Wednesday, December 19, 2012

South Africa: Walking the Freedom Fighters' Street


Johannesburg — On a dry land of Vilakazi Street in Orlando West to the South of Johannesburg, well known as the city of gold, you will come across a man-made stream close to the Soweto Museum.
The water that is made to flow consistently in the stream is said to symbolize the blood that was lost during the struggle for freedom.
There isn't that much wealth and beauty in Soweto Township except for the rich history that made South Africa what it is today, free at last.
(The writer standing while pointing at one of Soweto houses while in Johannesburg, Soweto recently) 
At the Museum surroundings also, there is a huge stone that the tour guide who introduced his name to us only as Abel, says it represents the only weapon that was used to fight for their freedom.
It is a 30 minutes drive by commuter from the heart of Johannesburg at De Korte street in Bloemfontein to the Museum where memories, from the loss of lives to the brutal acts done to many South Africans by the apartheid government is witnessed through recorded voices and images.
We were 15 of us, all journalists from the SADC region selected to attend the "Freedom and responsibility of the media", the training courses offered by GIZ, the German Society for International Cooperation which also sponsored our trip to Soweto and Vilakazi street.
The training mainly focused on participants from the SADC region countries of Malawi, Zambia, Tanzania, Botswana, Namibia, Lesotho, Madagascar, Zimbabwe, Mauritius and Democratic Republic of Congo.
As we arrived walking towards the entrance of Soweto Museum surroundings, we came across a thick huge stone that our tour guide Abel said symbolizes the only weapon that was used by South Africans to free themselves from the apartheid government.
The stream origin is seen with a huge picture frame of Hector Zozile Pieterson, a 13 year school girl who was shot dead by the then apartheid government, as students staged a protest against the use of Afrikaans language as a medium of instructions in Soweto in1976.
 (The writer  showing the portrait of Hector Zozile peterson being carried by her brother while a sister runs along them)
She is seen being carried by her brother as her elder sister run alongside while shedding tears. We weren't lucky to see Hector Zozile Pieterson sister who is said to work at the Museum because she had a day off that Saturday.
Abel says the picture showing Hector Zozile Pieterson in a frame at the Museum surrounding being carried by her brother after she was shot dead is actually the factual one taken in 1976.
Hector Zozile Pieterson died at an early age of only 13, she never had a chance to prove to the world about her rights, and the work for what she stood for, fighting for her country.
But, she left to us with a history that makes South Africa and Africa at large proud of what it is today, free at last.
The outside of the Museum is as reach in history as the inside. From the stream, there is also a thick broken wall from where the stream is said to originate. These broken walls Abel says represent leadership failure to protect civilians from bullets.
There is also in the stream basement a line of grass planted at the middle of the stream that symbolizes the bullets that were being fired at civilians.
Abel says the trees that are planted surrounding the building and the area depict the sole protection that the citizen could seek.
"The authorities had failed to give us protection and the only protection we had, was from tree-trunks" says Abel who is in his 30's as he paraded us from the outside Museum.
He might not have experienced the freedom fighting the likes of Hector, but he knows his roots well and is well informed of all the happenings then.
The inside of the Museum is full of the tales of the struggle to freedom of South Africa, the only country which bears the continents' name.
There are pictures of freedom fighters heroes hanged on the walls of the inside Museum scribbled on with strong messages and the persons' profile.
There are messages of "Ubuntu" translated from Zulu as "humanity to others" and of course the ANC slogans which was used to evoke the struggle to freedom.
Though, you will not be allowed to take pictures from the inside of the Museum and no one dared to ask our facilitator Sigrid Thomson about how much GIZ had paid for us as an entrance fee to the Museum.
"You won't be allowed to carry and take photos from the inside Museum and there is no need for a tour guide there because all the messages are self explanatory, but you will enjoy taking photos of the outside surroundings of Vilakazi street home to two internationally recognized activists."
But we did have a chance to see video images of the hardships and torture that our fellow freedom fighters, the young energetic citizen fighting for their rights had endured. The loss of lives and torture that people had endured being previewed in video tapes and audios revolved the sad colonial memory to our mind and we couldn't hold our tears from running down our cheeks.
Yet the best thing that one can do after watching all those tapes from the recorded video images and audio sounds is to learn to forgive, a thing of course best practiced by the man himself.
I mean Nelson Mandela whose 27 years imprisonment left him without a grudge against the apartheid government. He (Mandela) alone knows the term "forgiveness" best than anyone else and has lived to walk that talk.
It is this Soweto we visited where the famous actress Whoopi Goldberg and Leleti Khumalo's stage movie of "Sarafina" was developed to commemorate the loss of school children who died in 1976 in protest of the use of Afrikaans' language as a medium of instructions in schools during the apartheid government.
And it was here at Vilakazi Street where the first house of Mandela was located and still remains but as a Museum.
Mandela stayed here for 13 days after his release from prison on February 11, 1990 and went on to stay at the Beavily hills, (the other side of Soweto) with his wife Winnie Madikizela Mandela for less than five years.
You will still spot a number of European tourists taking photographs as you walk around Vilakazi street and in front of Nelson Mandela's house where there is a wide glass frame scribbled "Mandela House"
 (The writer with a group of participants of summer academy at Madiba house at Vilakazi street in Orlando West)
There is also Bishop Desmond Tutu's house on the same street of Vilakazi that made me rethink of why out of all the places the two men decided to come and experience first with the poor locals of Soweto in Vilakazi street.
Abel says the Vilakazi street was so famous during the 2010 World Cup championship that the authorities had to ban more tourists from visiting the place because the place couldn't hold any more tourists.
Soweto with a population of over 3 million people has with it 32 townships which are all ethically divided.
But life is still improving in the city where a number of tourists visit each day to the famous home of the first black President of South Africa,
After almost two weeks stay in Johannesburg, South Africa, without any experiences of power interruption to buildings, traffic lights to the sounds of generators, I was welcomed back to Dar es Salaam airport with darkness from streets to buildings.
There was a loud sound of generators that could be heard coming from few houses with light on as I headed back to my home in Kinondoni district. It is an experience well learned.

