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Compassion International Tanzania to save 1.7 million children from abject poverty by 2027
So far Compassion International Tanzania has managed to reach out to 115,000 children in 21 regions and more than 80 local councils, served through 550 churches in the country.
Arusha Catholic Archdiocese marks 60 years milestone, though its mission journey has covered 98 Years.
Evangelization mission in Arusha started on July 15, 1926, when a delegation of Holy Ghost Fathers Missionaries from Kilimanjaro was invited to visit what was then a small hamlet.
Maiden Zanzibar International Sports Festival Comes up in the Isles around February 2024
Zanzibar is currently also offering cycling tourism in the isles, where riders get to peddle from stone town to clove farms
Tanzanians in Germany elect new leaders of their Union
The 2023 General Election for the Union of Tanzanians in Germany (UTU) pitted five candidates who were vying for four positions of leadership.
Power shedding plunges Tanzania into Total Darkness
The country now remains unproductive during the day and gets plunged into pitch darkness during the night
Outgoing Tanzania envoy in Muskat bids farewell to the Sultanate
The Sultanate of Oman has one of the oldest historical relationships with communities in Tanzania, especially in Zanzibar.
World Bank funds project to issue 2.5 Million Title Deeds to Landowners in Tanzania by 2026
This is probably the first initiative in Sub-Saharan Africa’s land sector to receive such a large amount of money from the World Bank.
New Railway line to link DR Congo with Zambia
This new railway infrastructure development is expected to form part of the envisaged Trans-African Corridor.
Towards Apimondia 2027: How Tanzania engages Apiculture in forests conservation
The country is making a much more profitable use of the nearly 10 million bee colonies, churning out 33,000 tons of honey every year according to the Tanzania Forest Services Agency (TFS).
Ismailis in Tanzania: They came, saw and invested, but why did they leave?
More than 90 percent of the buildings forming the Central Business District of Arusha and Dar-es-salaam Cities, were built and owned by the Ismailis.