Friday, November 11, 2011

Tanzania Prime Minister Destroys UK David Cameron at the Parliament Q & A

Mr Mizengo Pinda v/s David Cameron

It doesn't get more real  than this when the Tanzania Prime Minister responded to the UK David Cameron remarks about queers and lesbians at the parliament Q & A The Prime Minister trashed the idea of UK Prime Minister imposing homosexuality to Aid recipient Nations (Tanzania being included).. The TZ Prime Minister Mr Mizendo Pinda highlighted real facts about "People like David Cameron are Devil advocates and we have been warned about them even in Surat Al-Hijr [15:39] and we're prepared to face them"..  when he said such words got him a chorus of approval from all members of parliament and he went on warning "such dubious thoughts should be kept far away from the United Kingdom government if it intends to keep friends with Tanzania.. because even though this country is currently Aid Recipient it wont hesitate even for a second to erase UK from its friends list"..

  In real life situation Regular Tanzanians sees Homosexuality as a disability and the government has always been treating it as such but it remains to be skeptical as weather it should keep it as such or to reinforce this law like the rest of the African countries which have

The Prime Minister went on trashing David Cameron Remarks as irresponsible and deviant because he is arrogant to suggesting something so disgusting even to animals!... he went  questioning David Cameron Common sense as to "why should he suggest something so wrong even to animals?" this was his personal and government view on the matter. Tanzania has  the largest Animal parks in the world and it went to so much trouble campaigning in UK to attract English tourists to visit Tanzania Parks but all that now seems to change even after the recent Royal visit by Price Williams and his wife most people are still hostile towards UK and its prime ministers something which leaves most of us wondering if History has its role on the matter

Sunday, November 6, 2011

Zambia forces Malawi High Commission out of its building in Tanzania

President Kikwete of Tanzania signing a book of condolences for the late Chiluba at the Zambian mission in Tanzania.


The tension between Zambia and Malawi has escalated with the the Malawian government moving its High Commission from the Zambian premises in Tanzania after Zambia hiked rent. The High Commissions of the two countries have been sharing an office block with Malawi renting to Zambia since the building is owned by the Zambia government.
But a few weeks ago, Zambia raised the rent by more than 200 per cent forcing Malawi to move out.
Malawi’s Principal Secretary in the ministry of foreign Affairs Patrick Kabambe confirmed the development to Malawian media saying with the increase in the rentals they had no choice but to move out of the building.
The building is along Ohio Street in the city centre.
A Zambian diplomat in n Dar-es-Salam said “Malawi will now operate from an office near Rose Garden area in Mikocheni, but its former offices on two floors are still vacant.”
President Michael Sata recalled High Commissioner to Malawi Reuben Musakabantu, with immediate effect and has not sent a replacement.
The tension between the two friendly countries started after Sata won the elections in Zambia and remembered that he was ejected from Malawi in 2007.
He declined to attend a COMESA meeting in Malawi but demanded an apology from the eastern neighbour.
Sata also offered a prohibited TV station in that country rights to beam into Malawi from Zambia.

Tanzania - Britain Relations sour after indecent UK’s Prime Minister remarks


We have been
deeply saddened and appalled by the remarks by the UK’s Prime Minister, David
Cameron, who last week told the Commonwealth leaders that African countries
 which won’t support gays’ rights as well as same sex marriages can’t get aid 
from Britain.
It is appalling because after 50 years of Tanzania’s independence, Cameron, a grandson of the very same British Colonialists who robbed Africa, still believes that he can dictate what we should and shouldn’t do in using aid as a bargaining tool.
First of all, we would like to inform Cameron following
his ill-conceived remarks that Tanzania has its cultural values, which its citizens will always endeavor to promote and nurture.
 It is by these values that we have built a peaceful and united country for all people regardless of their race, gender and faith.
Though we are still poor in terms of economic and social development, we have always remained a united peaceful nation that has its values.
We are not a nation of angels, and haven’t claimed to be a country of saints. However, the
truth is that we are a nation with values and tradition that reflect our reality, identity as well as what we stand for in promoting democracy and human rights.
In this country we do know there are gays, lesbians and the likes. However, at no time have we condemned these groups because they are fellow human beings. But that doesn’t at all justify the ill-conceived advice from UK’s Prime Minister.
Our moral values give us the right to choose what to legalise or what we shouldn’t allow to be legalised. Just because we don’t legalise it doesn’t mean we have condemned those who practise these inhumane acts.
If today we are forced to recognise and legalise gays and same sex marriages, tomorrow we shall be ordered by the same cheap minds to declare prostitution ‘lawful business’ in Tanzania.
If, Cameron with his cheap and ill-timed mindset thinks that whatever happens in our society should be recognised, then one day drug dealers, armed robbers and their likes will also demand the right to be recognised.
We shall not at all as nation legalise gays and same sex marriage because these acts are against our beliefs and immoral by all standards. We are not a nation of animals, but a society of human beings who use brains to reason, instead of emotions.
Tanzanians will not die simply because Cameroon, the ‘Head Prefect’ has suspended aid to our country. We shall always triumph above these cheap immoral thoughts masterminded and marketed by those whose moral authority went bankrupt many years ago.
During the past 50 years of our
independence, we weathered many storms as a nation, and at no time, did our
people die because there wasn’t any aid from UK.
What we have overcome during five decades of our independency is greater than the so called UK’s aid. UK can
go to hell with its aid, but, Tanzanian will always remain there no matter how many times Camerons has fumed.
If a UK Prime Minister can have such a cheap mindset of trying to use aid as a tool of influencing British’s immoral and
evil acts in Africa, then no wonder today, some countries in Europe are on the
blink of collapse economically and culturally.
Let David Cameroon and his billions promote evils at the peril of UK, but, not Tanzania
 or Africa. We don’t need billions of aid, which comes with a string of conditions of
 moral decay in our country.