Monday, December 3, 2012

Tanzania: Fight Weight Gain With Vegetables, Say Experts




Medics often advise people to consume food with fewer calories if they want to lose weight. Yet in Africa, vegetable consumers have for long been seen as inferior, or people who are not affluent.
This trend however is dying out. There has been a growing demand for vegetables in the recent years due to diseases that are associated with animal protein, says Mr. Hassan Mndiga, the Training and Outreach Coordinator at the World Vegetable Center.

(Mr Hassan Mndiga, the Training and Outreach Coordinator at the World Vegetable Center Photo By Kenan Kalagho)
The world vegetable center is providing opportunities to farmers in the country and especially in Arusha by promoting vegetable growing through research and breeding processing. Mndiga says the project of growing vegetables and research is really paying and farmers can improve their income as well as educating their children if fields are properly managed.
"There has been a growing demand for vegetables in hotels and at the family level people are shifting trends from animal to plant protein," notes Mndiga.
"There is very low consumption of vegetables in the country due to the lower vegetable production and yet urban people have a "vegetable versus cholera" notion which needs to be stopped" Mndiga says
According to Ms Rose Dusabeyezu, the Research Assistance in Seed Unit at the center, the organization also has a seed bank that reassures that seeds are kept with purity in order to maintain the quality.
Dusabeyezu says the center also makes sure that all the partner states in the region have access to vegetable seeds while at the same time distributing them to neighboring countries of Ghana, Zambia, Cameroon, Mali and Malawi.
Commenting on adoption of GMO's, Mndiga says that there are many pros and cons that need to be evaluated so no need to rush.

Tanzania: Tomato Seed Worth Its Weight in Gold

East African Business Week (Kampala)


By Kenan Kalagho, 26 November 2012

Forget about the the gold in the mines, the money is in the gardens with tomato seed breeding.
If local miners in the country had knowledge about the price of a kilo of tomato seeds in the European market, they would have shifted their attention from the mines to the field of vegetable seed breeding.

