Tundu Lissu (L), new chairperson of Chama Cha Demokrasia na Maendeleo (CHADEMA), Tanzania's main opposition party, and defeated incumbent chairperson Freeman Mbowe (R) are seen during a national congress in Dar es Salaam,
Dar es Salaam. The Tanzania Meteorological Authority (TMA) has issued a warning for potential flooding and landslides as spring rains season (Masika) is expected between March and May 2025. Stakeholders have been urged to take precautionary measures to mitigate possible impacts.
However, while Tanzania has made significant progress in scaling up access to clean electricity, challenges remain. Among the key issues are financing. Ensuring continued financing for large-scale electrification projects, particularly in rural areas, is a major concern.
DAR ES SALAAM: Across Tanzania, a sweeping reform effort is underway, fostering a pro-business environment and targeting the country’s public sector and its state-owned enterprises (SOEs).
Tanzania has been ruled by the same party since independence. It was founded in 1992, shortly after Tanzania adopted a multiparty system of democracy. Party chairman Freeman Mbowe has been rallying his members to forge a united front.
After steering Tanzania’s leading opposition party, Chadema, through two tumultuous decades of political battles, transformative campaigns, and unyielding advocacy for democracy, Freeman Mbowe’s tenure as chairman has officially come to an end,
Dar es Salaam. Tanzania has been ranked as one of the eight safest countries in Africa, making it a desirable tourist destination, according to a recent review by Altezza Travel.Altezza Travel, a Tanzanian destination management company with over 10 years of impeccable service and a strong reputation,
Tanzania's main opposition party has chosen a new leader ahead of general elections due in October at a time when it faces increasing political repression.
Chinese doctors led by Professor Pan Xiangbin (2nd R) of China's Fuwai Hospital, together with their Tanzanian colleagues, perform a cardiovascular surgery on a child at Jakaya Kikwete Cardiac Institute in Dar es Salaam,
Tanzania's government said no-one in the country had tested positive for the Marburg virus after the World Health Organization (WHO) said at least eight people in the northwest were believed to have died from it.
DAR ES SALAAM — Tears of joy flowed as Husna Shabaan Kingwande learned that her 3-year-old son Ikram's heart surgery had been a success. The procedure at the Chinese-built Jakaya Kikwete Cardiac Institute in Dar es Salaam marked a significant step in introducing advanced Chinese medical technology to Tanzania.
Officials previously questioned whether the deadly disease was indeed present in the African country, which had seen 8 suspected Marburg deaths.