Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The National Assembly of Tanzania was formed as the Legislative Council of Tanzania Mainland – then known as Tanganyika – in 1926. The Council was formed under a law enacted by the British Parliament called the Tanganyika Legislative Council Order and Council. The law was gazetted in Tanganyika on 18 June 1926.
The PBU network includes two television channels: Bunge TV, which broadcasts live sessions of the National Assembly covering Nairobi and parts of neighbouring counties, and Senate TV, which broadcasts live sessions of the Senate covering Nairobi and parts of neighbouring counties. Both channels are available on the Signet terrestrial free-to ...
Name Took office Left office Notes Adam Sapi Mkwawa: 26 April 1964 19 November 1973 Mkwawa was elected as Speaker of the National Assembly of Tanganyika on 27 November 1962 [2]
Bunge (BG) is seeing favorable earnings estimate revision activity and has a positive Zacks Earnings ESP heading into earnings season.
Tanzania has a five-level judiciary, which comprises the jurisdictions of tribal, Islamic, and British common law. [9] In mainland Tanzania, appeal is from the Primary Courts through the District Courts and Resident Magistrate Courts, to the High Courts, ending in the federal Court of Appeal. The Zanzibar court system parallels the legal system ...
Elections in Tanzania occur on both the local and national levels. The local government holds elections for street or village chair people. General elections at the national level elect the President and the members of the National Assembly. The president is elected for a five-year term. [1]
Radio Tanzania - established 1 July 1965 The board of the corporation was dissolved. The structure of the corporation was changed. It became part of the government's Ministry of Information and Tourism. Radio Tanzania established 2 stations IN 1973 Swahili service later called ‘Idhaa ya Taifa’ or the National Service; English service
The party was created on February 5, 1977, under the leadership of Julius Kambarage Nyerere, the Founding Father of Tanzania (then Tanganyika) through the merger of the Tanganyika African National Union (TANU), the ruling party in Tanganyika, and the Afro-Shirazi Party (ASP), the ruling party in Zanzibar.