Prof. Muhongo ni mtu makini ninayemjua

Prof. Muhongo ni mtu makini ninayemjua

Nchi yenye democrasia na utawala bora,haina budi kuacha fursa kwa INSTITUTIONS Kuwa says juu ya tawala za nchi.
Viongozi kwa Tanzania hii bado sijaona with the exception of the late Sokoine.
Hakuna mwingne wa kupongezwa.
 
Mkuu , I must admit, I have a weakness!

I dont read the rest of the message if the general flow is predictable and biased.
And again I would advise you to read the history of Mail z& Guardian to note the British hand operating behind the scenes.

so behind ITV (tanzania), The Guardian(Tanzania), RadioOne (Tanzania),....there is a british hand too?
 
so behind ITV (tanzania), The Guardian(Tanzania), RadioOne (Tanzania),....there is a british hand too?


"MAIL & GUARDIAN NEWSPAPER
The Mail & Guardian was conceived, funded and launched in just six weeks in early 1985, by a group of journalists who had been retrenched after the closures of two of South Africa's leading liberal newspapers, the Rand Daily Mail and Sunday Express.


The paper, originally known as the Weekly Mail, was launched on a shoe-string budget of R50 000 (about $8 000), and relied for its survival on the sweated -- and often unpaid -- labour of a small staff and part-time volunteers. The early shareholders were liberal professionals, academics and business leaders who contributed a few thousand rands each as a gesture towards maintaining a tradition of critical journalism in an increasingly harsh political climate.


Since the fledgling company could not afford to buy mainstream technology, the paper was produced entirely on personal computers, becoming one of the world's earliest examples of Apple Macintosh-based desktop publishing.


During the Eighties, the Weekly Mail built up an international reputation as a vocal apartheid critic, leading to a number of clashes with the government that culminated in the paper's suspension in 1988.


The paper became a must-read for anyone interested in South African politics, and it built up a readership ranging from the still-jailed Nelson Mandela and the exiled African National Congress (ANC) leadership to key foreign policy decision-makers in Washington, London and Bonn. Indeed, it was an article in the Weekly Mail (describing plans for secret talks with the ANC) that precipated the resignation of president PW Botha.


In 1991, the Weekly Mail, together with the Guardian in London, broke the "Inkathagate" scandal, which described how police funds were being secretly channelled to Inkatha to block the ANC. Two Cabinet ministers fell from grace in the wake of the scandal and the weakened National Party government of FW de Klerk was obliged to reopen its stalled talks with the ANC.

Inkathagate was also the beginning of a closer relationship between the Weekly Mail and The Guardian, which bought a large share in the Weekly Mail, and helped to stabilise the small paper's precarious finances for the first time. In 1995, The Guardian became the majority shareholder in the paper, which was renamed the Mail & Guardian."


Mkuu. Do we need to say more?
 
Mkuu pengine tuwe direct ili uweze kunielewa.
Tatizo si haki sawa kwa wote wakati tunajua uwezo wa waTanzania ni finyu.

Hapa lazima tuwe na local capacity building ili kuwasaidia watanzania kuzi face hizo challenges za miradi hiyo mikubwa.
Titategemea wawekezaji wa nje hadi lini?

Mimi namsifu sana Mtu kama Waziri Magufuli na msimamo wake wa local capacity building, katika Wizara ya Ujenzi.
Magufuli anajitahidi sana kuendeleza wakandarasi wazalendo ili hatimaye hata miska 50 ijayo, pasiwepo na ulazima wa kuwa na wakandarasi wakubwa wa nje.

Na hayo ndiyo malengo ya kiongozi mwenye vision with our country at heart.

Nakuunga mkono kwa asilimia 100. Tanzania itajengwa na Watanzania wenyewe siyo Wawekezaji toka Nje. Pale ambako Mtaji na Ujuzi unakosekana basi kuwepo mipango mkakati kuwasaidia Watanzania kupata ujuzi na mitaji.

