha. “This record has been something I’ve been dreaming of doing since I was 12,” says Barton-Wood. “I moved to Tanzania for two years, and went to school there, so I’ve always wanted to come back to do a project like this.” Maisha is rooted in traditional singing and instrumentation, featuring chizeze fiddle along with muheme and ngoma drums but it’s also embellished with more contemporary electronic touches… The Zawose Queens … also have a special show at Womad festival, where Hukwe used to perform as a trailblazing, yet rare, Tanzanian artist … (25 June 2024)

REVIEWS

by Martin Walsh

ETHNICITY, IDENTITY, AND CONCEPTUALIZING COMMUNITY IN INDIAN OCEAN EAST AFRICA. Daren E. Ray. Ohio University Press, Athens, Ohio, 2023. 329 pp. ISBN: 9780821426135 (paperback). USD $36.95.

From the cover of the book under review. Daren Ray/Ohio University Press

For more than half a century, “ethnicity” and “community” as concepts have been at the centre of scholarship in eastern and southern Africa. More recently, academics have sought to understand the underlying cultural, historical, and political circumstances that (re)made social groups. In this volume from the Indian Ocean Studies Series at Ohio University Press, Darren Ray draws cases from southeastern Kenya to address how societies imagined themselves in contexts at the intersection of Africa and the Indian Ocean during the last two thousand years. The author emphasises the last two to five hundred years to avoid the typical foreshortening of history that often enables mummified social categories, such as “tribe”, in the region’s scholarship. Ray recounts developments internal to Kenya, but also social outcomes impacted by transoceanic commerce and the effects of disproportionate power in the postcolonial setting of an independent state.

In scholarship about Africa, it is now common to recognise that cultural communities were not absolutes; they varied somewhat from location to location, shifted through time, and existed with permeable boundaries. Practices influence group relations. Difference is meaningfully constituted but did not neatly predetermine monolithic ethnic identities. Although these generalisations are well understood, authors rarely detail such cases in ways that crosscut deep precolonial and postcolonial contexts. Ray’s work is a positive treatment in that it sheds the typical straitjackets of discipline, geography, and chronology to address social mosaics and change. His nuanced analysis – which also ranges beyond the “coast” and “hinterland” as exclusive geographies and beyond Africa and the Indian Ocean as separate domains of influence – highlights intersections: frontiers and cross-cultural interfaces that complicate the “local” and “global” via the region. In this volume, interdisciplinary evidence, from linguistics, material culture, oral traditions and histories, documents, and other sources, provides the substance that exposes relational dynamics within and among communities in Kenya. As the author demonstrates well, practices and expressions linked to language, kinship, and religion have ideological and ontological implications for concepts such as ethnicity and for interpretations of society.

Divided into three sections and eight substantive chapters, Ray’s text shows that societies tend to categorise members using cultural characteristics and charters as they integrate historically distinct groups into a single political economy. The Comaroffs, Igor Kopytoff, and, in southeastern Kenya, Chapurukha Kusimba, among others, have engaged the topic of social and commercial networks with sophistication. In these cases, ethnicity is a “set of relations” and a “mode of consciousness”, a fact that pushes back against earlier, often colonial, representations that immutable African societies occupied specific areas. Precolonial African people, of course, had long engaged other people on the continent and beyond it through collaboration and competition. Ray emphasises the “littoral” as a domain of both the Swahili and Mijikenda peoples. The volume outlines changes to lineages and religious sects, among other social identities. Thus, kinship, Islam, and urban invention are treated as integral to shifts in identity and in place-making practice. This approach and the overall narrative address the ways speakers of Sabaki languages reconceived identities under changed regional circumstances and politics through time.

