@InexorablesoG Huu ujio ni sehemu ya mkakati wa sasa, ili kuongezea nyama ule mjadala wa bungeni pamoja na kauli za Kombo.
The guy ni completely project.
Dear Mr. President @realDonaldTrump
If you were to remove this murderous leader from Africa, just as you removed Maduro from Venezuela without civilian casualties you would be regarded as a hero across the African continent. Africans remain deeply shocked that on October 29 2025 Tanzanian’s illegitimate president, Samia Suluhu shut down the internet and electricity nationwide for 72 hours and then ordered the killing of more than 10,000 Tanzanians. Two months later, she remains in power, and there has been no meaningful response from either the African Union (AU) or SADC.
Some critics have condemned those of us who are appealing for U.S. intervention, arguing that Tanzanians should confront this brutal regime on their own. Let me be clear: Tanzanians did resist. On October 29 2025,they took to the streets, and they were met with live bullets. Protesters were shot dead until the demonstrations were completely crushed. Even those who were at home, they were shot in their homes just instill fear.
So I ask a simple question to anyone who doesn’t support US intervention in Tanzania how many more Tanzanians must be killed by their own government before U.S. intervention is considered justified? Please give us a number. Is it 50,000 more? Or 100,000 more?
To those who argue that the United States will not assist Tanzania because it lacks crude oil, that is not the main reason Maduro is no longer president of Venezuela. The real reason he was easily removed is that his own people rejected him and considered him an illegitimate leader. This is the case in Tanzania. The country will literally take to the streets to celebrate the end of the brutal CCM/Samia era.
As for the “America First” policy, Tanzania possesses vast natural resources, including uranium, natural gas, coal, nickel, lithium, gold, tanzanite, and diamonds. These resources are currently being heavily exploited by countries such as the UAE, China, and Russia. These same countries continue to support the murderous regime. These countries do not care about Tanzanian lives, they don’t care how many of us get murdered by the government as long as they get to loot. In fact, the UAE is supplying the Tanzania government with weapons that are being used to kill civilians.
If the United States were to support the people of Tanzania, we would end the strategic dominance of the UAE, China, and Russia and instead build a strong partnership with the U.S. This would be a win–win situation for both nations.
@realDonaldTrump Please also urge Mr. Zuck to reinstate my Instagram, facebook and WhatsApp accounts that were taken down 4 weeks ago after meta was pressured by the Tanzanian government. It’s alarming that US tech companies are helping authoritarian government to censor critics. Also 1 tech company should not be allowed to own so many critical social media platforms. In 1 hour I was literally removed from 3 major platforms simply because 1 company owns them.
I’ve just seen the reports about Meta suspending Mange Kimambi ’s Facebook and Instagram pages, apparently after pressure from the Samia Suluhu Tanzanian government.
This is exactly why I’ve never fully trusted Meta.
Why would Mark Zuckerberg bow to political pressure from any government, especially when the voice being silenced has been speaking for democracy?
Mange has been highlighting the struggles of ordinary Tanzanian families. She has been highlighting the deaths and killings done by the Tanzanian government against Tanzanians
She has been raising uncomfortable truths.
If anything, that voice deserves protection, not punishment.
Silencing critics doesn’t solve injustice.
It only deepens the wounds of a people already fighting to be heard. Meta is now enabling injustices.
My people, if you can, tag Meta in the replies and demand fairness.
No platform should assist in suppressing civic voices anywhere.
Facebook
Restore Mange Kimambi’s accounts.
Restore fairness.
Restore the right of the people to speak.