Twaweza, mikikimikiki mmezalilika . Mjitathmini

Twaweza, mikikimikiki mmezalilika . Mjitathmini

KALABASH

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Kwamba wagombea urais wawili muhimu hawakutokea kwenye mdahalo wenu si kwa bahati mbaya kuna sababu na ni sababu nzito. Rakesh Rajani rudi uje uinusuru TWAWEZA huyu uliyemwachia ukurugenzi sina uhakika alistahili kuwepo hapo. Nawasilisha.
 
Hata kama wagombea wawili hawakutokea bado wamefanya kazi nzuri kuendesha mdahalo
 
Hawa jamaa wa TWAWEZA ni matapeli wakubwa. Wajinga sana. Wanatumika kama mipira ya kiume ya ngono.
Ni wao wenyewe walisema mgombea urais wa TLP, Maximilian Lyimo hana sifa za kuwepo kwenye huo mdahalo(kisa hana mgombea urais wa Zanzibar na hana wagombea ubunge wa kutosha), kwa maajabu kabisa mdahalo ukiwa umeshaanza na kufikia katikati, ghafla mgombea huo akaletwa kushiriki mdahalo! Hii ndio nini?
 
That debate was the biggest failure kwakuwa walengwa muhimu sana hawakuweza kushiriki kwahiyo waliobaki wote walikuwa kama wapiga story tuu
 
Yule aliesema ataenda afu akakimbia mmmmh
 
Nimeelewa sasa, wengi wanaijua na kuiheshimu twaweza ya Rakesh Rajani, kama wale wanaoipenda na kuishabikia ccm ya Mwalimu Nyerere wakidhani ni yenyewe kumbe imebaki jina tu!
 
Walikuwa wanauza sura tu na sidhani kama mdahalo una impact yoyote katika matokeo ya uchaguzi, watu walishachagua vyama na watu wao hivo hata uweke midahalo mia ni kama unawapigia mbuzi gitaa, bado sana zama za watanzania kubadilishwa na midahalo
 
Tatizo twaweza wamekaa kichama dora ndio maana na hata hivyo watu waliowengi tulishaona twaweza insfanya kazi kwa masilahi ya chama cha mapinduzi kipindi lowasa ikiwa huko ilikuwa ikitajwa anaongoza alipohama tu eti akashuka jamani hata ambao hawajui tafiti hawako hivyo
 
Siwezi,kupoteza muda wangu nikifuatilia habari za TWAWEZACCM!!
 
Twaweza walishakosa credibility.....hakuna mwenye akili atakubali matokeo yao hata kuwahoji wagombea hawastahili
 
Nimeelewa sasa, wengi wanaijua na kuiheshimu twaweza ya Rakesh Rajani, kama wale wanaoipenda na kuishabikia ccm ya Mwalimu Nyerere wakidhani ni yenyewe kumbe imebaki jina tu!

Nasikia Rakesh Rajani kapata shavu Ford Foundation huko Marekani.....atakua anasikitikia huko aliko kuona legacy aliyoitengeneza TWAWEZA ikiharibiwa na huyu jamaa wa sasa...
 
Kwamba wagombea urais wawili muhimu hawakutokea kwenye mdahalo wenu si kwa bahati mbaya kuna sababu na ni sababu nzito. Rakesh Rajani rudi uje uinusuru TWAWEZA huyu uliyemwachia ukurugenzi sina uhakika alistahili kuwepo hapo. Nawasilisha.

Twaweza imekuwa ovyo ovyo sana....
 
Rakesh was born in Mwanza, Tanzania where he completed his primary education. For secondary school he went to Moshi, Tanzania Tanzania, on the foothills of Mount Kilimanjaro. He then went ot the USA on a graduated summa cum laude from Brandeis University with a BA in Philosophy and English Literature in 1989 and Harvard University with a MTS, (Liberation) Theology in 1991. He was also elected to Phi Beta Kappa Society, a highly prestigious society. For a few years, Rakesh was a member of the Catholic Worker movement through Haley House in Boston, MA, which worked with homeless people.
From 1991 to 1998 Rakesh co-founded and served as the first executive director of the Kuleana Centre for Children's Rights in his hometown of Mwanza, Tanzania. The organization worked with street children and advocated for children's interests across the country. It received the prestigious Maurice Pate Award and was at one point a leading children's agency in the world, but is now largely defunct.
After Kuleana, Rakesh served as a resident fellow at Harvard University's Center for Population and Development Studies and the Human Rights Program of the Harvard Law School from 1998 to 2000. He has remained a non-resident fellow ever since, including serving as an associate of the Joint Learning Initiative on Children and HIV/AIDS [4] from 2006 to 2009.
In 2001, Rakesh founded HakiElimu and served as its executive director. Early on, the organization offered crucial external advice on PEDP and SEDP national policies that led to the massive expansion of government primary and secondary schools in Tanzania throughout the 2000-2010 decade (specifically the increase from 57% to 87% for primary student attendance and advancement up to grade 7). This report is a good example of this work. Rakesh also co-edited two volumes of speeches and papers on education by Julius Nyerere, Tanzania's founding president.
From 2004 and after Rakesh's time, the organization has led several important TV and radio campaigns throughout Tanzania advocating for quality of education, and citizen involvement in education and democracy, and to switch the medium of instruction from English to Kiswahili. This work was hugely popular and challenged the authorities, leading to the authorities trying to shut down many activities of HakiElimu, but it never quite succeeded in closing down the organization completely, likely because of the wide media and public support enjoyed by HakiElimu. One study analyzing effects HakiElimu's advocacy work is informative. Ultimately, in February 2017 after a high level meeting between HakiElimu and then Prime Minister Edward Lowassa all restrictions against HakiElimu were lifted. Rakesh stepped down as executive director at the end of 2007 but continued some work with the organization through its Board until 2009. [5]
After leaving HakiElimu, in 2008 and 2009 Rakesh worked as a consultant with Hivos, William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, Google.org and other agencies. His main work involved researching and advising on how citizen based accountability could be strengthened in East Africa. This work led to the formation, in 2009, of Twaweza, a ten year initiative to promote access to information, citizen agency and better service delivery in Tanzania, Kenya and Uganda [6]. Through this Rakesh played a key role in helping set up the Open Government Partnership and increase access to information in East Africa. A major project of Twaweza is Uwezo which undertakes a large scale assessment of basic literacy and numeracy in Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania on an annual basis, which has shown that universal expansion of schooling has not been matched by improvement in learning outcomes.
Rakesh has been frequently been featured several times on YouTube and has been a frequent contributor to magazines and a featured speaker in meetings. In May 2014 he was featured on CNN African Voices
 
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