By examining multiple groups in the same speech community – the Swahili and Mijikenda are both members of the Sabaki language family in the littoral – Ray subverts the past practice of anthropologists and historians who reiterated single ethnicities through their research and writing. The author examines the ancestry of ethnicity from deep time up to the contemporary moment to challenge the assumption that ethnicity is a colonial derivation. Ray notes, “…even at their greatest strain, relationships among Mijikenda and Swahili communities tended to be more amicable than those with Kamba or Oromo communities, whom they excluded as perpetual immigrants to the coast” (p. 242). The speakers of Sabaki languages, he stresses, “identify more as members of clan confederations that were founded as long ago as the sixteenth century (e.g., Rabai or Jomvu) than as members of the Mijikenda or Swahili ethnic group. …they [also] employ religious practice as a key criterion for determining ethnic belonging” (p. 242). Ray employs a “cis-oceanic approach” (à la David Armitage in the Atlantic world), to study the movement and consequences of the intersection of people, products, and ideas in a specific coastal region. In such approaches, the ocean is treated as the link among parts but not the subject of analysis.

Ray’s volume and its contributions are a welcome addition to the scholarship of eastern Africa. His writing is clear and engaging. However, there are concerning absences in citation. A lapse, Ray does not cite Chapurukha Kusimba’s decades-long interdisciplinary scholarship on social mosaics and coast-hinterland entanglement in southeastern Kenya. In addition, after making robust arguments that scholars should work across spatial and social boundaries, the author closely follows nation-state borders to procure cases and sources. Research in Tanzania previously examined in detail topics closely aligned to Ray’s text, including in areas of northeastern parts of the country which also are home to Swahili and Mijikenda communities. The works of Rhonda Gonzales and Geoffrey Owens are demonstrative of research in Tanzania that partially parallels Ray’s narrative. They detail changes to societies’ expressions and practices across time in a holistic regional manner (among communities) that consciously entangles the coast and hinterland. It might then be asked why nation-state boundaries are maintained as a frame of research practice by Ray when other boundaries are treated as permeable or unjustly limiting to debates about ethnicity and community in eastern Africa at large, especially for widespread groups self-identified as “littoral” along a lengthy coastline.

This volume makes an important contribution to history and social science in southeastern Kenya while challenging problematic dichotomies and mummified identities on the continent. Ray’s text will interest anthropologists, historians, political scientists, and Africanists in general, as well as those who want to learn more about similar dynamics and related communities in Tanzania.
Jonathan R. Walz

Jonathan R. Walz, PhD, is Associate Professor and Graduate Program Chair at the SIT-Graduate Institute in Vermont, USA. His scholarly interests include the history and anthropology of eastern Africa and the Indian Ocean. He is currently stationed in Zanzibar, where he leads graduate and undergraduate programmes on human livelihoods, coastal ecology, and climate change.

HISTORIC MOSQUES IN SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA: FROM TIMBUKTU TO ZANZIBAR (Handbook of Oriental Studies. Section 1 The Near and Middle East, Vol. 163). Stéphane Pradines. Brill, Leiden and Boston, 2022. xviii + 350, with 213 colour illustrations. ISBN: 978-90-04-44554-3 (hardback) EUR 149.00; ISBN: 978-90-04-47261-7 EUR 149.00.

Historic Mosques


This compendious and well-illustrated volume, written by Stéphane Pradines, Professor of Islamic Art and Architecture at the Aga Khan University in London, is advertised as “the first comprehensive synthesis on mosques in sub-Saharan Africa, bringing together sites from more than twenty states from sub-Saharan Africa; and more than 285 monuments, from the IXth to the XIXth centuries.” In his relatively brief introduction, Pradines tells us that in addition to its broad scope, the “originality of this book resides in the presentation of African monuments in their historical, political and economic context”. This is facilitated by its division into three main geographical areas, each characterised by different religious and architectural traditions. Chapter 1, “The Mosques of the Niger Valleys”, is more than 100 pages long and focuses on the mud brick mosques of West Africa, the “Sudanese” mosques as they were once called. The second chapter has the longest title (“The Mosques from the Horn of Africa to the Valleys of the Nile”) but at 30 pages is by far the shortest of the three, reflecting the lack of research in this strife-torn region.

