Kipigo alichopewa Aikande Clement Kwayu toka kwa watanzania sababu ya utafiti wake bandia hatakisahau

Aliandika maoni yake akayaita utafiti akarusha mitandaoni na watanzania wakamjibu vizuri sana nahisi sasa atajua watanzania wa sasa si wale aliowaacha alipoenda ughaibuni.

Kitwa cha habari na mambo aliyoyapa kipaumbele zaidi ya 85% kwenye andiko lake hayahusiani na kichwa habari yake, Habari ilipaswa iwe kuhusu COVID-19 kwa mujibu kuhusu Corona bali aliegemea sana kwenye maoni ya kisiasa hasa kuhusu aina ya uongozi wa Mh. Magufuli na demokrasia. Nafikiri mzee wa kutoa boko Lissu alipaswa kupitia maoni ya watanzania kabla ya kuongea vile kwenye mahojiano yake na TV ya nchi jirani kuhusu COVID-19.


Tafadhari soma chapisho lake kisha angalia maoni ya watu baada ya andiko kwenye sehemu ya maoni, nenda kwenye link hii Tanzania's COVID-19 response puts Magufuli's leadership style in sharp relief

Kumpondea Magufuli kuhusu alivyo shughulika na COVID-19 ni sawa na kujipiga bunduki mguuni.
Natamani Mtafiti bandia Aikande Clement Kwayu atupe tena andiko la kuhusu hali ya COVID-19 Tanzania baada ya zaidi ya miezi miwili kupita tangu aandike maoni yake aliyo yaita utafiti. ambayo yaliegemea upande mmoja wa sarafu.

Tanzania’s COVID-19 response puts Magufuli’s leadership style in sharp relief

One of the main points of discussion around the various responses to the COVID-19 pandemic is governance. Different countries have reacted to the pandemic in different ways. These differences are informed by varying styles of leadership and governance around the globe.
Countries with open and transparent governing styles have taken a more hands-on approach by engaging diverse stakeholders. Scholars who examined the COVID-19 responses in China, Japan and South Korea, for example, found that there was systematic evidence that different governance decisions led to different results.
In the case of Tanzania, I argue that COVID-19 has revealed, rather than informed, the governance style under the current administration.
Writing about India’s handling of the new coronavirus, Amartya Sen – professor of economics and 1998 economics Nobel laureate – said:

In line with this thinking, being transparent and engaging diverse groups, including both loyalists and critics, is crucial for governments in the fight against the virus.
In Tanzania, President John Magufuli has taken the opposite view. He has framed COVID-19 as a war and not a health calamity requiring scientific consultation. As a result the handling of the pandemic has been at the whim of the president.
Since Magufuli expressed his doubts on the professionalism of the national laboratory, no more updates on COVID-19 have been made. It’s no longer easy to tell if data being released by the government is grounded in science, or whether it is simply that the president wants lower figures reported.
Magufuli’s COVID-19 response is typical. He is a president who has always taken an idiosyncratic view of leadership. Since his election in 2015, he has acted unilaterally. This has divided the country, while consolidating power in the presidency. Even his own ruling party has become a casualty of his autocratic style of leadership.
Idiosyncratic response to COVID-19
Magufuli has downplayed the pandemic’s threat and encouraged the use of local and home remedies such as drinking ginger and lemon tea, and steam therapy as a way to prevent infection.
He publicly questioned the efficacy of the COVID-19 tests used in Tanzania’s laboratories. He then promised to send a plane to collect Madagascar’s traditional remedy for the virus.
This statement marked the end of the health minister’s daily updates on the country’s COVID-19 response. It was followed by a presidential proclamation that that God was answering the prayers of Tanzanians against the pandemic.
The president then appointed a new deputy health minister, probably because the previous one had questioned the use of steaming therapy to manage the virus.
Two weeks earlier, the president had appointed a new Constitutional and Legal Affairs minister, following the sudden death of his predecessor. The new minister was given the unusual task of investigating the activities of the national laboratory and its handling of COVID-19 testing.
Both men had previously supported Magufuli’s response to the pandemic.
These appointments give the real impression that loyalty to the president is very important in Tanzania. Dissenters are not tolerated. It’s no surprise that the official leader of opposition in parliament was rebuffed when he extended an offer to work with the government to fight the virus.
Civil society organisations have also been sidelined. But faith-based organisations have been won over by the government’s decision to keep places of worship open. Religion has been framed as a more appropriate response to COVID-19 than science.
History of intransigence and excesses
In 2017, Magufuli banned pregnant school girls from continuing school despite calls to the contrary. As a result the World Bank delayed the release of a $500 million education loan.
Eventually, Magufuli bowed to the pressure and lifted the ban.
Another example of Magufuli’s intransigence was his reaction to a planned countrywide protest organised by the opposition Chadema party. The police threatened to use force to stop citizens from participating. Eventually, the opposition called off the demonstration after faith leaders and civil society called for dialogue.
To date, there has not been any dialogue between the government and Chadema.
The absence of dialogue, and discrimination against Chadema and other opposition parties, has led to further polarisation between the Magufuli administration and dissenters.
The state response to COVID-19 is well within Magufuli’s playbook. He acts unilaterally, while polarising the nation and consolidating power in the presidency. This is often to the detriment of the Chama cha Mapinduzi ruling party. Power is centralised in the executive. Party organs and members do not have the agency to hold the president to account.
Critics within the ruling party have been punished and expelled.
The executive’s autocracy has forced the opposition party to strengthen its institutions from the ground up. It now appears that Chadema is becoming a stronger party institutionally. In response, the ruling party has resorted to using force to maintain its grip on power.
To understand how Magufuli centralised power, one structural move he took in the beginning of his administration is illustrative. He removed the Regional Administration and Local Governments office from the office of the prime minister and put it in the office of the president.
The office is responsible for administering education, health, and development projects within local districts across the country.
Thus, local government matters are reported directly to the president’s office and are managed from the very core of the executive branch. This structural change has diverted revenue collection to the central government. The president has also used local government political appointees to silence dissenters.
It is apparent, therefore, that he will decide whether cases of COVID-19 in Tanzania have declined or increased, no matter what the science says.
The real fate of the country, however, is in the hands of Tanzanians. Only they can take their power back.

The problem with the author is that, he has singled out a few approaches and fronted them as the only main approaches used in TZ to reduce the spread of covid-19. The truth is those are some of the approaches and TZ has not excluded all other approaches used by other countries. If the author is sincere why leave out the use of masks, wash of hands, use of sanitizers, social distancing etc., which are part of the covid-19 approaches used in confronting the spread of covid-19 in TZ. We all hear TZ campaigns covering all these areas.

We everyday witness how TZ professionals, politicians, teachers, health officers and the like are emphasizing the adherence to WHO organizations recommendations in dealing with corona-virus and we have never heard Tanzania government dismissing those measures in favor of prayer or use of ginger as Kwayu wants or tries to insinuate. By the way what is wrong with adding ginger herbs and prayer or any other approaches that we think may help solve a problem that has no prevention/cure.

In research any problem that is new and has not been studied, we first start with exploratory approaches to finding out possible solutions to the problem. Trying to find what might or could help, since even the approaches we are using have not been scientifically proven to work, is worth the effort. Is there a study that has shown six feet is a safe social distance for non spreading of the virus. Has washing hands been found to help? The answers to the effectiveness of approaches we are using now is unknown. But since we know these approaches have been proven to work in other areas, we borrow these and use them.

To me, Kwayu sounds more of a political alarmist than a scientist. All scientist are currently conducting exploratory studies towards solving the covid-19 problem. These studies include social science, psychology, social work that focus on behavior and covid-19... how behavior may help and currently we are actually depending on our own behavior to mitigate the problem. But we are also heavily investing chemistry/pharmaceutical/medical science studies that focus on prevention and cure. Again these studies are exploratory too.

