Bus owners call off planned strike

Tanzania Bus Owners Association (TABOA) has called off today’s strike following an invitation by the Surface and Marine Transport Regulatory Authority (Sumatra) for discussions.

According to Taboa, services will continue to schedule as they
hold discussions with Sumatra  seeking an amicable agreement over their various issues including construction  of the new bus Terminal at Mbezi Luis  in Dar es salaam and  reduction of fines.

“We decide to suspend our planned  strike  which was supposed to start today after Sumatra sent us a  letter  yesterday  requesting to  hold a meeting ,” said the Taboa Treasurer Issa Nkya.

“The meeting will involve people from Dar city council, Sumatra, traffic police and transport stakeholders and Taboa will be represented by 12 members,” he added.

Nkya insisted that if Sumatra will not respond to their demands they will continue with the planned strike.

Interviewed, a passengers at the Ubungo Bus Terminal (UBT )Samuel Shija called upon Taboa not to strike citing the fact that should bus services be stopped, many people will be affected.

 “I heard yesterday on the radio that upcountry country bus owners plan to boycott services today to press the government to respond their long time demands,” he explained.

“I was shocked because I plan to travel to Iringa on Friday but I hope both side will reach to  conclusion” he said.

Meanwhile, Sumatra Communication and Public Relations Manager David Mziray confirmed that the Authority has written a letter to the bus  owners association asking  them to  call off the strike.

“We have good relationship with Taboa I don’t know why they would jump to that conclusion without involving us,” he said.

He confirmed that the meeting will involve various stakeholders and is expected to start in the afternoon.

On Monday this week ,Taboa announced the planned strike aimed at pressuring the government through Sumatra to reduce fines and stop ongoing construction at UBT which is said to inconvenience passengers affecting operations of the buses.
 

Govt plans to form 10 person land conflict resolution team

The government is planning to form a ten person team to manage arbitration and reconciliation of land conflicts between farmers and pastoralists in Kiteto District, Manyara Region.

Making the announcement over the weekend at the Roho Mtakatifu cathedral, an Anglican Church of the Central Tanganyika Diocese in Dodoma Region, Prime Minister Mizengo Pinda admitted that land conflict in the region is a big challenge.

Pinda who was the guest of honour at the consecrating ceremony for Dr Dickson Chilongani as the sixth Bishop of the Central Tanganyika Diocese said land conflict issues in Kiteto must be resolved before the conflict escalates any further.

“The situation in Kiteto requires immediate action to find an amicable solution…this is not only as task for the government but the community in general, security organs and even the churches,” the Premier said.
Pinda said the formed arbitration team is expected to visit each and every village in the region and success achieved in Kiteto will serve as a model for other regions.
“We want Kiteto to be the pilot project to resolving land conflicts in the country,” the PM said citing the risk of conflict escalating to neighbouring five regions including Tanga (Kilindi), Morogoro (Gairo), Dodoma (Kongwa) and Manyara (Simanjiro).

Apart from formation of the team, Pinda said the government has also surveyed and divided at least 133,000 hectares that the two groups are disputing over. He explained that the land has been divided into several ranches for pastoralists and farm lands for the farmers.

The Premier also said the number of police stations and posts in the region will be increased to beef up security.

Earlier,  Arch Bishop Chimeledya had inquired as to the government’s response to the escalating conflict and how they plan to safeguard the lives of people in the affected areas. The Bishop implore the government to take immediate and decisive action to protect the people there. The Prime Minister did not however detail the composition of the ten man resolution group nor their mandate or when it would commence operations.

SOURCE: THE GUARDIAN

Govt pleads for public support in maintaining elderly centres

The government has called on all districts and regional authorities and stakeholders to make provision for taking care of the elderly in their respective areas.

Deputy minister for Health and Social Welfare, Dr Stephen Kebwe made the call on Monday in parliament, saying taking care of the elderly especially those living in centres for the elderly is a cross cutting issue hence all stakeholders should participate.

