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         Tanzania Regional History:     more detail
  1. Maziwi Island off Pangani (Tanzania): History of its destruction and possible causes (Regional seas) by Mario Fay, 1992
  2. Kilimanjaro: A Regional History: Production and Living Conditions 1800-1920 by Ludger Wimmelbucker, 2003-05-01
  3. Iron and regional history: Report on a research project in southwestern Tanzania by Marcia Wright, 1985
  4. Development for Exploitation: German Colonial Policies in Mainland Tanzania, 1884-1914, 2d ed. (book reviews): An article from: Canadian Journal of History by Philip Stigger, 1996-08-01
  5. Working papers in planning by Tukumbi Lumumba-Kasongo, 1992

21. History
In the past, Kenya, tanzania and Uganda have enjoyed a long history of cooperation under successive regional integration arrangements.
http://www.eac.int/history.htm
home site map search privacy ... contacts HISTORY
To contact us...
Call: +255 27 2504253/8
Fax: +255 27 2504255
Email: eac@eachq.org EAC Staff Login for Emails
East African Community Designed by Teknosell
From Co-operation to Community In the past, Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda have enjoyed a long history of co-operation under successive regional integration arrangements. These have included the Customs Union between Kenya and Uganda in 1917, which the then Tanganyika later joined in 1927; the East African High Commission (1948-1961); the East African Common Services Organisation (1961-1967); the East African Community (1967-1977) and the East African Co-operation (1993-2000). Following the dissolution of the former East African Community in 1977, the Member States negotiated a Mediation Agreement for the Division of Assets and Liabilities, which they signed in 1984. However, as one of the provisions of the Mediation Agreement, the three States agreed to explore areas of future co-operation and to make concrete arrangements for such co-operation.

22. World Telephone Numbering Guide
history history regional Services regional Services tanzania will change its mobile number formats, and update certain other service numbers throughout
http://www.wtng.info/wtng-255-tz.html
Updated 30 April 2005 By Country Code By Country Name Other WTNG pages Acknowledgements Main Page
Calendar

Glossary

History
...
What's New

Tanzania
Number Format
Area Code: 2-3 digits Subscriber Number: 4-7 digits Trunk Prefix: International Prefix: 000
Area code information
January-December 2005 - national renumbering
Tanzania will change its mobile number formats, and update certain other service numbers throughout 2005. From 1 January to 31 March 2005, numbers are re-assigned and announcements of the changes are published. On 1 April 2005, new numbering is activated. The old number format will run permissive with the new format until 30 December 2005. On 31 December 2005, the old numbering is unavailable, and new numbering is mandatory. Source: Tanzania Communications Regulatory Authority (TCRA) announcement (8 February 2005, via ITU).
Assigned number ranges
Mobile number changes
Mobile numbers are currently based on a 3-digit area code portion (the '74x' portion of +255 74x xxxxxx) followed by 6-digit subscriber number. On 31 December 2005, mobile numbers change to a '2+7' format, +255 7y zxxxxxx - y indicates the carrier, and z is a digit other than 0, 1, 8 and 9.

23. Overseas And Off-Campus Programs
East Africa Kenya/tanzania Program Study focuses on the history, Includes excursions to regional areas of interest and Florence.
http://www.lclark.edu/COLLEGE/DEPAR/OSOC/
@import "http://www.lclark.edu/trillium/global/style2.css"; Front Page Academics Overseas and Off-Campus Programs
A-Z Site Index
Overseas and Off-Campus Programs
Language Intensive Programs 2005-06
Chile: Santiago/Valparaiso
Prerequisites: Fall semester participation in the Dominican Republic (Santiago) program or three years of college Spanish courses. Cumulative GPA of 2.75 and 3.0 in the language.
Program (Fall/Spring/Full Year): Housing at either site is with Chilean families. In Santiago, following a four-week advanced intensive Spanish language course, students enroll in regular university courses at the Universidad de Chile and the Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, where they choose from courses in the humanities, social sciences, and sciences. In Valpara'so, following a four-week advanced intensive Spanish language course, students enroll in regular university courses at the Universidad Católica de Valpara'so (UCV), where they choose from courses in literature, history, environmental studies, oceanography, and psychology. This program is not appropriate for students who intend to study political science, anthropology, or sociology, because these courses are not offered at UCV.
China: Beijing/Harbin
Prerequisites: Two years of college Chinese for Beijing. Three years of college Chinese for Harbin. GPA of 3.0 in the language.

24. Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung Tanzania - History FES Tanzania
FES history Facts Work. FES tanzania Chronology. Trainee Programme Important goal of the cooperation is an economical and regional move together,
http://tanzania.fes-international.de/about-us-fes-tz.php
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FES Tanzania Chronology Trainee Programme FES Headquarters Other FES-Offices in Africa CHRONOLOGY OF THE WORK OF THE FES IN TANZANIA List of FES Representatives On 09.12. Tanganyika is ushered into independence under the Prime Minister Julius Nyerere. 1962, Nyerere becomes president. Tanganyika and Zanzibar are founding the United Republic of Tanzania. From the beginning on, the partnership is problematic. The African culture of the Mainland stands against the Islamic determined world of the Islands. In 1965, the diplomatic relations between the new Tanzania and the Federal Republic of Germany (FRG) are broken off within short notice, as according to the Hallstein Doctrine, FRG does not accept a diplomatic representation of GDR on the now Tanzanian island Zanzibar. The provisional constitution codifies a one-party-system, supported on the Mainland by TANU, in Zanzibar and Pemba by ASP. Julius Nyerere together with Walter Scheel (president of FRG) inaugurates the first German development project.

25. AMECEA History And Development
These themes tells us that although it was a regional gathering, the Bishops vision The First ITEBEA Plenary takes place in Dar es Salaam, tanzania.
http://www.amecea.org/amecea-history.htm
About Us Departments
  • Secretary General Social Communication
    • ADS
    Pastoral
    • ANA COLEA
    Institutions Countries Publications Vision Statistics SECAM ... Home THE HISTORY OF AMECEA BEGINNING OF AMECEA
    AMECEA (then ITEBEA) was the brainchild of the Catholic Bishops of Tanganyika (today's Tanzania). In 1960 they proposed, through the then Apostolic Delegation (today's Nunciature) in Nairobi, that there be collaboration among Catholic Bishops in the region. That time the following countries were under the Nairobi Apostolic Delegation namely Kenya, Nyasaland (today's Malawi), Uganda, Sudan, Tanganyika and Northern Rhodesia (today's Zambia). When these other Bishops' Conferences agreed to the necessity of working together, the then Apostolic Delegate (today's Nuncio) Monsignor Guido Del Mestri consulted Rome. Rome gave its approval. REASONS FOR SOLIDARITY
    There were at that time winds of change in both the Church and society in this region.

26. TABLES OF MODERN MONETARY HISTORY: REGIONAL TABLESby Kurt Schuler
TABLES OF MODERN MONETARY history regional TABLES by Kurt Schuler tanzania, pound sterling, 20, 1779.63. Togo, French franc*, 0.5, 1
http://users.erols.com/kurrency/authorities.htm
TABLES OF MODERN MONETARY HISTORY: REGIONAL TABLES
by Kurt Schuler
www.dollarization.org
Preliminary version, May 2005
I welcome comments from knowledgeable readers. Should you have a suggested correction, please specify the source of your information. I am most interested in information from primary sources, particularly laws and the reports of monetary authorities.
Notes So far the tables for Africa, Asia, and Australia/Pacific are finished, though they are subject to revision. "Present" refers to 2005 in the tables of monetary authorities.
Table. African countries that have had various types of monetary authorities Systems with competitive issue of the monetary base Free bankingCompetitive issue by banks of notes (paper money) and deposits with few special regulations. Fixed exchange rate with gold, silver, or a foreign currency. Lesotho (1902-21), Malawi (1894-1940), Mauritius (1813-17, 1817-24*, 1824-5, 1832-49), Namibia (1915-61), South Africa (1837-1920, 1920-1*), Swaziland (1897-1921), Zambia (1906-40), Zimbabwe (1892-1940). Besides these episodes, there was also limited competition in Mozambique (1919-42*). Botswana (1897) and Nigeria (sometime 1899-1912) had episodes of note issue by a single bank either too brief or not extensive enough to usefully classify as free banking. Free issueUnusual system with neither an exchange rate target nor centralized control of the monetary base.

