Saturday, March 27, 2021

What African leaders had to say about President John Magufuli

By Jael Mboga 
Military officers salute the coffin of late Tanzanian President John Pombe Magufuli draped in the national flag at Uhuru stadium, Dar es Salaam, on March 20, 2021. [Reuters]

?Tanzania former President John Pombe Magufuli’s state funeral was held in Dodoma on Monday.

Some of the heads of state who attended had this to say:

1. DRC’s President Felix Tshisekedi

*President John Magufuli’s death is a continental mourning period.

*He pushed for the economic development for both country and continent.

*He taught those around him to push for change and fight graft.

2. South Africa President Cyril Ramaphosa

*President John Magufuli was unapologetic about being an African.

*Tanzania helped South Africa in its fight against Apartheid.

*Thanked Magufuli for standing out as a warrior against corruption.

*Reminded leaders to work for the people, not themselves.

*Pushed for the use of African languages widely, especially Swahili.

3. Botswana President Mokgweetsi Masisi

*President John Magufuli will be remembered for his contribution of troops along with Malawi and South Africa for yielding peace in eastern DRC.

*His ideals remain in our minds and hearts.

*Was a great teacher almost like Julius Nyerere, even to us in Botswana.

4. Comoros Island President Azali Assoumani

*His passion and leadership was known and admired by all

*We have lost someone who pushed for Africa and Tanzania freedom.

*President John Magufuli heard our problems and improve unity.

5. Malawi President Lazarus Chakwera

*President John Magufuli was Africa’s finest sons.

*He pushed for hard work and destroyed lazy cartels.

*Africa states can become middle-income countries within a single President’s term.

*President Magufuli taught Africa that infrastructure projects can be finished on time and within budget.

*He proved that we can succeed even if we do not follow foreign countries’ blueprints that leaves Africa in debt.

*Magufuli’s was a life of service and a guiding principle.

*He was not just an icon. He was a hero. The kind of resolve that will create the Africa we want.

6. Zambia President Edgar Lungu

*President John Magufuli had a selfless resolve to bring prosperity to the people of Tanzania.

*He had an immense contribution for the growth of SADC, especially through his recent chairmanship of the bloc.

*Praised for pushing for the supply of engine oils and lubricants in the Tanzania-Zambia deal.

*In 2019 he and Lungu opened the Nakonde one stop border stop to improve trade.

7. Zimbabwe President Emerson Mnangagwa

*It’s a dark day in Tanzania, region and the whole continent.

*President John Magufuli dedicated his life to the service of his people and the African continent.

*He was a soldier in ensuring Tanzania’s people’s growth.

*Established a reputation as a man of action to hasten development.

*Zimbabwe was inspired when it learned TZ attained lower-middle-income status five years before deadline. It was one of the main milestones of achievement which are testimony of the leadership of Magufuli.

*He led SADC from August 2019-20, when he steered the bloc towards inclusive industrial development and jobs creation.

*Magufuli will be remembered for his role as chairperson to have SADC set aside October 25 to leaders to speak out against sanctions imposed on Zimbabwe.

*In 2019 Zimbabwe was devastated alongside Malawi following Cyclone Idai, but Tanzania was among the first countries to donate food and medical supplies.

8. Burundi VP Prosper Bazombana

*Burundi is equally in mourning and flying flags at half-mast.

*President John Magufuli’s bravery brought development to the people of Tanzania.

*Burundi and Tanzania started a great relationship even before independence, and will continue to work together.

9. Namibia VP Nangolo Mbumba

*President John Magufuli is referred to as the grand-uncle of Africa’s independence.

*He was a leader who believed in spending his time helping his people.

*Boosted relations with Namibia by opening the first embassy in Windhoek.

*Pushed for the wide use of Swahili language.

Also in attendance at the Dodoma state funeral were ambassadors and heads of diplomatic missions who represented Japan, Finland, Oman, Denmark, Norway, France, Qatar, Cuba, Korea and Spain among others.

Magufuli, 61, will be buried in his native home in Chato district in Geita region on March 26.

Magufuli had not been seen in public since February 27, sparking rumours that he had contracted Covid-19. Officials denied on March 12 that he had fallen ill. He was Tanzania’s first president to die while in office.

Magufuli died of heart disease Wednesday at the Emilio Mzena Hospital in the business capital Dar es Salaam. He leaves behind widow Janet, seven children and 10 grandchildren.

 

No comments :

Post a Comment