Search Results for: Tanzanian
10 results out of 22 results found for 'Tanzanian'.
OPEN UNIVERSITY OF TANZANIA OPENS NEW FRONTIERS ABROAD
The Open University of Tanzania (OUT) is reaching out to higher education institutions in other neighbouring countries to establish collaborations that will encourage more foreign students to enroll for distance learning.
University vice chancellor Professor Tolly Mbwette said the institution’s board hoped to spread its influence regionally: “We are now the largest distance learning university in the region and our plan is to take distance learning to most countries in East Africa and those under the Southern African Development Community [SADC] by 2016.”…
EAST AFRICAN AIRPORTS EXPANDING APACE
Rapidly increasing continental air traffic has fuelled intense competition among east African countries in constructing and upgrading airport infrastructure. Indeed, investments could exceed USD1.7 billion in the next three years, according to Andrew Luzze, the executive director of the East African Business Council.…
AIRPORT SQUATTERS EVICTED AS KILIMANJARO INTERNATIONAL IS EXPANDED
THE TANZANIAN Government has awarded a USD30 million contract to the Netherlands’ BAM International to upgrade Kilimanjaro International Airport. Bakari Murusuri, managing director of BAM’s local affiliate Kilimanjaro Airports Development Company said the terminal building, aprons, taxiways and the runway would be expanded.…
OUP ADMITS SUBSIDIARIES BRIBED AFRICAN OFFICIALS FOR TEXTBOOK SALES
BY KEITH NUTHALL
AN ARM of the Oxford University Press (OUP) will pay GBP1.89 million through a UK High Court civil recovery order for illegally bribing Tanzanian and Kenyan officials to win school textbook contracts. The bribes were made through Oxford Publishing Limited’s (OPL) Kenyan and Tanzanian subsidiaries OUP East Africa and OUP Tanzania.…
SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA PUSHES FORWARD WITH ATC IMPROVEMENTS
BY BILL CORCORAN, WACHIRA KIGOTHO, PAUL COCHRANE; and KEITH NUTHALL
SUB-SAHARAN Africa has always been regarded as a problem zone for air traffic control, with weak states struggling to provide the sophisticated and flexible communications required for state of the art ATC.…
TANZANIA'S TRANSFORMATION FROM SOCIALISM TO CAPITALISM HAS LEFT ITS BUSINESS ETHICS FLOUNDERING
BY JOHN K AGUNDA
IF there was one African country where a business forum on ethics was most appropriate, it might well be Tanzania, given its immediate post-independence history of socialism and self-reliance.
Those purist 1960s and 1970s days of former President Julius Nyerere and his ‘ujamaa’ leftism are now history, of course, with Tanzania, very much part of the gloablised liberal capitalist mainstream.…
WORLD BANK PLANS INVESTMENTS IN THREE TANZANIA AIRPORTS
BY KEITH NUTHALL
THE WORLD Bank is planning to sink US dollars USD57.5 million into three Tanzania regional airports: Bukoba, Kigoma and Tabora. The financing will be managed by the Tanzanian Airports Authority (TAA), which will itself be spending USD11.7 million on these projects.…
BIOFUELS PRODUCTION INCREASES IN EASTERN AFRICA
BY WACHIRA KIGOTHO
EAST Africa is developing as an important source of biofuels and biofuel feedstock, with governments keen to attract foreign direct investment for this potentially strategic rural development option.
Ethiopia, Kenya, Mozambique, Sudan, and Tanzania are countries where foreign companies are competing to acquire land for biofuel projects.…
NOVEL TOBACCO CURING TECHNOLOGY COULD BE SAVIOUR FOR MALAWI FLUE-CURED LEAF SECTOR
BY BILL CORCORAN, in Lilongwe, Malawi
THE WIDESPREAD implementation of new technological developments in Malawi’s flue-cured tobacco process could enable local producers to dramatically increase their output and its quality, according to industry experts.
Results from tests run during Malawi’s latest tobacco curing season using a new method of heating have shown a dramatic improvement in energy efficiency over standard methods, and an improved quality of the end product compared to traditionally cured tobacco.…
NOVEL TOBACCO CURING TECHNOLOGY COULD BE SAVIOUR FOR MALAWI FLUE-CURED LEAF SECTOR
BY BILL CORCORAN, in Lilongwe, Malawi
THE WIDESPREAD implementation of new technological developments in Malawi’s flue-cured tobacco process could enable local producers to dramatically increase their output and its quality, according to industry experts.
Results from tests run during Malawi’s latest tobacco curing season using a new method of heating have shown a dramatic improvement in energy efficiency over standard methods, and an improved quality of the end product compared to traditionally cured tobacco.…