27. Eastern Africa, 1600-1800 A.D. | Timeline Of Art History | The Metropolitan Muse
Timeline of Art history World Map regional Map introducing Swahili customs from the coastal region of presentday tanzania and Mozambique.
http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/ht/09/sfe/ht09sfe.htm
Encompasses present-day Sudan, Ethiopia, Eritrea, Djibouti, Somalia, Kenya, Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi, Kenya, Tanzania, northern Zambia, northern Malawi, and northern Mozambique
See also Central Africa Guinea Coast Southern Africa , and Western and Central Sudan Christian Ethiopia's political and territorial decline, which began in the sixteenth century, continues throughout this period due in part to encroachment by pastoral peoples and emergent Muslim states such as Harar, in western Ethiopia. Efforts to unify the Ethiopian Church and restore security and prosperity to the kingdom produce a period of artistic florescence centered at the capital city of Gondar. Along the East African coast, first Portugal and then the sultanate of Oman gain control of Swahili economic centers; Mombasa, in modern-day Kenya, becomes an important state in the eighteenth century under Omani rule. The East African interior, in present-day Rwanda, Burundi, Uganda, and western Kenya and Tanzania, witnesses the development of large states made powerful by trade and improved agriculture. At this time, emblems of leadership imported from the coast and Central Africa are adopted for use throughout the region.
Architecture displaying Islamic influences is built of stone or fossilized coral in Swahili settlements such as Mogadishu, Mombasa, Lamu, Zanzibar, and Kilwa. Windows and doorways are typically framed with

28. History
Taking its regional impact into account, it has been estimated that Haydom of tanzania, largely 15002000 m above sea level, in Arusha Region south of
http://www.haydom.no/en/history.htm
Haydom Lutheran Hospital, Tanzania
Friends of Haydom Foundation/ Stiftelsen Haydoms venner Home
Reports

Research
... Haydom Developement company Units at Haydom
Lena's_Ward
Op. Theatre

Nursing School

Epilepsy
...
Eye Clinic

Projects at Haydom
HIV/AIDS
Primary-School
Roads Nursing choir ... Library Other L etters
HISTORY
Haydom Lutheran Hospital (HLH) was first built by the Norwegian Lutheran Mission in 1953 at the request of the then existing government authorities with a capacity of 50 beds. It is about 80 km. south -west of district headquarters and about 300 km. from Arusha which is the main town and regional centre. (See map) Government wanted to develop the area ,cleared for tze tze asked mission to build. The administration of the hospital was handed over to the local church , the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Tanzania,(ELCT), Mbulu Synod , in 1963. The hospital is under the Medical Board which in turn is elected by the General Assembly of ELCT, Mbulu Synod. In 1967, after an obvious need to expand, the Lutheran World Federation and OXFAM (UK) and "Brot fur die Welt" funded the extension to a capacity of 250 beds. The hospital was officially opened by the then President, J.K. Nyerere. In 1983 E.Z.E (Germany) funded an extension and a modern building for laboratory and pediatric ward. Today HLH has a total of 350 beds, but most of the time the number of inpatients is up to 400 a day. The hospital has been part of the Tanzanian central health plan since 1967.