Chapter 3, “The Mosques of the Indian Ocean Coast”, is longer than the other two chapters combined, and will no doubt be of most interest to the readers of Tanzanian Affairs.
This last chapter is in turn divided into twelve sections, the headings of which will give some idea of its contents:
3.1 The Swahilis [sic], a Cultural Model of Multiple Origins
3.2 Historiography of Research on the Swahili Mosques
3.3 The History of the East Coast of Africa
3.4 Trade and Islam in the Indian Ocean
3.5 Technology and Construction of the Swahili Mosques
3.6 Morphology of the Swahili Mosques
3.7 The Decorative Programme of the Swahili Mosques
3.8 Regional Groups and the Chronology of the Swahili Mosques
3.9 The Swahili Mosques of the Thirteenth Century
3.10 The Swahili Mosques of the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Centuries
3.11 Portuguese Domination and the Style of Lamu, Sixteenth to Seventeenth Centuries
3.12 The Swahili Mosques of the Nineteenth Century

The full list including subheadings can be downloaded from the publication webpage (https://brill.com/display/title/59360). This provides much more detail than can be included in a short review and is well worth perusing. Along with a good index, it is very helpful to have such a breakdown in a book that is likely to be most used as a work of reference. This is certainly one of the ways in which I will use it; I’ve also enjoyed reading about architectural and other aspects of the Swahili mosques and their history from the regional and wider perspectives that Pradines provides. There are still many lacunae in that history, and surveys of this kind are useful for drawing attention to them, whether intentionally or not. In addition to the obvious gaps in the archaeological record, it is frustrating to see so little attention being paid to linguistic evidence, though I was no more surprised by this than by the author’s intemperate criticism of “Africanist researchers” and their alleged efforts to “obliterate exogenous influences” (p. 157) in their reconstructions of coastal history.

Pradines concludes the text with an epilogue that is even shorter than his introduction. It is followed by a couple of annexes and other supporting matter, including glossaries. Given the high cost of this volume, it’s a pity that more effort was not put into proof-reading and smoothing out the translation from the author’s original French. That said, it is a very welcome addition to the literature on the heritage of Islam and Islamic architecture in Africa that will hopefully contribute positively to both understanding and conservation. And with any luck, it will also encourage other researchers to fill in some of those gaps and move beyond those contested historiographies.
Martin Walsh
Martin Walsh is the Book Reviews Editor of Tanzanian Affairs.

Also noticed:
MORE THAN A RESOURCE – THE SOCIAL SIGNIFICANCE OF LOCAL SEED SYSTEMS AND SEED EXCHANGE IN THE GLOBAL SOUTH: THE EXAMPLE OF TANZANIA. Jonas Metzger. Springer VS, Wiesbaden, 2023. xv + 185 pp. ISBN: 978-3-658-40010-1 (paperback) EUR 74.99; ISBN: 978-3-658-40011-8 (eBook) EUR 64.19.
Here is the publisher’s blurb: “Seeds are at the heart of a transformation process that affects more than two billion people worldwide. This study on smallholder farmers in Tanzania examines how local seed systems are anchored in the socio­cultural structures of smallholder life worlds. Using the example of seeds, the close interweaving of agricultural and social practice is traced and it is worked out how individual processes of modernisation brought in from outside have far-reaching consequences for smallholder coexistence. The study provides a concrete, detailed and differentiated account of everyday farming life and of how smallholder households deal with seeds. A particular focus is on seed exchange relationships and how these provide both social security and social cohesion in the study region. The study is based on extensive field research and intensive interviews with farmers, who also have their own say in the work.”

And, for the sake of transparency, here is the publisher’s declaration (confession?) on the copyright page: “This book is a translation of the original German edition “Mehr als eine Ressource – die soziale Bedeutung lokaler Saatgutsysteme und des Saatgutaustausches im Globalen Süden” by Metzger, Jonas, published by Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden GmbH in 2022. The translation was done with the help of artificial intelligence (machine translation by the service DeepL.com). A subsequent human revision was done primarily in terms of content, so that the book will read stylistically differently from a conventional translation. Springer Nature works continuously to further the development of tools for the production of books and on the related technologies to support the authors.” (!) They must have judged that this will not put off potential readers of such a seminal study.

