Hotuba ya Rais Samia yatajwa katika hotuba saba bora za Umoja wa Mataifa

Mwandishi ana tatizo la uelewa na uchanganuaji mambo jambo ambalo linamfanya atathmini mambo ktk mtizamo wa kisiasa zaidi kuliko uhalisia.

I can perfectly describe this author as an imbecile out to win favour from the person he/she is unjustifiably exalting.
 
Tunahitaji Tume huru ya Uchaguzi na bila ya kuisahau Katiba mpya iliyokwama pale bungeni kwa CCM,wabunge hewala.
hayo ya hotuba ni yao yanatusaidia nini tulioibiwa Uchaguzi na matokeo ya kubuni.
Tume huru halafu katoweni Hotuba tutawaelewaga.
Kwangu mimi waliiba uchaguzi ili watutese.
 
Hotuba ya Rais Samia Suluhu Hassan wa Tanzania aliyoitoa Septemba 23 kwenye Mkutano wa 76 wa Baraza Kuu la Umoja wa Mataifa (UNGA) huko New York, imetajwa kuwa miongoni mwa hotuba saba muhimu zaidi kwenye kikao hicho.

Hotuba ya Rais Samia imechaguliwa na tovuti ya Marekani ‘Foreign Policy (FP)’ miongoni mwa hotuba muhimu zaidi kutolewa kwenye kikao hicho na pia ni ya pekee kutoka kwa mkuu wa nchi mwanamke.

Samia amekuwa mmoja wa wakuu wachache wa nchi wanawake kutoka Afrika kuhutubia Baraza Kuu la Umoja wa Mataifa. Viongozi wengine ambao hotuba zao zimeelezea mambo muhimu ni pamoja na Rais wa China Xi Jinping, Rais wa Marekani Joe Biden, Rais wa Brazil Jair Bolsonaro, Rais wa Lebanon Michel Aoun, Rais wa Iran Ebrahim Raisi na Waziri Mkuu wa India Narendra Modi.

Katika chapisho lao ‘FP’ liliwataka wachangiaji na waandishi wa kurasa zao kupima hotuba wanazoona zina uzito mkubwa au zina mambo muhimu zaidi.


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View attachment 1957068

Tanzania’s first female president stepped onto the scene.

By Laurie Garrett, Pulitzer Prize-winning science writer and columnist at Foreign Policy

When Tanzanian President Samia Suluhu Hassan finally took the stage to deliver her speech at the United Nations General Assembly on Thursday afternoon, she presented a distinctive contrast to the endless stream of all-male speakers who had preceded her to the podium on the third day of the General Debate. Even more sharply, she stood in clear contrast with the man who preceded her as president of Tanzania.

Suluhu previously served as vice president under President John “The Bulldozer” Magufuli, a man who brooked no disobedience, including on his insistence that COVID-19 didn’t exist in Tanzania. Under his presidency, data on the country’s mounting death toll was suppressed, doctors were gagged, and all coronavirus-related drugs and vaccines were banned.

Then, in February, Magufuli abruptly disappeared from public view—and for the first time, on Feb. 27, a physician gave a nationally broadcast speech warning Tanzanians of the new plague. On March 17, Magufuli died.

Suluhu acceded to the presidency, telling the nation her predecessor had “died of a heart condition”—a statement she has not amended despite it being widely suspected that his cause of death was COVID-19. Days later, South African scientists reported discovery of a “super-mutant” strain of the novel coronavirus unlike any other circulating in Africa, carried by three Tanzanian travelers to Angola. Regional political pressure on Suluhu rose, and over the next several months, she created a COVID-19 scientific advisory council and joined global efforts to obtain vaccines and drugs for her nation.

In her U.N. remarks, Suluhu repeatedly praised multilateralism and the United Nations system. She noted her nation’s dependency on technical and financial support from external sources and admonished that “multilateralism cannot and should not succumb to the virus.”

Far from following Magufuli in denying the presence of the virus in the country, Suluhu acknowledged that “Tanzania has not been spared by COVID-19” and said the pandemic had already radically reduced Tanzania’s economic growth, from 6.9 percent a year to 5.4 percent, primarily due to loss of tourism. This, in turn, has wiped out the country’s ability to finance climate change adaptation.

As the first female leader of her nation, Suluhu pointedly noted that “COVID-19 is threatening to roll back the gains that we have made” in gender equity and said she plans to implement policies aimed at female economic development and political and social advancement.

The world still lacks verifiable COVID-19 data from Tanzania, including on cases and death tolls. But Suluhu started vaccination efforts in July, and with her U.N. speech, she joined the majority of her African peers in strongly denouncing the inequities in global vaccine distribution, with merely 245 million doses distributed as of earlier this month to poorer nations through the U.N.’s COVAX mechanism and 81 percent of all doses having been administered in the wealthiest nations.

