Nimependa transparent fabric ya paa lake pia roof orifice space. Ule wa mwanzo roof looked heavy yaani with many steel structures meaning tensile strength yake itahitaji many pillars to support the structure!?
Yaani Hawa watu Wana maisha magumu aise!mfano hapa Tabora,Bei ya vyakula iko Hivi,
Mchele 1kg=Ksh28
Unga1kg=Ksh32
Nimewawekea kwa pesa yao ili wasipate shida ya ku convert. Ndio maana huwa nawashangaa wanaposema eti watumishi wa TZ wanalipwa mishahara midogo wakati mishahara ya watumishi wa kenya inaishia kwenye chakula.
Mkuu ni kweli usemacho ila kiukweli hiyo design ni nzr na inafaa tungeitumia, pia inaweza ikabadilishwa kdg ili iwe sports stadium na pia ikaongezewa capacity iweze ku accommodate watu wengi km malengo yetu ya abt 90k, inabidi tuwe na uwanja tofauti na huu wa mkapa, hyo design ni nzr na ya kisasa zaidi na ndiyo stadia nyng za developed countries ziko hvyo mkuu na usisahau kwamba Tz ya ss inataka vitu quality co ili mradi tu mkuu.
The project aims to generate energy with a capacity of 2115 megawatts, to be transmitted through 400 kV lines
CAIRO: President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi has expressed his support for the construction of a dam at the Julius Nyerere Hydropower Station in Tanzania by two Egyptian companies.
Arab Contractors and Elsewedy Electric were awarded the contract for the construction of the dam on the Rufiji River by the Tanzanian government in December 2018, at a cost of $2.9 billion.
Prime Minister Mostafa Madbouly has held a meeting to follow upon the project. He said President El-Sisi wanted the dam in Tanzania “to express the ability of the Egyptian contracting sector to complete major projects to the highest quality.”
Minister of Housing Assem Al-Jazzar confirmed that the project aims to generate energy with a capacity of 2115 megawatts, to be transmitted through 400 kV lines.
Head of the Central Agency for Reconstruction Maj. Gen. Mahmoud Nassar said the Julius Nyerere dam protects the surrounding environment from the dangers of flooding and will store about 34 billion cubic meters of water in a new lake that ensures the constant availability of water throughout the year for agriculture and fishing and the preservation of surrounding wildlife.
He said that the project consists of the main concrete dam body and four supplementary dams to form the water reservoir, two temporary dams in front and behind the main dam, and a hydroelectric power station. He explained that a housing complex and a temporary and permanent road network will be established to serve the project, which will also involve a spillway, a 703-meter tunnel, a permanent concrete bridge and two bridges over the Rufiji River.
Gen. Nassar said that despite the challenges faced by those working on the project, mainly caused by four floods between December 2019 and March 2020, they had still managed to complete a large part of the project. The number of employees working on it stood at 5,233 workers, made up of 526 Egyptian workers, and 3,974 Tanzanian workers, as well as 733 foreign workers from other countries.
DENIED CITIZENSHIP Tanzanian women with Kenyan spouses protest over IDs More than 1,300 married to Kenyan men in Taita Taveta do not have IDs
In Summary
• Even after living in Kenya for decades and raising children who are citizens by birth, the women themselves are still denied IDs.
• This results in them being unable to get inheritance, loans and health services. CITIZENSHIP: Tanzanian women married to Kenyan spouses address journalists in Voi. They want the government to issue them with Kenyan IDs
Image: SOLOMON MUINGI
Tanzanian women married to Kenyans in Taita Taveta county have appealed to the government to issue them with Kenyan identification cards.
The more than 300 women out of about 1,300 county-wide said they are denied inheritance, loans and health services due to lack of national IDs.
They were speaking in Taveta town during a meeting with Taita Taveta Human Rights Watch lobby group.
The women, legally married to Kenyan men, said they are subjected to abject poverty due to lack of the important document.