A DESCRIPTION OF PIMBWE (BANTU, TANZANIA): PHONOLOGY, GRAMMAR, AND DISCOURSE. Jonathan Weiss. SIL e-Books 084, SIL International, 2023. vii + 97 pp. ISSN: 1934-2470 (eBook). Free to download from https://www.sil.org/resources/publications/entry/97737.

The Pimbwe are a relatively little known ethnic and linguistic group who live to the northwest of Lake Rukwa in what is now Katavi Region. Their Bantu language is one of many in southwestern Tanzania that is being documented by researchers working with SIL International, the evangelical organisation formerly known as the Summer Institute of Linguistics. Jonathan Weiss’s recently published description of Pimbwe is based on a MA dissertation completed in 2020 at Trinity Western University (British Colombia, Canada) that is also free to read online. As his abstract makes clear, this is a technical work: “The present study is the first formal description of Pimbwe […]. After situating the Pimbwe language within the wider linguistic context, I describe Pimbwe phonology, tone, and grammar, with particular emphasis on the structure of the verb. Over 150 interlinear language examples are given. Finally, natural language use in extended discourse is described based on two running commentaries of the Pear Story film. The full text of the two Pear Stories is given in two appendices” (p. iii). (This refers to a “six-minute film made at the University of California at Berkeley in 1975 and shown to speakers of a number of languages, who were asked to tell what happened in it” (p. 5)). It’s good to see descriptive studies like this in print. As well as tracking down some of the references that Weiss gives, readers wanting to know more about the past and present of the Pimbwe might like to look up the work of the evolutionary anthropologist Monique Borgerhoff Mulder and her colleagues, including the interesting volume on The History and Traditions of the Pimbwe that was published by Mkuki na Nyota in 2014.
Martin Walsh

OBITUARIES

by Ben Taylor

Yusuf Manji pictured in 2015

Prominent businessman and former Yanga Africans Football Club sponsor, Yusuf Manji, has died at the age of 48. He passed away in June in Florida, USA, where he had been receiving treatment. The news of his death was confirmed by his son, Mehbub Manji.

Manji built a reputation for entrepreneurial success and business leadership. He is particularly noted for his role as the founder and chairman of Quality Group Limited, a USD $700m conglomerate with interests in manufacturing (including plastics and steel products), beverages, and pharmaceuticals. Under his stewardship, Quality Group grew to become one of Tanzania’s leading industrial groups, and in 2017 Manji was listed by Forbes magazine as being one of Tanzania’s richest men.

The football community had particular reason to mourn Manji’s passing. The president of Young Africans, Hersi Said, expressed deep sorrow over Manji’s death, describing it as a profound loss.

“He was a visionary leader who dedicated himself to laying a strong foundation for our team. His commitment to sports development in our country was unparalleled,” Hersi said in a statement.

Born into one of the richest families in Tanzania, with his father being a respected businessman, Manji received a high-quality education. He studied at the American College of Switzerland, Morehouse College in Atlanta, and Hofstra University in New York. He took over his father’s Dar-based motor works company in 1995 at the age of just 20. He diversified the company and turned it into a sprawling billion-dollar conglomerate. Over time, he became active in philanthropy and became close to various politicians, including both President Mkapa and President Kikwete.

The business magnate later drew unwanted attention from the government of President John Magufuli, which accused Manji of tax evasion and improper business practices, including a controversial tender to supply military uniforms. The government launched audits and investigations into the financial operations of several companies, and several of Manji’s companies were accused of wrongdoing following the audits. The Tanzania Revenue Authority (TRA) shut down one of his company’s farming outfits and demanded over TSh 12 billion in unpaid taxes.

Several economic and national security charges were brought against Manji, leading to his arrest. He had been a councillor in Temeke (Dar es Salaam) at the time, but ended up losing his seat after failing to attend six consecutive plenary council meetings while in detention. He was later released after the Director of Public Prosecutions dropped the charges against him.

The Quality Group empire suffered the brunt of his legal battles, undergoing restructuring and divestment as Manji struggled to put his life back together.

Manji had previously been considered untouchable, according to political analyst Buberwa Kaiza. “He wielded considerable influence as a prominent businessman with close ties to the state, especially during the administrations of Benjamin Mkapa and Jakaya Kikwete respectively.”