Even looking to 2022, the wealthy world is backtracking on promised vaccine donations to COVAX, and nearly 80 percent of African nations will miss not only their short-term COVID-19 control targets but also those set for attainment next year.
Upuuzi mtupu
 
Hongera rais wetu kwa kuwemo kwenye saba bora ya hutoaji hotuba kwenye mkutano wa UNGA.

Mleta mada ile hotuba ya rais wa Ghana imeshika namba ngapi?
===
Ni vigezo vipi vilitumika kufanya ranking ya hotuba hizo?

Natanguliza shukrani kwa kwa majibu.
Ili hotuba ya Afrika itoboe lazima izingatie yafuatayo

1.Iwe inaitukuza UN

2.Iwe inaendana na Sera za UN

3. Iwe inakubali unyonge (dependency) kwa mabeberu
 
Ili hotuba ya Afrika itoboe lazima izingatie yafuatayo

1.Iwe inaitukuza UN

2.Iwe inaendana na Sera za UN

3. Iwe inakubali unyonge (dependency) kwa mabeberu
Asante mkuu kwa ufafanuzi. Hata hivyo, nadhani FP walitumia vigezo vingine.
 
Hotuba ya Rais Samia Suluhu Hassan wa Tanzania aliyoitoa Septemba 23 kwenye Mkutano wa 76 wa Baraza Kuu la Umoja wa Mataifa (UNGA) huko New York, imetajwa kuwa miongoni mwa hotuba saba muhimu zaidi kwenye kikao hicho.

Hotuba ya Rais Samia imechaguliwa na tovuti ya Marekani ‘Foreign Policy (FP)’ miongoni mwa hotuba muhimu zaidi kutolewa kwenye kikao hicho na pia ni ya pekee kutoka kwa mkuu wa nchi mwanamke.

Samia amekuwa mmoja wa wakuu wachache wa nchi wanawake kutoka Afrika kuhutubia Baraza Kuu la Umoja wa Mataifa. Viongozi wengine ambao hotuba zao zimeelezea mambo muhimu ni pamoja na Rais wa China Xi Jinping, Rais wa Marekani Joe Biden, Rais wa Brazil Jair Bolsonaro, Rais wa Lebanon Michel Aoun, Rais wa Iran Ebrahim Raisi na Waziri Mkuu wa India Narendra Modi.

Katika chapisho lao ‘FP’ liliwataka wachangiaji na waandishi wa kurasa zao kupima hotuba wanazoona zina uzito mkubwa au zina mambo muhimu zaidi.


===========================


View attachment 1957068

Tanzania’s first female president stepped onto the scene.

By Laurie Garrett, Pulitzer Prize-winning science writer and columnist at Foreign Policy

When Tanzanian President Samia Suluhu Hassan finally took the stage to deliver her speech at the United Nations General Assembly on Thursday afternoon, she presented a distinctive contrast to the endless stream of all-male speakers who had preceded her to the podium on the third day of the General Debate. Even more sharply, she stood in clear contrast with the man who preceded her as president of Tanzania.

Suluhu previously served as vice president under President John “The Bulldozer” Magufuli, a man who brooked no disobedience, including on his insistence that COVID-19 didn’t exist in Tanzania. Under his presidency, data on the country’s mounting death toll was suppressed, doctors were gagged, and all coronavirus-related drugs and vaccines were banned.

Then, in February, Magufuli abruptly disappeared from public view—and for the first time, on Feb. 27, a physician gave a nationally broadcast speech warning Tanzanians of the new plague. On March 17, Magufuli died.

Suluhu acceded to the presidency, telling the nation her predecessor had “died of a heart condition”—a statement she has not amended despite it being widely suspected that his cause of death was COVID-19. Days later, South African scientists reported discovery of a “super-mutant” strain of the novel coronavirus unlike any other circulating in Africa, carried by three Tanzanian travelers to Angola. Regional political pressure on Suluhu rose, and over the next several months, she created a COVID-19 scientific advisory council and joined global efforts to obtain vaccines and drugs for her nation.

In her U.N. remarks, Suluhu repeatedly praised multilateralism and the United Nations system. She noted her nation’s dependency on technical and financial support from external sources and admonished that “multilateralism cannot and should not succumb to the virus.”

Far from following Magufuli in denying the presence of the virus in the country, Suluhu acknowledged that “Tanzania has not been spared by COVID-19” and said the pandemic had already radically reduced Tanzania’s economic growth, from 6.9 percent a year to 5.4 percent, primarily due to loss of tourism. This, in turn, has wiped out the country’s ability to finance climate change adaptation.

As the first female leader of her nation, Suluhu pointedly noted that “COVID-19 is threatening to roll back the gains that we have made” in gender equity and said she plans to implement policies aimed at female economic development and political and social advancement.

The world still lacks verifiable COVID-19 data from Tanzania, including on cases and death tolls. But Suluhu started vaccination efforts in July, and with her U.N. speech, she joined the majority of her African peers in strongly denouncing the inequities in global vaccine distribution, with merely 245 million doses distributed as of earlier this month to poorer nations through the U.N.’s COVAX mechanism and 81 percent of all doses having been administered in the wealthiest nations.