Dr Kebwe was responding to a question raised by Azza Hillal Hamad (Special Seats, CCM) who had wanted to know government’s efforts towards addressing challenges facing Kolandoto centre for the elderly in Shinyanga Region.

The deputy minister said the Kolandoto Centre which accommodates 41 senior citizens is among 17 others that are under the government through the ministry of Health and Social Welfare.

“The government acknowledges the challenges facing the elderly who live in such centres. Among the challenges are sicknesses and not having relatives or children to look after them. However, the government has continued to provide services accordingly,” he said.

He noted that the government has been disbursing funds every year to finance the services provided by the 17 elderly centres including the Kolandoto centre.

He explained that in 2013/14, the government set aside 38,250,000/- for Kolandoto centre and also provided various supplies including 39 mattresses, 110 bed sheets, 100 blankets and two water tanks.

“The government also provided other basic needs such as food, clothing, medicines and counseling… however, there is still a need to renovate infrastructures at the centres,” he explained.

Dr Kebwe added that this financial year, 2014/15 the government has set aside 29,250,000/- purposely for the purchase of food and other operations at the Kolandoto centre for the elderly.

“The government will continue to provide for the elderly at the centre and renovate dilapidated infrastructures as per the availability of funds,” he added.
SOURCE: THE GUARDIAN

Tanzania Trade Show to begin this week in Dar

Chairman of the Tanzania Chamber of Commerce Industry and Agriculture (TCCIA) Francis Lukwaro will this Friday officially open the 10th Tanzania Trade Show at the Mlimani Conference Centre in Dar es Salaam.

The public is encouraged to visit the exhibition and reminded
that there are no entrance fees.

The three day exhibition has attracted exhibitors from over 12 countries including the United Arab Emirates, India, Netherlands, Poland, China and Italy.

Also represented are scores of Tanzanian exhibitors as well as those from neighbouring Kenya all offering a huge variety of products ranging in categories covering building, construction, packaging, industrial, medical, pharmaceutical, food, hotel, automotive and industrial sectors among others.

The event is organised by the Dubai based Grow Exhibitions, which has a strong presence in East Africa organising at least 6 events annually in Tanzania and Kenya.

“One of the main attractions this year is the participation of Federation of Indian Exporters along with its members and also the Polish Trade Authority,” says Moiz Jalputliwala of Grow Exhibitions.

“Visitors will have a wide range of products to pick from with guaranteed affordable prices…business persons will be able to network and grow their ventures,” he said.
 

'Public views left out in proposed Constitution'

Many views aired by the public have been left out in the proposed Constitution, former Constitutional Review Commission Chairman, Retired Judge Joseph Warioba said yesterday.


He was speaking at the repeated symposium on the proposed new Constitution which was disrupted earlier this month.

Addressing the attendants, former Constitutional Review Commission Chairman, Retired Judge Joseph Warioba said the people’s views must be respected and according to him in the proposed Constitution, ‘many views aired by the public have been left out.

Warioba underscored that a good Constitution is the foundation on which the country can strengthen peace and harmony.

 “The Constitution should also unite the people in all national matters not to cause disunite,” he stressed.

 “We should continue educating the public on the proposed Constitution,” he urged.

Warioba finally advised leaders to ‘rethink how to better the country and not put personal and political interests ahead of national agendas that benefit the citizens.’

Early this month unidentified assailants disrupted the first symposium on the proposed new Constitution and physically attacked Warioba as he made his presentation.

Also assaulted at the debate was a British Broadcasting Corporation Correspondent, Arnold kayanda, who sustained a severe head injury from the hurled objects.

Disruption began as the renowned and respected retired judge was addressing the attendants only to have a group of youth start shouting derogatory remarks and hurling among other things, chairs.

Police arrived on scene and arrested at least one person believed to be involved in the attack, they also shot teargas canisters to disperse the crowds.