Friday, October 21, 2011

Western Media use phrases like "Accused" to hide its involvement in the Brutal murder of another African Leader


Libya's rebel army has been accused of executing both Colonel Muammar Gaddafi and his son Mutassim in cold blood as the United Nations suggested their deaths amounted to war crimes.

Libya's rebel army has been accused of executing both Colonel Muammar Gaddafi and his son Mutassim in cold blood as the United Nations suggested their deaths amounted to war crimes.
Both Gaddafi and his son were filmed or photographed alive and relatively uninjured after their capture on Thursday, before both died of multiple gunshot wounds Photo: AP
Human rights groups and Gaddafi's wife Safia called for an independent investigation into the deaths, which robbed victims' families of the chance to see Gaddafi put on trial for his murderous acts.
Both Gaddafi and his son were filmed or photographed alive and relatively uninjured after their capture on Thursday, before both died of multiple gunshot wounds.
On Friday, at the refrigeration units in Misrata where the two bodies are being kept before their burial, young men queued for the chance to see the corpses and take pictures of them on their mobile phones.
Libya's interim president, Mustafa Abdul Jalil, is expected to declare the country officially liberated today, though the fate of Saif al-Islam, Gaddafi's chosen heir and the only man who could continue the fight, remains unclear.
Within Libya, Gaddafi's death has been a cause for celebration, but its new leaders have been warned that summary executions will not be tolerated by the international community.
Rupert Colville, spokesman for the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, said: "It is unclear how (Col Gaddafi) died. There is a need for an investigation."
Describing footage of Gaddafi's last moments as "very disturbing", he said that if the former dictator had been executed: "That would raise issues that a crime had been committed and we would have to look at dealing with that. It is very clear under international law that summary executions are illegal.
"You can't just chuck the law out of the window. Killing someone outside a judicial procedure, even in countries where there is the death penalty, is outside the rule of law."
It raised the possibility that rebel soldiers could be pursued for war crimes.
Amnesty International, meanwhile, called for "a full, independent and impartial inquiry" into the circumstances of Gaddafi's death.
Gaddafi's wife, Safia, also called on the UN to investigate the death of her husband and her son, according to a Syrian TV station.
David Cameron, however, said Libya, not the UN, should investigate the deaths. His spokesman said: "The account of precisely what happened is a matter for the NTC."
Several videos of Gaddafi after his capture near Sirte show him walking and talking to his enemies. His body was later photographed with a clean bullet hole in the left temple and bullet wounds in his abdomen and chest.
His son Mutassim, meanwhile, was photographed smoking a last cigarette and holding a bottle of water, almost uninjured, before being shot in the neck.
Mahmoud Jibril, the interim Libyan prime minister, admitted Col Gaddafi was relatively unscathed when he was captured.
He said: "When they transferred him to the pick-up truck he had no injuries. When the vehicle started moving he was caught in the crossfire and he was injured with a shot to the head."

Monday, October 17, 2011

TZ Currency Bounce Back


CURRENCY CONVERTER WIDGET

view TZS/USD chart
Mid-market rates: 2011-10-17 10:05 UTC
1.00 USD=1,698.04 TZS
US DollarTanzanian Shilling
1 USD = 1,698.04 TZS1 TZS = 0.000588914 USD
TZ Shillings shows a little sign of improvement after hitting a rock button y'day, This a great news for Tanzania online Enterprise after few days financial woes and Power crisis showing a little sign of improvement maybe Tanzania business will get back on its track

Saturday, October 15, 2011

TZ Currency Hits All times Low Against USD

CURRENCY CONVERTER WIDGET
view TZS/USD chart
Mid-market rates: 2011-10-15 14:19 UTC
1.00 USD=1,700.00 TZS
US DollarTanzanian Shilling
1 USD = 1,700.00 TZS1 TZS = 0.000588235 USD
The effects of frequent power blackout are begin to show as the Country currency value keeps dropping as reported by The National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) said the year-on-year inflation rate rose to 14.1 percent in August from 13.0 percent in July, mirroring rising inflation across east Africa This is Perfect News for Foreign investors, Tourists & Exchange students!.. imagine your 100 USD worth 170,000/= TZS surely life would be much better for you
 

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