KIONGOZI WA MBIO ZA MWENGE KITAIFA 2011 BI MTUMWA RASHID ALFANI AKIMPA TONE LA VITAMINI A MTOTO SUZY LUCAS NJELA IKIWA NI UFUNGUZI WA CHANJO KWA WATOTO WALIO CHINI YA MIAKA 5 HUKO NAMTUMBO, RUVUMA.
Thursday, 17 November 2011
MBIO ZA MWENGE NA CHANJO YA VITAMINI A 2011
KIONGOZI WA MBIO ZA MWENGE KITAIFA 2011 BI MTUMWA RASHID ALFANI AKIMPA TONE LA VITAMINI A MTOTO SUZY LUCAS NJELA IKIWA NI UFUNGUZI WA CHANJO KWA WATOTO WALIO CHINI YA MIAKA 5 HUKO NAMTUMBO, RUVUMA.
Tuesday, 18 October 2011
Wednesday, 10 August 2011
LONDON IS BURNING, CHILDREN ARE MOST AFFECTED IN THE CARNAGE
BRITISH Prime Minister David Cameron has vowed to do everything necessary to restore order following a wave of riots in London and other UK cities.
In a statement outside his Downing Street residence, Mr Cameron said: "This is criminality pure and simple and it has to be confronted and defeated."The Prime Minister said 16,000 police officers would be on duty in London later today (local time), far more than on previous nights, and he promised that rioters would be brought to justice.
Mr Cameron broke off a family vacation in Italy to return to London, where he chaired a meeting of the Government's emergency COBRA team and met with police.
He confirmed that parliament, which is on summer recess, would be recalled for a day on Thursday so that he could make a statement and allow lawmakers to discuss the violence.
Today three people have been arrested on suspicion of attempted murder as police struggle to contain riots across Britain.
However the Metropolitan Police said there had been 334 arrests since Saturday, with 69 people charged and two cautioned.
In unprecedented scenes of rioting in London, buildings were in flames in Croydon, Peckham and Lewisham in the city's south, while gangs of looters roamed the streets of Hackney in the east, Clapham in the south, Camden in the north and Ealing in the west.
The sporadic outbreaks of violence, which have been particularly difficult for police to control, followed a weekend that saw a dozen suburbs in the capital hit by chaos in the streets.
One officer was in a hospital in a stable condition, and the other suffered a minor injury, according to a Metropolitan Police statement.
"It is believed the injury occurred when police stopped some cars as their occupants were suspected of being involved in looting of a nearby electrical store," a police spokesman said.
"It is believed the driver of one of the cars drove away injuring the police officer in the process. Three people were later stopped by police and arrested on suspicion of attempted murder."
Scotland Yard said it had deployed an extra 1700 officers to deal with the London unrest, the worst in years.
Some London residents told Sky News of gangs of rioters attempting to break into their houses late last night (local time).
"I looked out the window and there was a horde of people outside," one resident in west London said.
"They actually tried to break into our house. They had a long pole which they were using to try to break down the door. One of them looked like he had a bottle, which I thought may have been a petrol bomb, and I was worried they might try to set the house on fire ... It was very frightening."
As the city reeled from the escalating public disorder, the violence spread as far as Birmingham - England's second largest city - in the Midlands, Liverpool in the northwest, and Bristol, the biggest city in the southwest.
In Birmingham, some 100 people were arrested after shop windows were reportedly smashed, property was stolen and a police station, which is not permanently manned, was set on fire.
Video footage broadcast by Sky News showed rioters charging police and throwing missiles in Liverpool, while police said around 150 rioters had rampaged through Bristol's city centre.
Meanwhile, authorities denied reports of rioting in Manchester after the BBC said there had been "minor disturbances".
British Prime Minister David Cameron cut short his Tuscan holiday to chair emergency meetings.
With less than a year to go until London hosts the Olympics, the city resembled a war zone.
Police were caught off guard and emergency services stretched by the rapidly expanding violence that has reportedly been organised on social networks including Twitter and Blackberry messenger.
In an emergency statement, The Met's acting commissioner Tim Godwin urged parents to get their children off the streets.
"I do urge now that parents start contacting their children and asking where their children are," he said.
"There are far too many spectators who are getting in the way of the police operation to tackle criminal thuggery and burglary."
The bulk of the violence began on Saturday in Tottenham, north London, after 29-year old local man Mark Duggan was fatally shot by police on Thursday.
Mr Duggan's death stirred old animosities and racial tensions which prompted riots in the 1980s.
Tottenham was the scene of severe rioting on the Broadwater Farm housing estate in 1985 when police constable Keith Blakelock was hacked to death.
The latest riots did not seem to be fuelled by a need for justice or revenge.
"All they want is a free TV or a new pair of running shoes. They're just taking whatever they fancy. These people are evil," one East London witness said.
As the unrest spread, some pointed to rising social tensions in Britain as the Government slashes STG80 billion ($A129.0 billion) from public spending by 2015 to reduce the huge deficit, swollen after the country spent billions bailing out its foundering banks.
Police acknowledged that major new bouts of violence had flared in at least five locations, badly stretching their resources.
"The violence we have seen is simply inexcusable. Ordinary people have had their lives turned upside down by this mindless thuggery," police commander Christine Jones said.
WATOTO NA UVUVI KWA NJIA YA MIKONO
Watoto wakisaka na kukamata 'CRABS' kwa ajili ya lishe nyumbani huko Kigamboni Dar es salaam.
VODACOM TANZANIA YAFUTIRISHA YATIMA MAFIA(W)
Mkuu wa Masoko na Mahusiano wa Vodacom TZ Bi Mwamvita Makamba akikabidhi sadaka ya thamani ya milioni tisa kwa yatima wilayani Mafia.
Tuesday, 9 August 2011
Friday, 27 May 2011
UPENDO,AMANI NA UMOJA WA KITAIFA HUANZIA KATIKA UMRI WA KINDA. WATOTO KUUNGANA PAMOJA KUTAZAMA CHANGAMOTO ZILIZO MBELE YAO, KUBEBA NA KUSAIDIANA PALE WADOGO WANAPOCHOKA KTK SAFARI YA MAENDELEO NA KUGAWANA HATA KIDOGO KILICHOPO MPAKA SAFARI IKAMILIKE. HUO NDIO MPANGO WA KURITHISHANA UKOMBOZI NA UONGOZI KTK JAMII. UPINZANI UNAKUA SASA SI WA KIITIKADI BALI PALE WADOGO WATAKAPOONA WAKUBWA NDIO WAMEFAIDI MASURUFU YOTE WENYEWE.
WATOTO WA TANZANIA WAKISOMA KATIKA MAZINGIRA MAGUMU.
Kwa muda mrefu sasa, jamii imekuwa ikiwatupia mzigo mkubwa wa lawama walimu pindi ufaulu wa wanafunzi unapo kuwa duni. Kimantiki lawama hizo zinaweza kuwa na mashiko. Hii inatokana na ukweli kuwa ubora wa elimu itolewayo unategemea sana uwepo wa walimu wenye sifa,vifaa vya kufundishia na kujifunzia, mitaala thabiti na thahili,ushirikiano wa walimu, wanafunzi, wazazi,wadau wa elimu na tathmini sahii ya mtaala inayokubalika
Wednesday, 11 May 2011
US ‘conflict minerals’ law bad for Africa-Tech firms
Representatives of American high-tech industries are warning that a law intended to promote peace in the Democratic Republic of Congo could result in a “de facto embargo” of minerals mined in many African countries.
But the Obama administration as well as Africa-focused activist groups are defending the law known as the Dodd-Frank Act in honour of its two main sponsors in the US Congress.
The law requires US companies making use of four minerals — tin, tantalum, tungsten and gold — to demonstrate to US regulators that they have sought to ensure that the imports are not helping finance rebel groups in the eastern DRC. Congo itself is a significant but not irreplaceable source of these metals, industry analysts say.
But Dodd-Frank applies to imports of the four minerals not only from the DRC but from the nine neighbouring countries, including Tanzania, Uganda, Rwanda and Burundi.
The supply chain for these “conflict minerals” is so long and complex that there is at present no way for American tech companies to prove that the materials did not originate in areas under DRC rebel control, said Rick Goss, a spokesman for the US Information Technology Industry Council.
Tantalum is particularly important to makers of consumer products such as mobile phones and laptops.
But Dodd-Frank requires companies such as Microsoft, Intel and Hewlett-Packard to show that comparatively small imports of the other three listed minerals also did not originate in areas where an estimated five million Congolese have died as a result of chaotic violence during the past 15 years.
For these reasons, Mr Goss warned last week at a think-tank forum in Washington, US tech firms could initiate a “de facto embargo” of mineral imports from eastern and central African countries that make up about 40 per cent of the continent’s land mass.
“There are hundreds of thousands of people, perhaps more, in central Africa who rely on mining and related activities as their sole source of income,” Goss said at the Centre for Strategic and International Studies.
Dodd-Frank could inadvertently result in them having “no income whatsoever,” added the tech industry council’s vice president for sustainability.
The battle over Dodd-Frank is escalating at present even though it became law months ago. Rules needed to implement the conflict minerals measure were supposed to be promulgated at the end of March
MOTHER OF SEVEN IN COURT OVER ARBOTION.!!
A mother of seven was on Monday charged with procuring an abortion and disposing of the foetus in a nursery school compound. Ms Nancy Nyawira Wanjama, who appeared in a Nyahururu court admitted committing the offence on May 4, in Suswa area, Subukia District.
Prosecutor James Koech told resident magistrate Daniel Musyoka that villagers informed officers at Suswa Police Patrol Base that a foetus had been found at Gatagati Nursery School, prompting officers to launch investigations.
The villagers rounded up four suspects, who were searched by elderly women. Ms Wanjama was found to have signs of having given birth but was unable to explain to the police where the baby was. On further interrogation, the 36-year-old woman admitted thaving given birth and led police to the school where she had disposed of the foetus. She was arrested and escorted to Subukia Police Station and a medical report prepared confirming that she had given birth to a pre-mature baby.
In mitigation, a tearful Wanjama pleaded for leniency, telling the magistrate that she had seven children depending on her and that her husband could not fend for the family. She said that they were landless and that they lived in a rented house, adding that they were experiencing tough times because inflation was very high. “My first born is in Standard Eight and is preparing to sit the national exam so he cannot take care of his younger siblings. I am the only one who is responsible and I cannot afford another child so I procured an abortion,” she said. The accused was remanded in Nyahururu Women’s Remand Home until May 11 when the magistrate will receive a probation report before passing the sentence.
Tuesday, 3 May 2011
OSAMA BIN LADEN: MURDER OF PARENTS AND CHILDREN IS DEAD
HEADS HAD TO TAKE DECISION FOR THE SAKE OF THE SAFER WORLD AND CHILDEN
NOW CHILDREN CAN SLEEP SAFELY.
AFTER KEEN N' ACCURATE INTELLIGENCE ADVICE, THE RUTHLESS MURDER OF PARENTS AND CHILDREN IS KILLED.......
NOW CHILDREN CAN SLEEP SAFELY.
Monday, 2 May 2011
LET MAY DAY, 2011 BE THE DAY TO END CHILD LABOUR.
IS THE WORLD REALLY LISTENING ?
WE HAVE VIRGIN LAND, MINERAL RESOURCES AND VAST FORESTRY BUT WE HAVE TO WORK 12 HRS A DAY, WITHOUT HEALTH AND SAFETY REGIMES, JUST TO FEED OURSELVES UNLIKE FELLOW PEERS SOMEWHERE!! WHAT HAS GONE WRONG?
IS THERE A CURSE OF SEVERE SHORTAGE AND OF EXCESSIVE ABUNDANCE OF BASIC RESOURCES AS WITH REGARD TO WORKING AND PROVIDING FOR CHILDREN IN THE SOCIETY?
WE, CHILDREN, LABOR TO BUILD VILLA AND LOOK WHO SLEEPS IN THEM
Sunday, 1 May 2011
EAST AFRICA BUSINESS TO BENEFIT CHILDREN COMPETITION
EAST AFRICA – Entrepreneurs in Tanzania and Uganda can apply for the Business Benefiting Children, a competition for businesses that improves the environment in which young children grow up.
The competition has been organised by BiD Network and the Bernard van Leer Foundation. BiD Network is an organisation whose mission is to encourage and promote entrepreneurship and Bernard van Leer Foundation is an international grant making foundation based in The Hague, The Netherlands.
To be eligible for this competition your business should have a positive impact on young children by improving the physical environment in which they grow up in by providing services such as better housing, cleaner energy, sanitation solutions, safer transport, safe places to play and clean water.
You should be running a business that has a financing need of between US$10,000 and US$1,000,000 and is likely to be profitable in the next three years.
Selected finalist in the competition will be invited on a business trip for training and investor meetings where they will meet more than 100 investors. They will also attend the Business Benefiting Children Week and Award Event.
Applicants whose business plans are not selected in the finals will also stand the chance of joining the BidNetwork Matchmaking for Entrepreneurs, a platform where entrepreneurs are connected with potential financiers and investors.
Applicants seeking advice and coaching on drafting their business plans should make submissions by 31st March 2011. The deadline for submitting full business plans is 31st May 2011.
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