Several media outlets covering the event including the Independent Television (ITV) were forced to disrupt the live broadcast but resumed shortly afterwards.

This time, the symposium, was held under tight security with police officers on alert and patrolling the area. Attendants were also required to go through security scanners, metal detectors and avail identity cards.

There were no reported incidences at the event.

Court bars IPTL saga debate in Parliament

The National Assembly may likely no longer debate the protracted saga over the controversial Tegeta escrow account scandal reports this week, after all.

The lawmaking body had planned to deliberate on the much-talked-about issue for three days running from today, but two of the parties to the saga yes
terday sought – and were granted – a High Court injunction effectively putting the debate on hold.

The parties in question are VIP Engineering and Pan African Energy.

The injunction, issued by the High Court of Tanzania (Dar es Salaam Zone), stands at least until the court hears the main case on the matter on December 8.

The High Court granted the injunction yesterday after being satisfied with arguments in the application by Independent Power Tanzania Limited (IPTL) and its subsidiary, Pan African Power, which was filed under the certificate of urgency No.  51/2014.

The application was filed by IPTL counsel Joseph Makandege, Gabriel Mnyele and Felician Kay and heard by a panel of three judges – Radhia Sheikh, Richard Mziray and Lugano Mwandambo.

They counsel argued that the court should bar the National Assembly from deliberating on the Tegeta Escrow Account report prepared by the Controller and Auditor General’s Office since the House’s only mandate was lawmaking.

They said publicly discussing matters being dealt with in court would amount to interfering with the duties and responsibilities of another arm – in this case, the Judiciary.

The IPTL lawyers admitted in the application that the National Assembly was legally and constitutionally at liberty to discuss such issues but only when the issues are still solely in the lawmaking House.

John Joel, Director of Parliamentary Affairs in the National Assembly, said when contacted for comment yesterday evening that the Speaker’s Office had not received any official communication on the said High Court injunction.

However, he said the National Assembly was an independent arm of the State just like the Judiciary and its activities cannot be interfered with by any court of law.

Singida East legislator Tundu Lissu, a lawyer, said he was “astonished” with the High Court ruling “because it is a decision that interferes with the National Assembly’s autonomy and independence”.

Earlier in the day, National Assembly Speaker Anne Makinda was emphatic that no one could bar the lawmaking body from performing its constitutional duties, assuring parliamentarians that the eagerly awaited debate on the Tegeta Escrow Account saga would begin today and continue for three consecutive days.

Within the past few days reports circulated alleging that the IPTL and Pan African Power (PAP) were seeking an injunction to ban the parliament from deliberating on the Controller Auditor General (CAG) report on the graft charges on the Tegeta Escrow Account.

“No one is going to stop us from executing our parliamentary duties. You don't have to be worried because our parliamentary immunities are very clear,” the Speaker stated.

However, she was quick to express concerns that she was yet to receive an official letter from Parliamentary Public Accounts Committee (PAC) Chairman Zitto Kabwe, to inform her office that the committee had finished its duty.

PAC was assigned to scrutinise the Controller and Auditor General’s (CAG) probe report on the controversy surrounding the Tegeta Escrow account.
Zitto Kabwe late last week announced that his committee had finished scrutinising the report and was ready to table it any time.

The Speaker warned that failure to receive the official letter from PAC would mean that there would be no debate on the saga in the House, adding that the CAG’s report would be distributed to the MPs before it was tabled.

“The CAG’s report will not be tabled word for word but will be used for terms of reference purposes when debating the PAC report. Tabling both reports will complicate things and it's likely that the MPs will not be able to debate the PAC report,” she explained.

Speaker Makinda noted that though the report will be distributed to MPs, it is not to be left on the legislators’ pigeonholes, explaining that the move is meant to keep unauthorized personnel from accessing it.

However the Speaker confirmed reports that there were attempts to file an injunction to prevent the report from being debated by MPs.