(Mr Herald Peters, Rijk Zwaan Afrisem MD explaining a point to a journalist touring his breeding firm in Arusha, Photo By Kenan Kalagho)
About thirty kilometers south of Arusha town lies' Rijk Zwaan Afrisem, a company that deals with conventional vegetable seed breeding like tomatoes, cucumber, sweat potatoes, egg plant, Chinese pepper and many other vegetable varieties mainly for export to European and other international markets.
Mr. Herald Peeters, the Managing Director for Rijk Zwaan Afrisem says his company has spent around $1,5 million (1.2 million Euros) investment in seed breeding.
He however points out that all these investments that are involved in the process of conventional seed breeding that takes up to more than 10 years usually pays off because a kilo of tomato seeds fetches about $82,727 (Euro, 65,000) in Europe where a tomato seed will give you $0.32 (Euro 0.25 cents).
Peteers says his company has already won the international seed certification and is ranked amongst the 10 best international seed breeders"
The greatest challenge Peteers say is on low production of seeds and labor efficient caused by low education in the field of breeding considering that most of graduates from Sokoine University of Agriculture (SUA) are employed on temporally basis.
According to Abel Kuley, a professional horticulturalist with the firm, there has been lack of knowledge to farmers on drip irrigation because most of them are growing vegetables traditionally.
"We teach farmers to cultivate vegetables in a modern way no matter their varieties, Mr. Kuley says,
and adding that improved hybrid varieties have however proved to have higher yields than local varieties.
For the hybrid variety to give you that yield you need to give it sufficient water at the right time while also ensuring that fertilizer application and weeds is done at the right time insisting that after the training the choice is left to a farmer on whether or not he should adopt the new hybrid varieties.
He further points out that his firm through partnership with Fintrack and the Dutch government have been able to train farmers on capacity building and 30 of them have already adopted the green house system.

Tanzania: Economic Growth Fails to Reflect

East African Business Week (Kampala)


By Kenan Kalagho, 19 November 2012

Dar es Salaam — Government has been asked to improve sector interconnection to allow the movement of the economy in the way that could benefit majority of the citizens.

Speaking during the launch of the Second Tanzania Economic update symposium that was organized by the World Bank, renowned economist and lecturer of the University of Dar es salaam Prof. Samuel Wangwe said itwas important for the government to focus on Small and Medium Enterprises (SME's) if the country was determined to move the economy forward.
(Pro. Wangwe of REPOA Centre stressing a point  during the recent update of Tanzania Economic update review conducted by the World Bank Photo By Kenan Kalagho)

Prof. Wangwe said that instead of the government focusing on large entrepreneurship business which touch few citizens, it was high time that every citizen participated by targeting SME's that employ majority of the Tanzanians.
"There is no way we are going to feel the growth for individuals if we do not target the rural economy where the majority of the population is involved in the production process on a small scale," he said.
Wangwe said that the country needed to look at how to create a good investment climate that would lead to job creation so as to solve the urbanization issue while at the same time looking at how the rural population would benefit from agriculture through subsidy programs and market access.
The second biannual Tanzania economic update stated that despite the country's difficult external environment, it still managed to post a macroeconomic growth of 6% over the past year which according to the report, resulted from the government's flexibility in utilizing fiscal and monetary policies.
The report titled "Spreading the wings: From Economic growth to shared prosperity" is aimed at fostering constructive policy dialogue between stakeholders and policy makers to stimulate debates on essential economic issues.
The lead economist with the World Bank for Tanzania, Burundi and Uganda, Mr. Jacques Morisset noted that with a GDP growth rate of 6.5% during the 2011/12 and manageable fiscal and current account deficits, Tanzania has performed better than most developed countries and better than many emerging economies, including India and Brazil.
However many experts argued that there was need for the country to look at the economic trends that would reflect the improvement in the lives of majority of the citizens instead of weighing the economy by looking at sectors like mining, hospitality and telecommunication.