So, my friend Kwayu, if you are a real researcher do research a favor. Be open or have an open mind, do not try to give half truth because you want to use that half truth to prove your point. In research language you are unethical because you hide information to prove or score points. Real students of research do not make conclusions without being exhaustive. Real research students do not hide information otherwise their research and research results will be biased. Be ethical, real, and fair to the research discipline. Otherwise you will be unethical. Being ethical is everything to all disciplines and professions, including research.
 
Real students of research do not make conclusions without being exhaustive. Real research students do not hide information otherwise their research and research results will be biased. Be ethical, real, and fair to the research discipline. Otherwise you will be unethical. Being ethical is everything to all disciplines and professions, including research.
Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation who insisted in COVID- 19 vaccine sponsored Kwayu's conversation (research).
This explains why Kwayu was so biased.
" The Conversation is funded by the National Research Foundation, eight universities, including the Cape Peninsula University of Technology, Rhodes University, Stellenbosch University and the Universities of Cape Town, Johannesburg, Kwa-Zulu Natal, Pretoria, and South Africa. It is hosted by the Universities of the Witwatersrand and Western Cape, the African Population and Health Research Centre and the Nigerian Academy of Science. The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation is a Strategic "
 
Aliandika maoni yake akayaita utafiti akarusha mitandaoni na watanzania wakamjibu vizuri sana nahisi sasa atajua watanzania wa sasa si wale aliowaacha alipoenda ughaibuni.

Kichwa cha habari na mambo aliyoyapa kipaumbele zaidi ya 85% kwenye andiko lake hayahusiani na kichwa cha habari yake, Habari ilipaswa iwe kuhusu COVID-19 kwa mujibu kichwa cha habari, mwishowe aliegemea sana kwenye maoni ya kisiasa hasa kuhusu aina ya uongozi wa Mh. Magufuli na demokrasia. Nafikiri mzee wa kutoa boko Lissu alipaswa kupitia maoni ya watanzania kabla ya kuongea vile kwenye mahojiano yake na TV ya nchi jirani kuhusu COVID-19.


Tafadhari soma chapisho lake kisha angalia maoni ya watu baada ya andiko kwenye sehemu ya maoni, nenda kwenye link hii Tanzania's COVID-19 response puts Magufuli's leadership style in sharp relief

Kumpondea Magufuli kuhusu alivyo shughulika na COVID-19 ni sawa na kujipiga bunduki mguuni.
Natamani Mtafiti bandia Aikande Clement Kwayu atupe tena andiko la kuhusu hali ya COVID-19 Tanzania baada ya zaidi ya miezi miwili kupita tangu aandike maoni yake aliyo yaita utafiti ambayo yaliegemea upande mmoja wa sarafu.

Tanzania’s COVID-19 response puts Magufuli’s leadership style in sharp relief

One of the main points of discussion around the various responses to the COVID-19 pandemic is governance. Different countries have reacted to the pandemic in different ways. These differences are informed by varying styles of leadership and governance around the globe.
Countries with open and transparent governing styles have taken a more hands-on approach by engaging diverse stakeholders. Scholars who examined the COVID-19 responses in China, Japan and South Korea, for example, found that there was systematic evidence that different governance decisions led to different results.
In the case of Tanzania, I argue that COVID-19 has revealed, rather than informed, the governance style under the current administration.
Writing about India’s handling of the new coronavirus, Amartya Sen – professor of economics and 1998 economics Nobel laureate – said:

In line with this thinking, being transparent and engaging diverse groups, including both loyalists and critics, is crucial for governments in the fight against the virus.
In Tanzania, President John Magufuli has taken the opposite view. He has framed COVID-19 as a war and not a health calamity requiring scientific consultation. As a result the handling of the pandemic has been at the whim of the president.
Since Magufuli expressed his doubts on the professionalism of the national laboratory, no more updates on COVID-19 have been made. It’s no longer easy to tell if data being released by the government is grounded in science, or whether it is simply that the president wants lower figures reported.
Magufuli’s COVID-19 response is typical. He is a president who has always taken an idiosyncratic view of leadership. Since his election in 2015, he has acted unilaterally. This has divided the country, while consolidating power in the presidency. Even his own ruling party has become a casualty of his autocratic style of leadership.
Idiosyncratic response to COVID-19
Magufuli has downplayed the pandemic’s threat and encouraged the use of local and home remedies such as drinking ginger and lemon tea, and steam therapy as a way to prevent infection.
He publicly questioned the efficacy of the COVID-19 tests used in Tanzania’s laboratories. He then promised to send a plane to collect Madagascar’s traditional remedy for the virus.
This statement marked the end of the health minister’s daily updates on the country’s COVID-19 response. It was followed by a presidential proclamation that that God was answering the prayers of Tanzanians against the pandemic.
The president then appointed a new deputy health minister, probably because the previous one had questioned the use of steaming therapy to manage the virus.
Two weeks earlier, the president had appointed a new Constitutional and Legal Affairs minister, following the sudden death of his predecessor. The new minister was given the unusual task of investigating the activities of the national laboratory and its handling of COVID-19 testing.
Both men had previously supported Magufuli’s response to the pandemic.
These appointments give the real impression that loyalty to the president is very important in Tanzania. Dissenters are not tolerated. It’s no surprise that the official leader of opposition in parliament was rebuffed when he extended an offer to work with the government to fight the virus.
Civil society organisations have also been sidelined. But faith-based organisations have been won over by the government’s decision to keep places of worship open. Religion has been framed as a more appropriate response to COVID-19 than science.
History of intransigence and excesses
In 2017, Magufuli banned pregnant school girls from continuing school despite calls to the contrary. As a result the World Bank delayed the release of a $500 million education loan.
Eventually, Magufuli bowed to the pressure and lifted the ban.
Another example of Magufuli’s intransigence was his reaction to a planned countrywide protest organised by the opposition Chadema party. The police threatened to use force to stop citizens from participating. Eventually, the opposition called off the demonstration after faith leaders and civil society called for dialogue.
To date, there has not been any dialogue between the government and Chadema.
The absence of dialogue, and discrimination against Chadema and other opposition parties, has led to further polarisation between the Magufuli administration and dissenters.
The state response to COVID-19 is well within Magufuli’s playbook. He acts unilaterally, while polarising the nation and consolidating power in the presidency. This is often to the detriment of the Chama cha Mapinduzi ruling party. Power is centralised in the executive. Party organs and members do not have the agency to hold the president to account.
Critics within the ruling party have been punished and expelled.
The executive’s autocracy has forced the opposition party to strengthen its institutions from the ground up. It now appears that Chadema is becoming a stronger party institutionally. In response, the ruling party has resorted to using force to maintain its grip on power.
To understand how Magufuli centralised power, one structural move he took in the beginning of his administration is illustrative. He removed the Regional Administration and Local Governments office from the office of the prime minister and put it in the office of the president.
The office is responsible for administering education, health, and development projects within local districts across the country.
Thus, local government matters are reported directly to the president’s office and are managed from the very core of the executive branch. This structural change has diverted revenue collection to the central government. The president has also used local government political appointees to silence dissenters.
It is apparent, therefore, that he will decide whether cases of COVID-19 in Tanzania have declined or increased, no matter what the science says.
The real fate of the country, however, is in the hands of Tanzanians. Only they can take their power back.

Kwa hakika hali ni mbaya. Upepo umebadilika. Siyo povu peke yake bali hata kujipendekeza kijinga jinga pia.

Wasemaji wa wananchi wamekuwa wasemaji kweli kweli utafikiri wametumwa. Kumbe ni njaa za matumbo yao tu.

Wamechachawa na kupagawa. Wanajitekenya na kujichekesha wenyewe. Hamkani si shwari tena.

Yote tisa mambo iko Oct 28. Wajumbe tutaingia kazini.

Bashite wafikishie salamu zetu kwa maana anayetakikana ni huyu:

IMG_20200804_210728_515.jpg


Habari ndiyo hiyo.

Awe Lipumba, Membe, Lissu, nk.

Hapendwi mtu hapa!
 
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