Some of them have been living in the country for more than 30 years, and their children and grandchildren are Kenyan citizens by birth.
Rafa Salim, 46, a Tanzanian national who has been married to a Kenyan spouse for 21 years, said lack of IDs has marginalised them.
She said they have been unable to either get loans from financial institutions or inherit properties from their husbands.
“You have to bend very low to get loans in empowerment groups using your husband's ID card. Other groups and microfinance institutions do not accept a third-party identification card,” Rafa said.
She urged Interior CS Fred Matiang’i to order the issuing of Kenyan IDs to them, adding that they were also left out in the recent registration of Huduma Number.
The swelling number of foreigners has been attributed to the county’s proximity to neighbouring Tanzania and cross-border trade in the porous Taveta border.
The women, some of whom crossed through undesignated routes into Kenya to follow their hearts across the border, said they have been denied some crucial services, where IDs were required for access.
Shamila Yahya, who has lived in the country for 17 years, said most of the women do not have passports and Tanzanian IDs.
She said most women lack basic healthcare as they are unable to register to the National Hospital Insurance Fund and Linda Mama medical scheme.
Lillian Msheri, another woman who has faced the same problem, asked the East African Community integration to harmonise the process of acquiring IDs for citizens of the region.
She said if not addressed, the bureaucracy would make them immigrants in pursuit of love.
“We are here because of love, the only documents we have is marriage certificates and affidavits. Let the government formulate a way of assisting us,” she said.
Zedekiah Dika, a legal officer at Kituo Cha Sheria, said the state has violated the women’s rights by denying them IDs.
“The constitution is very clear on dual citizenship for foreign spouses. We shall compel the government to look into the matter,” Dika, also the Coast region civil society chairman, said.
He said the civil society will petition the government for violation of human rights.
VIOLATION: Kituo Cha Sheria legal officer Zedekiah Dika during a meeting with Tanzania women married to Kenyan men in Taveta town. He said they will sue the state for violation of human rights
Image: SOLOMON MUINGI
DENIED CITIZENSHIP Tanzanian women with Kenyan spouses protest over IDs More than 1,300 married to Kenyan men in Taita Taveta do not have IDs
In Summary
• Even after living in Kenya for decades and raising children who are citizens by birth, the women themselves are still denied IDs.
• This results in them being unable to get inheritance, loans and health services. CITIZENSHIP: Tanzanian women married to Kenyan spouses address journalists in Voi. They want the government to issue them with Kenyan IDs
Image: SOLOMON MUINGI
Tanzanian women married to Kenyans in Taita Taveta county have appealed to the government to issue them with Kenyan identification cards.
The more than 300 women out of about 1,300 county-wide said they are denied inheritance, loans and health services due to lack of national IDs.
They were speaking in Taveta town during a meeting with Taita Taveta Human Rights Watch lobby group.
The women, legally married to Kenyan men, said they are subjected to abject poverty due to lack of the important document.
Some of them have been living in the country for more than 30 years, and their children and grandchildren are Kenyan citizens by birth.
Rafa Salim, 46, a Tanzanian national who has been married to a Kenyan spouse for 21 years, said lack of IDs has marginalised them.
She said they have been unable to either get loans from financial institutions or inherit properties from their husbands.
“You have to bend very low to get loans in empowerment groups using your husband's ID card. Other groups and microfinance institutions do not accept a third-party identification card,” Rafa said.
She urged Interior CS Fred Matiang’i to order the issuing of Kenyan IDs to them, adding that they were also left out in the recent registration of Huduma Number.
The swelling number of foreigners has been attributed to the county’s proximity to neighbouring Tanzania and cross-border trade in the porous Taveta border.
The women, some of whom crossed through undesignated routes into Kenya to follow their hearts across the border, said they have been denied some crucial services, where IDs were required for access.
Shamila Yahya, who has lived in the country for 17 years, said most of the women do not have passports and Tanzanian IDs.