Leo nimesoma ktk ukurasa wa Facebook wa Rais Uhuru Kenyatta alipokutana na Viongozi wa Serikali na Siasa toka Turkana akiwaambia kwamba wawaeleze wananchi wao wasiuze ardhi,bali watumie ardhi yao kupata hisa ktk Makampuni yatakayo chimba Gesi na Mafuta ktk eneo la Turkana. Sisi hapa tunawatimua wananchi ktk maeneo yao kwa fidia kiduchu! Nchi itafaidikaje na maliasili zake kwa kuwatupa Wazawa nje tena kwa masimango?
 
"MAIL & GUARDIAN NEWSPAPER
The Mail & Guardian was conceived, funded and launched in just six weeks in early 1985, by a group of journalists who had been retrenched after the closures of two of South Africa's leading liberal newspapers, the Rand Daily Mail and Sunday Express.


The paper, originally known as the Weekly Mail, was launched on a shoe-string budget of R50 000 (about $8 000), and relied for its survival on the sweated -- and often unpaid -- labour of a small staff and part-time volunteers. The early shareholders were liberal professionals, academics and business leaders who contributed a few thousand rands each as a gesture towards maintaining a tradition of critical journalism in an increasingly harsh political climate.


Since the fledgling company could not afford to buy mainstream technology, the paper was produced entirely on personal computers, becoming one of the world's earliest examples of Apple Macintosh-based desktop publishing.


During the Eighties, the Weekly Mail built up an international reputation as a vocal apartheid critic, leading to a number of clashes with the government that culminated in the paper's suspension in 1988.


The paper became a must-read for anyone interested in South African politics, and it built up a readership ranging from the still-jailed Nelson Mandela and the exiled African National Congress (ANC) leadership to key foreign policy decision-makers in Washington, London and Bonn. Indeed, it was an article in the Weekly Mail (describing plans for secret talks with the ANC) that precipated the resignation of president PW Botha.


In 1991, the Weekly Mail, together with the Guardian in London, broke the "Inkathagate" scandal, which described how police funds were being secretly channelled to Inkatha to block the ANC. Two Cabinet ministers fell from grace in the wake of the scandal and the weakened National Party government of FW de Klerk was obliged to reopen its stalled talks with the ANC.

Inkathagate was also the beginning of a closer relationship between the Weekly Mail and The Guardian, which bought a large share in the Weekly Mail, and helped to stabilise the small paper's precarious finances for the first time. In 1995, The Guardian became the majority shareholder in the paper, which was renamed the Mail & Guardian."


Mkuu. Do we need to say more?

Yes, we need to say more. You have conveniently cut short your evidence JUST BEFORE THIS.

"In 2002, GMG reduced its shareholding to 10%, selling an 87.5% majority share in the newspaper to Newtrust Company Botswana Limited, owned by Zimbabwean publisher and entrepreneur Trevor Ncube. Having relocated to
South Africa, Ncube also took over as CEO of the company."

Mail&Guardian is owned by a black-african, just like ITV and Guardian Tanzania are owned by Mengi. Do you still contend that these are "white" media or do you cede?
 
Yes, we need to say more. You have conveniently cut short your evidence JUST BEFORE THIS.

"In 2002, GMG reduced its shareholding to 10%, selling an 87.5% majority share in the newspaper to Newtrust Company Botswana Limited, owned by Zimbabwean publisher and entrepreneur Trevor Ncube. Having relocated to
South Africa, Ncube also took over as CEO of the company."

Mail&Guardian is owned by a black-african, just like ITV and Guardian Tanzania are owned by Mengi. Do you still contend that these are "white" media or do you cede?
Mkuu Ncube is NOT Mengi and I dont see the connection between the two.
The Connection of Britain to Mail & Guardian is quite vivid, though.
Talk of one, blowing his masters trumpet.
 
Mkuu Ncube is NOT Mengi and I dont see the connection between the two.
The Connection of Britain to Mail & Guardian is quite vivid, though.
Talk of one, blowing his masters trumpet.

i rest my case.
 
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