Kinana: Tanzania cannot be allowed to be the new front for terrorists

Kinana: Tanzania cannot be allowed to be the new front for terrorists

Masheikh wamekamatwa Zanzibar, kwa nini washtakiwe bara? Pili, ina maana Kinana na serikali yao hawajui due process maana tayari ameshawahukumu kuwa ni magaidi. Katibu Mkuu wa Chama ambaye hajui due process ni balaa
 
Just imagine tarehe 1 November 2015 Kinana atakuwa wapi kama kweli mawazo yake ni haya?! Natafakari tu kwa sauti
 
The thread Author is right except for one thing, Lowassa doesn't stand any chance of winning the presidential elections, the bunch of his supporters are a mere group of followers who are just happy that their camp has received a person who's familiarity with politics surpasses that of their former flag bearers who vied for the same position in the past and hence the sympathy and intentional disregard for his past questionable actions on their part otherwise they too know well that he isn't someone right for the position. In short, they are just a bunch of people who had no hope before he fell into their flock and they are now using him as a trump card hoping to win. Apart from those, the rest of Tanzanians have the wisdom to separate between a true leader and someone who wants to rule by all means. Someone who is prepared to use all means necessary including the application of actions which are almost criminal.
 
kinana amenifanya nihamie ukawa rasmi, kwani amedhihirisha kuwa ccm imeshindwa kushawishi wapigakura na kuanza kushawishi wasio husika
 
kuna upotoshaji mwingi sana kwenye hili andishi. this is shame.
 
kuna upotoshaji mwingi sana kwenye hili andishi. this is shame.


...Uamsho or "Awakening", an Islamic terrorist group with known links to Boko Haram.
Kinana hizo ni siasa za maji taka na siasa za kizamani sana. Tumewazowea na hata Jumuiya za Kimataifa zimewazowea kwa uongo wenu huo. "Ewe mwana siasa chunga ulimi wako elewa ya kwamba kuna maisha baada ya uchaguzi".- Mengi
 
Hizi habari pia zinapatikana katika twiter ya George Roberts, Sasa na David Korenke.

Jambo moja kwa wenye kuwatawala watanzania ni kuwa M/Mungu wa kweli hafi, hasinzii, wala kulala hivyo wamuogope yeye mwenye uwezo wa kutesa kiwiliwili na roho.

Watawala wanaelewa na nafsi zao zinawasuta ya kuwa UAMSHO hawahusiki na chochote kile ambacho wanachoshtakiwa nacho na ndio maana huu ni mwaka 4 wamewekwa kizuidhini bila kupatikana ushahidi wa kuwashtaki.

Ikiwa lengo la watawala wanaotawala Tanganyika ni kuendelea kuitawala Zanzibar kwa nguvu hata ikibidi kutoa roho za baadhi ya watu nadhani hilo halitowezekana tena kwa miaka inayokuja, maana wazanzibar kwa umoja wao tayari wameshafahamu na kuelewa ninani adui yao namba moja! Na kwa muamko huu walionao wazanzibar sasa hatunabudi kuwashukuru na kuwaombea maisha marefu na yenye afya tele kikundi cha UAMSHO kwa kazi kubwa waliyoifanya ya kuwaamsha na kuwaunganisha wazanzibar na sasa wanamjua ninani ADUI YAO.
 
In 2013 two British volunteer teachers, Katie Gee and Kirstie Trup – both at the time teenagers – suffered a horrific attack while in Zanzibar, part of Tanzania in East Africa, when two men on motorbikes threw sulphuric acid in their faces. Flown back to London, surgeons removed from Katie Gee, the worst affected of the two, burnt skin from 30 per cent of her body. One year later, she was still required to wear a plastic mask to reduce the scarring covering her face.

Assisted by investigators from the British police at New Scotland Yard and Interpol, the Tanzanian authorities later arrested for the crime members of Uamsho or “Awakening”, an Islamic terrorist group with known links to Boko Haram. They have now been charged in court. Uamsho has a history of targeting foreigners and even Muslim and Christian religious leaders who do not support their aim of tearing apart the union of Tanzania through terrorism and converting Zanzibar into an extremist state.

Even after the attacks on Gee and Trup, who were only in Zanzibar to help and others who have meant no harm to anyone, as we learnt in the first few weeks of election campaigns in Tanzania, Edward Lowassa, an opposition candidate, has clear sympathies to the aims of these extremists.

