Tanzania
has rich stocks of minerals. Apart from gold, the country exports copper,
nickel, silver, diamonds and other precious stones such as tanzanite. BBC
|
Tanzanian weekly tabloid
Mawio has been banned for two years after linking two former politicians with
the ongoing minerals saga in the country.
Jakaya
Kikwete was president of Tanzania from 2005 to 2015
|
A
presidential commission said earlier this week that Tanzania has lost 188
trillion Tanzanian shillings (US$84bn) over 19 years due to mining companies
under-reporting the amount of minerals they have been exporting.
The
tabloid is well known for its occasional investigative reports, but usually
publishes detailed and critical articles against the government.
In
a press release, the Minister for Information Harrison Mwakyembe said he had
"no option" but to ban the newspaper.
Tanzanian Newspaper
Suspended For Pointing Finger At Ex-Presidents
AFP
reports that Tanzanian weekly, Mawio, has been ordered to suspend publication
for two years after pointing the finger at two former presidents in connection
with huge revenue losses, the country's interior ministry said Friday.
The
weekly, regularly critical of the government, was suspended after it published
front page pictures of former presidents Jakaya Kikwete (2005-2015) and Benjamin
Mkapa (1995-2005) on Thursday, linking them with dubious mining contracts.
On
Wednesday, President John Magufuli had threatened "severe measures"
against any media that suggested Kikwete and Mkapa might be involved in signing
contracts that were disadvantage to the state.
Justice
Minister Palamagamba Kabudi pointed out that the former heads of state enjoyed
immunity from prosecution over events occurring during their mandates.
Mawio
went on to report comments by opposition MP Tundi Lissu, who told parliament
that Kikwete and Mkapa were mainly responsible for the controversial contracts
and that both should be summoned before an enquiry commission.
A
commission of enquiry set up by President John Magufuli on Monday estimated
that €75 billion (US$84 billion) had been lost in tax evasion arising
from mining operations since 1998.
The
panel found that the losses were primarily due to the failure of foreign
companies operating in Africa's fourth largest gold producer to declare
earnings. It blamed flawed contracts unfavourable to the state.
The
information ministry said that Mawio had made the accusations against the
former leaders when neither of two commissions set up by Magufuli to probe the
affair had blamed them for anything.
The
weekly was ordered to suspend publication of both its print edition and the
internet edition for 24 months from the date of notification.
Following
publication of reports on the mining sector, Magufuli ordered the revision of
laws on the allocation of mining contracts and asked prosecutors to question --
and even charge -- ministers of mining and of justice found to have signed
contracts harmful to state interests in recent years.
Magufuli
accused Canadian mining giant Barrick Gold of "stealing from us" in a
live televised address this week, but welcomed discussions when the firm's CEO
John Thornton flew to Tanzania on Wednesday.
Mawio
has already faced a government ban for its coverage of a political crisis after
elections late in December 2015 in the semi-autonomous Zanzibar islands. That
ban was lifted by the courts.
Tanzania has rich stocks of minerals. Apart from gold, the country exports copper, nickel, silver, diamonds and other precious stones such as tanzanite.
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