Nearly 50 People Killed as Flash Floods wreak havoc in Tanzania.
Nearly 90,000 people have been displaced as heavy rains continue to destroy homes and farms in villages and rural townships
Border Point between Uganda and South-Sudan suffer Frequent floods that hamper efficiency
There is an urgent need for South-Sudan to expedite the implementation of the East African Community Customs Union Protocol
Zephania Ubwani: As prolific as they come!
Veteran Kenyan Media Specialist Machua Koinange pays homage to his old Tanzanian colleague and friend, the late Zephania Ubwani
Lake Tanganyika Disaster: Ten Persons Missing as 17 passengers rescued from shipwreck
The number of persons who were sailing on the ill-fated ship remains elusive, because vessels on Lake Tanganyika usually pick up unofficial passengers along the way
World Bank issues USD 200 million for upgrading the railway line linking Dar-es-Salaam and Isaka
Set to be disbursed over the coming six years, the money will pay for refurbishing tracks, repairing weak bridges, and improving two intermodal terminals on the railway line.
Tanzania to experience the next Total Solar Eclipse in the year 2100
The next Annular solar eclipse on the other hand should be observed around these shores in the year 2031, as curtain raising sky event.
Chinese, Congolese, Tanzanians and Kenyans among 25 passengers feared dead as ship sinks in Lake Tanganyika
The official list of names of all 25 passengers that were abord the ship is attached here in the story
Rwanda’s 1000 Hills have eyes: The Genocide story spinning three decades between Arusha and Kigali
It all started in Arusha moving to Dar-es-salaam, later to Kigali and eventually back to Tanzania Again. Rwanda's 30 years' journey in and out of the horrid genocide
Thirty years after Genocide: Rwandans are still striving to rebuild country and restore their nation unity
More than 800,000 people, mostly Tutsis were killed in Rwanda during the 1994 Genocide
Forty years after the death of Sokoine, Tanzanians fondly remember their patriotic Prime Minister
Edward Moringe Sokoine Mollel, remains a legend that no other African leader can ever match.