She said most women lack basic healthcare as they are unable to register to the National Hospital Insurance Fund and Linda Mama medical scheme.
Lillian Msheri, another woman who has faced the same problem, asked the East African Community integration to harmonise the process of acquiring IDs for citizens of the region.
She said if not addressed, the bureaucracy would make them immigrants in pursuit of love.
“We are here because of love, the only documents we have is marriage certificates and affidavits. Let the government formulate a way of assisting us,” she said.
Zedekiah Dika, a legal officer at Kituo Cha Sheria, said the state has violated the women’s rights by denying them IDs.
“The constitution is very clear on dual citizenship for foreign spouses. We shall compel the government to look into the matter,” Dika, also the Coast region civil society chairman, said.
He said the civil society will petition the government for violation of human rights.
VIOLATION: Kituo Cha Sheria legal officer Zedekiah Dika during a meeting with Tanzania women married to Kenyan men in Taveta town. He said they will sue the state for violation of human rights
Image: SOLOMON MUINGI
DENIED CITIZENSHIP Tanzanian women with Kenyan spouses protest over IDs More than 1,300 married to Kenyan men in Taita Taveta do not have IDs
In Summary
• Even after living in Kenya for decades and raising children who are citizens by birth, the women themselves are still denied IDs.
• This results in them being unable to get inheritance, loans and health services. CITIZENSHIP: Tanzanian women married to Kenyan spouses address journalists in Voi. They want the government to issue them with Kenyan IDs
Image: SOLOMON MUINGI
Tanzanian women married to Kenyans in Taita Taveta county have appealed to the government to issue them with Kenyan identification cards.
The more than 300 women out of about 1,300 county-wide said they are denied inheritance, loans and health services due to lack of national IDs.
They were speaking in Taveta town during a meeting with Taita Taveta Human Rights Watch lobby group.
The women, legally married to Kenyan men, said they are subjected to abject poverty due to lack of the important document.
Some of them have been living in the country for more than 30 years, and their children and grandchildren are Kenyan citizens by birth.
Rafa Salim, 46, a Tanzanian national who has been married to a Kenyan spouse for 21 years, said lack of IDs has marginalised them.
She said they have been unable to either get loans from financial institutions or inherit properties from their husbands.
“You have to bend very low to get loans in empowerment groups using your husband's ID card. Other groups and microfinance institutions do not accept a third-party identification card,” Rafa said.
She urged Interior CS Fred Matiang’i to order the issuing of Kenyan IDs to them, adding that they were also left out in the recent registration of Huduma Number.
The swelling number of foreigners has been attributed to the county’s proximity to neighbouring Tanzania and cross-border trade in the porous Taveta border.
The women, some of whom crossed through undesignated routes into Kenya to follow their hearts across the border, said they have been denied some crucial services, where IDs were required for access.
Shamila Yahya, who has lived in the country for 17 years, said most of the women do not have passports and Tanzanian IDs.
She said most women lack basic healthcare as they are unable to register to the National Hospital Insurance Fund and Linda Mama medical scheme.
Lillian Msheri, another woman who has faced the same problem, asked the East African Community integration to harmonise the process of acquiring IDs for citizens of the region.
She said if not addressed, the bureaucracy would make them immigrants in pursuit of love.
“We are here because of love, the only documents we have is marriage certificates and affidavits. Let the government formulate a way of assisting us,” she said.
Zedekiah Dika, a legal officer at Kituo Cha Sheria, said the state has violated the women’s rights by denying them IDs.
“The constitution is very clear on dual citizenship for foreign spouses. We shall compel the government to look into the matter,” Dika, also the Coast region civil society chairman, said.
He said the civil society will petition the government for violation of human rights.
VIOLATION: Kituo Cha Sheria legal officer Zedekiah Dika during a meeting with Tanzania women married to Kenyan men in Taveta town. He said they will sue the state for violation of human rights
Image: SOLOMON MUINGI
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