29. Your Description
Environmental Geology. regional Interests East Africa tanzania, Zanzibar, West Africa Introduction to African history to the Sixteenth Century,
http://www.uga.edu/afrstu/facstaff/core.htm
African Studies Institute Home Certficate in African Studies Minor in African Studies Group Project Abroad (GPA) ... Photo Album Africanist Core Faculty African Studies / Comparative Literature
Office: 321 Holmes/Hunter Bldg. / 131 Joe Brown Hall
Phone: (706) 542-5314 / (706) 542-2140
Web: www.uga.edu/afrstu / www.uga.edu/cml Lioba Moshi
Director, African Studies / Professor
321 Holmes / Hunter Building (706) 542-5314
141 Joe Brown Hall (706) 542-2133
moshi@uga.edu
Education: Ph.D.-University of California, Los Angeles Current Research Interest: Discourse Analysis, Socio-Linguistics, African Languages Pedagogy Course Taught: Language Gender and Culture, Discourse Analysis, Introduction to Linguistics, Introduction to Africa, Intermediate/Advanced Swahili Regional Interests: East Africa [Tanzania] Akinloye Ojo
Academic Professional / Coordinator, Certificate and Minor in African Studies
317 Homes / Hunter Building (706) 542-5314
147 Joe Brown Hall (706) 542-7730 akinloye@uga.edu

30. Affiliated Faculty & Staff
Current Research Interests Arabic, Culture and history of the Middle East. regional Interests regional Interests East Africa tanzania, Somalia
http://www.uga.edu/afrstu/facstaff/aff.htm
African Studies Institute Home Certficate in African Studies Minor in African Studies Group Project Abroad (GPA) ... Photo Album Agriculture and Applied Economics
Office: Rural Development Center, Tifton
Phone: (229) 386-3512
Esendugue Greg Fonsah
Assistant Professor / Extension Economist
Rural Development Center (229) 386-3512
P.O. Box 1209
Tifton, GA 31793
gfonsah@uga.edu
Education: Ph.D.-University of Nigeria, Nsukka Current Research Interests: The British Mbos Tribe of Cameroon Agricultural and Environmental Sciences
Office: 102 Conner Hall
Phone: (706) 542-1611 Web: http://ugacescn.ces.uga.edu/caeshome Edward Kanemasu 120 Four Towers (706) 542-0812 ekanema@uga.edu Education: Ph.D.-University of Wisconsin Current Research Interests: Agricultural Meteorology Remote Sensing, Sustainable agriculture in Mali, Peanut CRSP in Ghana Regional Interests: East and West Africa [Uganda, Mali]

31. The Working-class History Of The United Republic Of Tanzania
The workingclass history of the United Republic of tanzania. Sex Workers Ask for Help With Securing Rights UN Integrated regional Information Network,
http://www.hartford-hwp.com/archives/36/index-cd.html
The working-class history of the United Republic of Tanzania
Hartford Web Publishing is not the author of the documents in World History Archives
Over 4,000 Workers At Kilombero Sugar Factory On Strike Public Servants Teeter On The Brink Of Redundancies ... Tanzania Declares All Trade Unions Defunct
TOMRIC Agency, 5 July 2000. The government has declared all trade unions in Tanzania defunct effective from July 1, this year and their registration supposed to start afresh. The government did not explain why the defunct was necessary, but he said that the new unions should be strong and united, rather than having disunited ones. Since 1998 the TFTU has over 10 affiliated trade unions.
Trade Unions Re-registration Starts
TOMRIC Agency, 13 September 2000. Three of ten trade unions which were declared defunct have been presented with new registration certificates after meeting most necessary requirements, including TUICO, TPAWU and COTWU. These were the Tanzania Union of Industrial and Commercial Workers (TUICO), Tanzania Plantation and Agricultural Workers Union (TPAWU) and Transport Workers Trade Union (COTWU). By Faustine Rwambali

32. The Contemporary Political History Of East Africa As A Whole
The Presidents of Kenya, Uganda and tanzania have signed a treaty forming an East Five years after the effective resumption of regional cooperation,
http://www.hartford-hwp.com/archives/36/index-ab.html
The contemporary political history of East Africa as a whole
Hartford Web Publishing is not the author of the documents in World History Archives
Cooperation with Mauritius
The Indian Ocean Newsletter , 4 February 1995. Delegates to the third meeting of the Seychelles-Mauritius joint cooperation commission, held in Mahe on January 31 and February first, agreed to bilaterial cooperation in education, industry, and agriculture.
Capitals Rocked By Bomb Blasts
By Philip Ngunjiri, IPS, 7 August 1998. A powerful bomb near the Kenyan Cooperative Bank and the United States Embassy has so far left more than 24 people dead. A similar explosion hit the Tanzanian capital of Dar es Salaam Friday, killing at least six people and injuring 72 others.
Analysts Look beyond Tragic Bombings to Assess Future of East Africa
From Institute for Public Accuracy, 13 August 1998. Major issues confronting Kenya, Tanzania and neighboring countries.
Bombings in Africa Raise Many Questions
By Monica Moorhead

