Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The National Assembly of Tanzania (Swahili: Bunge la Tanzania) and the President of the United Republic of Tanzania make up the Parliament of Tanzania. [2] The current Speaker of the National Assembly is Tulia Ackson, who presides over a unicameral assembly of 393 members. [3]
Mkwawa was elected as Speaker of the National Assembly of Tanganyika on 27 November 1962 [2] Erasto Andrew Mbwana Mang'enya: 20 November 1973 5 November 1975 [2] Adam Sapi Mkwawa: 6 November 1975 25 April 1994 [2] Pius Msekwa: 28 April 1994 28 November 2005 Retired [2] Samuel Sitta: 28 December 2005 2010 Retired [2] Anne Makinda: 10 November ...
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 ...
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 National Assembly, or Bunge la Jamhuri ya Muungano, has 323 members: 232 members elected for a five-year term in single-seat constituencies and 75 seats allocated to women who are elected by the political parties that are represented in the National Assembly.
A longtime hairdresser at Fox Sports has sued the company, alleging that she was fired after raising a series of concerns about workplace misconduct, and after repeatedly refusing to have sex with ...
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.
The official, who isn’t authorized to speak publicly about politics, said it follows other examples of prominent liberals’ refusing to give up power, including Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif ...