Tanzania

Tundu Antiphas Lissu, a Tanzanian human rights lawyer and outspoken advocate for an independent international inquiry into the evictions at Bulyanulu in August 1996, was detained by police on December 23 in Dar Es Salaam, and held for over 24 hours in an underground jail known as "The Hole."

The United Nations said last Thursday that all Rwandans who fled to Tanzania after the 1994 genocide had now returned home. Tanzania, which is host to more than one million refugees, has said it cannot cope with the influx of people escaping regional wars.

The repatriation of Rwandan refugees from camps in western Tanzania should be "substantively completed" by the end of the year, according to the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR).

When challenged by World Bank officials about the failure of his policies, Mwalimu Julius Nyerere, Tanzania's first president and a strong advocate of education, is reported to have said: "The British Empire left us a country with 85 percent illiterates, two engineers and twelve doctors. When I left office, we had nine percent illiterates and thousands of engineers and doctors." However, over the next 15 years education was practically forgotten and, by 2000, just 55 percent of seven-year-ol...read more

Responsible for providing technical assistance, managing/administering contractors, grantees and partners, monitoring and evaluation, program communication, and government and donor coordination. Previous experience in Africa a must and within a high prevalence HIV/AIDS country highly desirable.

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