Even looking to 2022, the wealthy world is backtracking on promised vaccine donations to COVAX, and nearly 80 percent of African nations will miss not only their short-term COVID-19 control targets but also those set for attainment next year.
Ili ucheke kwa matakwa fulani lazima utekenywe
 
Hotuba ya Rais Samia Suluhu Hassan wa Tanzania aliyoitoa Septemba 23 kwenye Mkutano wa 76 wa Baraza Kuu la Umoja wa Mataifa (UNGA) huko New York, imetajwa kuwa miongoni mwa hotuba saba muhimu zaidi kwenye kikao hicho.

Hotuba ya Rais Samia imechaguliwa na tovuti ya Marekani ‘Foreign Policy (FP)’ miongoni mwa hotuba muhimu zaidi kutolewa kwenye kikao hicho na pia ni ya pekee kutoka kwa mkuu wa nchi mwanamke.

Samia amekuwa mmoja wa wakuu wachache wa nchi wanawake kutoka Afrika kuhutubia Baraza Kuu la Umoja wa Mataifa. Viongozi wengine ambao hotuba zao zimeelezea mambo muhimu ni pamoja na Rais wa China Xi Jinping, Rais wa Marekani Joe Biden, Rais wa Brazil Jair Bolsonaro, Rais wa Lebanon Michel Aoun, Rais wa Iran Ebrahim Raisi na Waziri Mkuu wa India Narendra Modi.

Katika chapisho lao ‘FP’ liliwataka wachangiaji na waandishi wa kurasa zao kupima hotuba wanazoona zina uzito mkubwa au zina mambo muhimu zaidi.


===========================


View attachment 1957068

Tanzania’s first female president stepped onto the scene.

By Laurie Garrett, Pulitzer Prize-winning science writer and columnist at Foreign Policy

When Tanzanian President Samia Suluhu Hassan finally took the stage to deliver her speech at the United Nations General Assembly on Thursday afternoon, she presented a distinctive contrast to the endless stream of all-male speakers who had preceded her to the podium on the third day of the General Debate. Even more sharply, she stood in clear contrast with the man who preceded her as president of Tanzania.

Suluhu previously served as vice president under President John “The Bulldozer” Magufuli, a man who brooked no disobedience, including on his insistence that COVID-19 didn’t exist in Tanzania. Under his presidency, data on the country’s mounting death toll was suppressed, doctors were gagged, and all coronavirus-related drugs and vaccines were banned.

Then, in February, Magufuli abruptly disappeared from public view—and for the first time, on Feb. 27, a physician gave a nationally broadcast speech warning Tanzanians of the new plague. On March 17, Magufuli died.

Suluhu acceded to the presidency, telling the nation her predecessor had “died of a heart condition”—a statement she has not amended despite it being widely suspected that his cause of death was COVID-19. Days later, South African scientists reported discovery of a “super-mutant” strain of the novel coronavirus unlike any other circulating in Africa, carried by three Tanzanian travelers to Angola. Regional political pressure on Suluhu rose, and over the next several months, she created a COVID-19 scientific advisory council and joined global efforts to obtain vaccines and drugs for her nation.

In her U.N. remarks, Suluhu repeatedly praised multilateralism and the United Nations system. She noted her nation’s dependency on technical and financial support from external sources and admonished that “multilateralism cannot and should not succumb to the virus.”

Far from following Magufuli in denying the presence of the virus in the country, Suluhu acknowledged that “Tanzania has not been spared by COVID-19” and said the pandemic had already radically reduced Tanzania’s economic growth, from 6.9 percent a year to 5.4 percent, primarily due to loss of tourism. This, in turn, has wiped out the country’s ability to finance climate change adaptation.

As the first female leader of her nation, Suluhu pointedly noted that “COVID-19 is threatening to roll back the gains that we have made” in gender equity and said she plans to implement policies aimed at female economic development and political and social advancement.

The world still lacks verifiable COVID-19 data from Tanzania, including on cases and death tolls. But Suluhu started vaccination efforts in July, and with her U.N. speech, she joined the majority of her African peers in strongly denouncing the inequities in global vaccine distribution, with merely 245 million doses distributed as of earlier this month to poorer nations through the U.N.’s COVAX mechanism and 81 percent of all doses having been administered in the wealthiest nations.

Even looking to 2022, the wealthy world is backtracking on promised vaccine donations to COVAX, and nearly 80 percent of African nations will miss not only their short-term COVID-19 control targets but also those set for attainment next year.
Kuna matatizo ya akili kwa watu hiyo hotuba imebadilisha kitu gani Tanzania? The citizens are complaining they can't breathe, there is no relief, the hope has faded away, confidence has gone and prostration replaced with acute hardships in the society.
 
Nyota ya Rais Samia inazidi kung'aa..hotuba zake za Kiingereza huwa zinavutia kusikiliza.
 
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