Earlier, Bariadi MP John Cheyo (UDP) expressed concern over the tendency of rushing to judiciary organ seeking injunction to prevent the parliament from debating matters that concern them.

“My concern is… we have a legislative whose duties can be thwarted at anytime by other organs, this is not good,” said Cheyo.

In addition, Ubungo MP John Mnyika (Chadema) said the miscellaneous civil application No 50/2014 injunction was filed at the High Court on Monday by Pan African Power.

He said the respondents undersigned included the Prime Minister’s Office, CAG, Director General Prevention and Combating of Corruption Bureau (PCCB), Permanent Secretary Ministry of Energy and Minerals and PAC.

“Madam Speaker, please we want to be assured that the debate will stay intact,” said Mnyika.

The Speaker assured that all outstanding cases related to IPTL filed at the High Court have no connection to the saga.

'White gold' industry on its deathbed

  Could Tanzanians be bracing for yet another mega-scandal?
Agriculture, Food Security and Cooperatives Minister Christopher Chiza
 
Unless the government intervenes soon and with appropriate ‘medication’ in hand, there is every indication that Tanzania’s sugar industry is headed for collapse.

A recent survey by this paper shows that few people expect any such stimulus or rescue package any time soon and many doubt whether the future holds any promise for sugarcane farmers, sugar producers and consumers and the national economy in general.

Alarmed by the events they have seen unfolding for years on end, distraught producers of the crop now want the government to urgently consider drawing up and implementing a new regulatory framework that will monitor trends in the industry more closely for effective support and protection.

The producers’ concerns come at a time when imports of industrial and other types of sugar, some in the form of smuggled consignments, keep swelling and denying locally produced sugar reliable market.

Sugar producers in the country warn that the government’s failure to arrest the illegal importation of sugar promises a number of disastrous consequences, including a progressive decline in government revenue, loss of employment and shutdowns of essential social services such as health and education centres supported by the sugar firms under their corporate social responsibility schemes.

It is on record that over US$10 billion has been invested in social services by Tanzania’s sugar industry since privatisation in the late 1990s.
While estate cane area has tripled to 50,000 hectares, out grower cane area has quadrupled to 19,000 hectares and sugarcane harvest has also quadrupled to 4 million tonnes a year.

Annual sugar production has more than tripled to 320,000 tonnes (equivalent to a staggering US$224 million).

The human angle to the story is even more revealing and well worth noting; the country’s sugar industry supports in excess of 75,000 jobs or direct employees (over 2,000 in support services) and 15,000 registered outgrowers whose annual income has more than doubled to 50 billion/- since the late 1990s, the corresponding government revenue standing at 100 billion/-.

Computations by the Tanzania Sugar Producers Association (PSPA) show that over one million people would be directly affected by the collapse of the sugar industry in that it accounts for 13 per cent of all agricultural employment in the country and contributes 5.9 per cent towards the total national employment.
The association says that, alongside shielding the local sugar industry against unfair competition from imports, the framework should meet the needs of legitimate users of industrial sugar and adequately manage the importation of sugar generally.

Sugarcane is also the largest industrial agricultural product in Tanzania, contributing 5.2 per cent of the annual gross value of field crop production.
It is also noteworthy that some 90 per cent of the income generated by the sugar industry trickles right down to low-income households, thus playing a pivotal role in the war on poverty.

It is of particular concern to TSPA that 2012/2013 saw 100,000 tonnes of imported sugar filter into Tanzania unlicensed and therefore at zero duty, while 150,000 tonnes entered the country illegally thus denying the government much needed revenue.  

Agriculture, Food Security and Cooperatives Minister Christopher Chiza and Kilombero Sugar Company Ltd board chairman Ami Mpungwe have elaborated on the substantial damage the collapse of the country’s sugar industry would inflict on stakeholders and the larger public.

