Majaliwa condemns incitement

PRIME Minister Kassim Majaliwa on Wednesday threatened tough punitive
measures against people bent on inciting deadly violence in the country.
“The government will never put up with
people bent on inciting violence; we will squarely deal with the
agitators,” charged the premier when he addressed a public rally at
Kiteto district’s Kibaya Township on Wednesday evening.
He condemned in the strongest words some
people whom he accused of branding Kiteto as Soweto or Kosovo, saying:
“This is Tanzania... we cannot segregate against one another.”
Speaking on the first day of his working
tour of Manyara Region, Mr Majaliwa asked the area residents to respect
decisions by elders whose efforts to quell the hostilities between the
pastoralists and peasants, he highly appreciated.
“I highly appreciate former Prime
Minister Mizengo Pinda who formed a commission to restore peace in the
district... after assuming this position I made follow ups and learnt
that the conflicts were brewed by few people,” observed Mr Majaliwa.
Earlier, traditional leaders in Kiteto
handed over to the premier a club, a small hand-hoe and a leaf,
‘elisibie’ in Maasai, as a sign of peace and ending of clashes between
peasants and pastoralists. Mr Majaliwa also participated in religious
leadersled prayers. A 65-year old Mbambile Oloi Kurkur who claimed to be
the custodian of Maasai tradition, said God had listened to the
residents’ prayers to restore peace.
“God created this mystique tree which
remains green during the whole year even during times of extreme
drought; we have given you the ‘elisibie’ leaf as the sign of
everlasting agreement,” remarked the senior citizen.
Chairman of Kiteto District Peace
Committee Abubakar Mrisho, said the 70-member group of elders conducted
public awareness campaign in all the seven divisions and 23 villages in
the district on the importance of preserving peace. He said the peace
committee formed the group of elders from Maasai, Wanguu, Wakamba and
Wagogo communities, in a traditional ceremony to protect the land from
bloodshed.
In another development, Mr Majaliwa
reaffirmed the government commitment to provide the residents of
Simanjiro, one of the largest districts in the country, with better
roads and modern communication infrastructure.
The Premier had inspected construction
works on the Kilimanjaro International Airport (KIA) - Mirerani road,
shortly after talking to government officials at Orkesumet and
addressing the public rally at Mirerani Hills, home to the rare
Tanzanite Gemstones.
“The only way to serve people is to
actually reach and directly hear from them instead of waiting for
reports at the comfort of your offices,” he told the district officials
at Orkesumet. The PM later travelled to Mirerani and inspected the road
works.
Mirerani is the only location in the
district where the tarmac road is under works. The 26-kilometre road
which links KIA entrance and Mirerani Hills in Simanjiro District is
scheduled for completion at the end of this month, according to the
official Road Board Meeting report of Manyara Region. China Henan
International Cooperation Group Company is constructing the historic
tarmac road in the district at 32.2bn/-.
President John Magufuli, as Minister of
Works, laid the foundation stone for the KIAMirerani stretch in August
2015. The premier ordered speedy execution of the anticipated
89-kilometre road that connects Bonga location in Babati with Mela in
Dodoma region.
The project is scheduled for completion
by October 2017. Currently, construction works on Babati-Kondoa road
has reached 60 per cent, with the Japan International Cooperation Agency
and African Development Bank funding the over 83bn/- project.