33. Regional Activities - Africa
It is the first time in the history of Interpol as organisation that regional Zanzibar, tanzania, 19 August, 2002; Speech by the president of the United
http://www.interpol.int/Public/Region/Africa/Default.asp
26 September 2005
Home
Search Contact Help
Recent adds - Africa 6th meeting of the Central African Police Chiefs Committee - Minutes Africa: 4th Regional Training Course Regional activities
Africa
Police co-operation in Africa Interpol high representative visit in Africa 2003 History of the membership Fact sheet: Africa Sub-Directorate Countries of the four sub-regions of Africa south of Sahara Nairobi Sub-Regional Bureau ... Regional Training Course
History of the membership The continent's position as a crossroads between the Americas, Europe and Asia also lays it open to transnational crimes such as traffic in weapons, illicit drug trafficking, illegal immigration, traffic in stolen motor vehicles and fraud, which can only be stopped by international co-operation. Seeking and locating the criminals involved poses problems relating to information exchange, international identification and arrests with a view to extradition. This is why Interpol-in accordance with Article 2 (1) of its Constitution-ensures the closest possible co-operation between the criminal police authorities of all member countries, including those in Africa. Crime is not associated with a particular region and is certainly not a problem for Africa alone. Ever since it was established, the International Criminal Police Organization - Interpol has been seen by countries all over the world as an institution whose principles and objectives correspond to universal aspirations for human rights, public safety and the fight against ordinary law crime.

34. Memory Of The World Register - National Archives / German Records - Tanzania
Owner ; Custodian tanzania National Archives; regional or National Memory of the history of preservation . tanzania National Archives value the
http://www.unesco.org/webworld/mdm/1997/eng/tanzania/form.html
Memory of the World Register - Nomination Form Tanzania - German Records / Archives Abstract Part A - Essential Information Identity and Location Legal Information Identification Management Plan ... Nominator Part B - Subsidiary Information Assessment of Risk Preservation Assessment Abstract
The German Records show in an outstanding way what the situation was during the "great period" when most of the European powers were busy to divide Africa (East Africa included) among themselves in the form of colonies. During this period, many events took place which changed the face of Africa, changes which can only be understood by referring to these documents. For example, before the First World War, the German East Africa colony comprised Tanganyika (present Tanzania), Rwanda and Burundi, but after the war, these three countries were separated and an internationally recognized boundary was drawn between them. This is documented by the German Records.
Identity and Location
Name of the Documentary Heritage:
German Records / Archives Country:
Tanzania State, Province or Region:

35. Social Impact Of Adjt In Tanzania
The supply of drugs in regional and district hospitals has been erratic and many ed., Feeding African Cities Studies in regional Social history.
http://www.brad.ac.uk/research/ijas/tazadj2.htm
The Social Impact of Adjustment in Tanzania in the 1980s: Economic Crisis and Household Survival Strategies. Contents Mahmood MESSKOUB Population and Development Programme Institute of Social Studies PO Box 29776 2502 LT . The Hague The Netherlands School of Business and Economic Studies University of Leeds Leeds LS2 9JT UK I would like to acknowledge the financial support of the UNFPA and of the Population and Development Programme of the Institute of Social Studies (the Hague). I would also like to thank the Nobel Institute (Oslo) where I wrote an earlier draft of this paper. The first draft benefited from the comments of Ray Bush, Ardeshir Sepehri and John Loxley. Alas, they cannot be responsible for any remaining errors! I- Introduction In the ranking of the world's poorest countries, the position of Tanzania changed dramatically in the 1980s. It dropped from the 14th poorest country in 1982, with a GNP per capita of $280, to the second poorest in 1990, with a GNP per capita of $110. A more telling piece of evidence of the deteriorating economic conditions of the masses of Tanzanians is the declining growth of the real GDP per capita in the 1980s. Whilst for most of the 1960s and 1970s the real GDP per capita was growing at an average annual rate of 1.5-1.9 per cent, it registered a negative annual growth rate of 2 percent in the 1981-86 period. (Maliyamkono and Bagachwa, 1990, World Bank, 1984, World Bank, 1992) It was during this period that the Tanzanian government started negotiations with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank (WB) leading to the adoption of a series of structural adjustment and economic recovery programmes in the 1980s. The social impact of these programmes on Tanzania is the subject of this article.