“The damage will also include outgrowers, bankers, social security funds and loss of investors’ confidence,” warns Mpungwe.

He explained that the socio-economic impact and the multiplier effect for the sugar industry’s turnaround and growth trajectory are moribund particularly in job creation, growth of outgrowers’ communities, increased tax revenues, creation and formalisation of other sugar-driven business and overall rural transformation.

PSPA’s latest report on the status of the crop’s production and the development of the industry shows that since the Tanzanian market was flooded with the illegal sugar imports, local producers have hopelessly failed to meet their commitments to banks, to suppliers and out-growers, while their capital investments have been suspended owing to cash flow constraints.

“Also, the viability and sustainability of the sugar industry and the industry’s credibility in the eyes of financial institutions have been seriously compromised,” says the report.

“There are no significant benefits to the consumer, the price of sugar is below the average cost of production and the government is losing out on one of its major sources of revenue,” it notes.

In a letter sent to minister Chiza earlier this month, the producers attached five stakeholders’ resolutions for a new sugar import mechanism highlights including recommendation on the drawing up of a new regulatory framework to provide effective protection to the local sugar industry.

The producers argue: “Also the government has a central role and responsibility for establishing and ensuring the existence of a strong, transparent and auditable regulatory framework that effectively protects the local sugar industry while maintaining strict control on importation of sugar without disrupting the operations of legitimate users of industrial sugar.”

They have also recommended that major users of industrial sugar continue to procure their requirements as per current practice ‘which recognises their individual contractual arrangements’ and that the government take specific measures against dumped transit sugar as well as smuggled sugar entering the market through the so-called Zanzibar Route.

In the letter to minister Chiza, PSPA said that it would be of benefit if the producers’ consortium operating on the not-for-profit principle would have the responsibility for importing gap consumption sugar based on actual, verifiable and auditable requirements.

“The controlled volume of gap consumption sugar from the consortium activities would be made available for distribution through existing distributor networks,” it added.

The government, through Finance deputy minister Mwigulu Nchemba, declared in Bukoba earlier this month that it was contemplating a sweeping crackdown aimed at ending the illegal importation of sugar.

Sugar industry stakeholders the government’s intervention would be in line with the demands of vehemently touted national development ambitions, strategies, programmes and initiatives including Kilimo Kwanza and Big Results Now (BRN), especially as they relate to support for the stabilisation and modernisation of agriculture.

At a meeting held in Dar es Salaam last month, sugar industry stakeholders, among them major consumers of industrial sugar, agreed on the need to establish a new sugar importation mechanism to translate the spirit into action.

Delegates to the meeting included representatives of TSPA – whose members are Kilombero Sugar Company Ltd, Mtibwa Sugar Estates Ltd, TPC Ltd and Kagera Sugar Ltd – as well as the President’s Delivery Bureau, Confederation of Tanzania Industries, Tanzania Chamber of Commerce, Industry and Agriculture (TCCIA), Coca-Cola Kwanza, Nyanza Bottlers Co. Ltd, and the CEO Round Table.

Sugar industry watchers would like to see the government engage more with these and other stakeholders, to ensure that failure to act as swiftly and judiciously as circumstances demand, does not condemn this invaluable contributor to the nation’s economy to a cruel and largely unnecessary death.

They draw their optimism partly from the existence of the industry’s technical advisory committee, which brings together the Sugar Board of Tanzania, TSPA, Tanzania Sugarcane Growers Association, CTI, TCCIA, Tanzania Revenue Authority, and the Finance, Industry and Trade, and Agriculture, Food Security and Cooperatives ministries.

These meet twice a year to determine the quantity of sugar importation as well as the duty applicable to such importation.

However, a question that the team ought to answer is why, if it can deliver, is there still so much mess on the ground. Who or what is pulling them down?
Next: What stakeholders say about the real trials and tribulations facing Tanzania’s ailing sugar industry and how best to deal with them.
SOURCE: THE GUARDIAN