For some years the status of Zanzibar within the United Republic of Tanzania has been an important question for the people of that island. A tiny minority advocates separation from the mainland with which it was united in the same year it overthrew the Arab regime. There is nothing wrong in holding perfectly legitimate political debates so long as they are pursued through peaceful, democratic means.

But the question is, how long it would be possible for such discussion to remain peaceful if the opposition were to succeed in the upcoming Tanzanian General Election? Lowassa, who, after only 18 months as Prime Minister, was forced by the Parliament to resign from the post after a corruption scandal has promised the release of those who committed the acid attack. Allowing the suspected terrorists to walk free and, without doubt, resume their violent campaign would threaten the safety of ordinary Zanzibarians, mainland Tanzanians – most of whom are moderate whether they follow Islam or Christianity – and foreign visitors, many of whom hail from the UK.

Lowassa is proposing this purely as part of his breathtakingly cynical bid for the presidency. Rejected by voters in his attempt to win the nomination to be the candidate for the governing Chama Cha Mapinduzi (CCM) party he immediately decamped to the opposition to become theirs.

Moderate opposition leaders, including Professor Ibrahim Lipumba, the chairman of the predominantly Zanzibarian Civic United Front have resigned, in protest, to support the government. We can only assume that Lowassa’s outreach to these extremists was a desperate response to the fact the majority of Zanzibarians in that long-standing stronghold for the opposition have been refusing to support his presidential bid.

It is hardly surprising they do not. This move has angered many Christian bishops who had called for government to swiftly prosecute extremists who are widely believed to have burnt churches and targeted Christians with violence, including acid attacks. It is clear that Lowassa’s interests do not lie with helping the people of Tanzania, but by helping himself to power, and the spoils he believes await him there. After all, the character of Lowassa is well known not just to Tanzanians but also to the West. Wikileaks revealed through one of many U.S. diplomatic cables that concern Lowassa exactly what the Americans think about him, when then U.S. Ambassador Mark Green stated: “Lowassa's corrupt activities have been an open secret throughout Tanzania for many years.”

Neither Tanzania nor the West can afford to have Tanzania as the new frontier of terrorism in Africa through Lowassa’s actions. Despite the terrifying attacks they have conducted over the years, they have not yet demonstrated they have the strength of other jihadist groups such as Al-Shabaab or Boko Haram. Indeed, by comparison, Tanzania has been mercifully peaceful and safe from the violence committed against our neighbours such as Kenya.

While who governs Tanzania is only a question the citizens of my country have the right to answer, it is right that Britain and its allies in the struggle against Islamic terrorism should be extremely concerned were Lowassa to win and action his promise to the extremists.

When Al-Shabaab attacked Westgate Mall in Nairobi in 2013, the UK and US government issued travel advisories to its citizens against visiting many parts of Kenya. This has seriously affected their crucial tourism industry: it is without doubt that a revival of terror in Zanzibar would devastate the tourism industry of Tanzania and, in particular, that of Zanzibar on which the island is heavily dependent.

So the choice facing Tanzania at this coming election has ramifications both at home but also far beyond our own borders. If Lowassa and his opposition supporters win, a slim possibility as things stand today, then the country stands to become a new front for terrorists, just at the very time when they are facing defeat in other countries across Africa.

Kinana has served as the first Speaker of the East African Legislative Assembly, and Deputy Defence and Deputy Foreign Minister of Tanzania. He now serves as Secretary-General for the governing CCM party.

Source: thehill.com

u have anything else?
my votes go to lowassa/ukawa.
 
Haya kauli za mh. Lowassa zimeudhi wakubwa huko duniani .
Hebu jisome mwenywe hapa

Tanzania cannot be allowed to be the new front for terrorists | TheHill -
 
Kwani wao ndo wanapiga kura au ni sisi?!! waambieni wawapigie kura sasa tuone CCM. Mwaka huu ni ​mabadiliko tu basi.
 
Watanzania ndo tunapiga kura na si wamarekani
 
Mbona sisi hatukuwachagulia wao rais.....watuache
 
Subiri virungu tu....maana hutaaamini mmeshindwa

Oooooh kumbe umetumwa!
Hahahahaa pole sana Watu
Sisi hata magufuli akihamia chadema leo tutamchagua tu...!
Tunachohitaji ni CCM kutoka.


Mabadiliko kwanza...mtu Baadae!
 
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