36. NHBS Spring Catalogue: Regional Natural History & Travel
Download regional Natural history Travel as a .pdf document NHBS Home Page Environmental history in tanzania s Usambara Mountains
http://www.nhbs.com/webcat/ss05p9.html
NHBS Spring Catalogue Our Wildlife, Science and Conservation Catalogue customer.services@nhbs.co.uk Encounters: A Journey Through The Wild is a fantastic introduction to Sri Lanka's amazing wildlife. African Biodiversity Molecules, Organisms, Ecosystems is available in May - a key title for conservation biologists. Also of interest will be the revealing Canned Lion Hunting: A National Disgrace.
A whole host of Les Beletsky's highly popular Traveller's Wildlife Guides are newly available with more on the way.
Back to the start of the Spring Catalogue

NHBS Home Page

Africa

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Polar
Editor's Choice Act III in Patagonia
William Conway
The first book to take an in-depth look at wildlife and human interaction in this spectacular area of the world. Written by William Conway, former president of the ....
320 pages,
Traveller's Wildlife Guide to Belize and Northern Guatemala
Les Beletsky Contains all the information you need to find, identify, and learn about the region's magnificent exotic wildlife. It .... 477 pages, col photos, col illus.

37. International Team Project: Tanzania Research Checklist--Pritzker Legal Research
Recent history/Politics Refugee/regional/Tribal Religion Women s Issues regional and International Organizations. Note tanzania may not be members of
http://www.law.northwestern.edu/lawlibrary/research/foreign/tanzania.htm
Pritzker Legal Research Center Research Resources Foreign and International Legal Resources > International Team Project: Tanzania, Research Checklist
International Team Project: Tanzania Research Checklist
Introduction
This is a selective list of resources prepared for students participating in International Team Project: Tanzania at Northwestern University School of Law in the Spring 2005 semester. By way of background, the law library has very few books specifically dealing with Tanzania although it subscribes to a number of electronic resources that provide up to date and valuable country information. You are encouraged to explore the Africana collection of the University Library in Evanston, one of the best collections of African materials in the United States (Reference Department telephone number: 847-467-3084). Also use the Research Resources portion of the Law Library website. In particular, see: Foreign and International Legal Resources , under such topics as Human Rights and Humanitarian Law . For areas other than law, see the Main Library's list of

38. Nairobi, Regional Delegation (Comoros, Djibouti, Kenya, Madagascar, Mauritius, S
*history *Structure *Finances and budget *Human resources tanzania UGANDA. COMOROS In February the regional delegate was received by the Head of State.
http://www.icrc.org/web/eng/siteeng0.nsf/iwpList140/2C9F4FA391E53D21C1256B660058
About the ICRC ICRC activities The ICRC worldwide Focus ... Print this page Annual Report Nairobi, regional delegation (Comoros, Djibouti, Kenya, Madagascar, Mauritius, Seychelles, Tanzania, Uganda)
Introduction
In 1994 the regional delegation in Nairobi once again provided a range of services for major ICRC operations in the region. Many of the agricultural and water and sanitation programmes implemented in East Africa required backup from Nairobi. The regional delegation also provided logistic support, tracing services, telecommunications, administrative assistance and information and press services for the large-scale operation in Rwanda. For tracing services alone, the delegation in Nairobi hired about 60 employees to work around the clock processing the files for Rwanda. Details concerning some 60,000 people were entered on computer in Nairobi. Activities were also conducted in Tanzania and Uganda for victims of the conflict in Rwanda and of those in Sudan and Somalia (see the relevant chapters).
The regional water and sanitation coordinator worked mainly in connection with the crisis in Rwanda. Several evaluation missions were conducted early in the year from Burundi and Uganda to areas controlled by the two sides; these were followed up with logistic support. The ICRC dispatched chemicals (some 300 tonnes of aluminium sulphate and 50 tonnes of chlorination products) for water treatment from the delegation in Nairobi and from Kampala and Dar es Salaam. Emergency repair equipment was also supplied. In addition, the regional coordinator gave support to the ICRC's water and sanitation activities in Somalia and Sudan.

39. Nairobi, Regional Delegation (Djibouti, Kenya, Tanzania And Uganda)
*history *Structure *Finances and budget *Human resources The ICRC s main activity in the Ngara region of tanzania was tracing, though no crossborder
http://www.icrc.org/web/eng/siteeng0.nsf/iwpList143/603159DA0CC70366C1256B660059
About the ICRC ICRC activities The ICRC worldwide Focus ... Print this page Annual Report Nairobi, regional delegation (Djibouti, Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda)
Introduction
In 1995the ICRC:
centralized data concerning 65,000 unaccompanied children in the Great Lakes region;
locally procured 3,800 tonnes and dispatched a total of over 41,400 tonnes of food and other assistance for ICRC operations in Burundi (580 tonnes), Rwanda (39,400 tonnes), Somalia (400 tonnes), the Sudan (900 tonnes) and Zaire (120 tonnes);
procured locally and dispatched surgical and medical supplies worth Sfr 3,305,302 million for ICRC operations at Lokichokio and in the Sudan, Somalia, Rwanda, Burundi, Zaire, Ethiopia, Tanzania, Madagascar and Malawi.

Djibouti
A peace agreement signed between the government and the FRUD* opposition on 26 December 1994 had put an end to three years of internal armed conflict. Although not completely calm, the situation was relatively stable in 1995.
In June the ICRC visited four security detainees, including two who were seen for the first time, at the central prison.
During the year the ICRC's office in Djibouti served as a logistics base for the operation in Somaliland.

40. The Dorobo Peoples Of Kenya And Tanzania The Dorobo Peoples Of
In tanzania, the Dorobo groups Aramanick and Kisankasa still speak Cushite languages, Okiek history, Kenya Before 1900 Eight regional Studies.
http://www.ogiek.org/indepth/dorobo-people.htm
The Dorobo Peoples of Kenya and Tanzania The Dorobo Peoples of Kenya and Tanzania A people profile B y Orville Boyd Jenkins
August 1996 Religion : Animism
Population
Status
: 1% Christian Location : The "Dorobo" are not one tribe. Rather, the term Dorobo referred to the original forest-dwelling hunters in the Rift Valley of what is now Kenya and Tanzania. These peoples live in scattered groups in the plains of the Rift Valley and the forests of the neighboring escarpments. History : Southern Cushite peoples, followed by Eastern Cushites, settled in East Africa's Rift Valley during the first millennium after Christ. They found San (Bushmen) peoples already here. Bantu traditions refer to these early peoples whom their ancestors found there. Early Nilotes, then various waves of Bantu and later Nilotes subsequently came into the area. The Kikuyu refer to a people in Central Province as the Athi (the ground people), after the source the names Athi Plains and Athi River. Oral traditions say the Kikuyu paid the Athi to move into their land. The Athi seem to be either the Cushites or the original San people. (The Sandawe and the Hadzapi in northern Tanzania still speak San languages. The Bantu name "Twa" for the pygmies in Rwanda-Burundi-Zaire is the same word the Zulus use for the Khoisan click-language speakers they found in their early migrations into what is now Natal Province. There is still a San tribe there today called Twa.)

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