The facts matter. The European Parliament vote was not a final EU decision, nor did it suspend funding. Tanzania and the EU remain engaged through established consultation mechanisms.
Huyu ni Mtanzania pekee aliyetajwa kwenye #EpsteinFiles, Maria anatajwa kuongoza kazi ya kusafirisha mabinti wadogo kwenda kwenye Kisiwa na Epstein kilichopo Caribbean Sea Virgia. Kiwango hiki cha Ukatili mtu pekee anayeweza kufanya ni Maria. Huyu malaya kujiita mzalendo ni fixi.
HUU NDIO USAHIHI WA YALIYOJIRI KATIKA MJADALA NA UPIGAJI KURA WA BUNGE LA ULAYA KUHUSU MPANGO WA USHIRIKIANO KATI YA TANZANIA NA UMOJA WA ULAYA KWA MWAKA 2026.
Tujiepushe na wanaopotosha kuhusu jambo hili.
#KaziIendelee
In 2018, several donors suspended funding, yet Tanzania's GDP continued to grow and the country officially attained lower-middle-income status in 2020. Development is driven by production, investment, and resilience—not aid alone.
Tanzania's economy is now worth more than $85 billion, compared to about $50 billion a decade ago. Aid has played a role, but trade, investment, infrastructure, and the hard work of Tanzanians have been the real growth engines.
Tanzania reached lower-middle-income status despite global shocks, COVID-19 disruptions, and funding challenges. That achievement demonstrates the growing strength and diversification of the country's economy.
Today Tanzania is among Africa's fastest-growing economies and one of the region's major investment destinations. Temporary funding decisions by donors matter, but they do not define the destiny of a nation of over 65 million people.
Foreign aid can support development, but sustainable progress comes from domestic revenues, private investment, and productive sectors. Tanzania's continued growth despite past aid suspensions proves that point clearly.
Aid suspensions are not new to Tanzania. In 2018, Denmark, the UK, the EU, and Finland halted funding worth hundreds of billions of shillings. Yet Tanzania continued to grow and advance. Challenges come and go, but development must move forward.