Summary
·
Given that
the country is urbanising fast there is need to give urban areas special
attention
In observing two years since the passing on of President John Pombe Magufuli, some moaning his
absence, there has been, at the same, discussions and evaluations of two years since President Samia Suluhu Hassan made history by becoming the first female President of the United Republic of Tanzania, many pointing out the achievements that she has realised.Most of President Magufuli’s
strategic undertakings are continuing to be implemented; although in some
areas, President Samia has charted her own route. Comparing these two
personalities would be a gargantuan task. So, a practical approach would be for
one to select their area of interest and make their observations. I am an
urbanist, and anything to do with developing and managing urban areas and real
estate, is of interest to me.
In this respect, President Magufuli
distinguished himself from many others, when he allowed informal sector
operators, nationally known as machingas, to operate from anywhere. This saw
informal activities mushrooming and thriving in every corner of urban areas
where business could be conducted. President Samia went for bringing law and
order in urban areas by requiring machingas to operate from authorised areas
only. There were city clean-ups early in her Presidency. This, however, seems
to be slowly getting reversed. Machingas are resilient, and they have
surreptitiously crept back to where they believe are good locations for their
kind of business, the construction of modern market buildings for them,
notwithstanding.
The use of space in our urban areas
is largely unplanned. President Magufuli’s focus was mainly on large
infrastructure such as roads, flyovers, bridges, terminals, railways, not land
use planning. How one wishes, he could have one day appeared unexpected in the
middle of a dense squatter area to share ideas with residents who live in
overcrowded, unserviced and low quality neighbourhoods; to hear their
grievances and share their expectations. Alas, this never happened. During
President Samia’s two years, we see a lot of improvement in urban
infrastructure; urban movement is being eased such as with the extension of the
BRT in Dar es Salaam. There is relative stability in the supply of urban water
and electricity. The street-naming and house-numbering project is now easing
city dwellers’ identification with their locations. The list of achievements is
quite long.
Given that the country is urbanising
fast there is need to give urban areas special attention. We need a proper
definition of what an urban area is, and how these should be graded, from say a
trade centre, a town, a municipality and a city. We have seen, not only in
Tanzania, but also in neighbouring countries such as Uganda, when residents of
an urban area could go to bed living in a town and wake up the next day living
in a city.
In April 2020, the Ugandan
Parliament voted for the creation of 15 new cities in the country, over a four
year period. Thus, from one city, Kampala in 2020, Uganda would have 16 cities
come July 2023. Effective 1st July 2020 the following urban areas became
cities: Arua, Gulu, Jinja, Mbarara, Fort Portal, Mbale and Masaka.
On 1st July 2021 Hoima became a
city. On July 1 2022, Entebbe and Lira became cities. And, come July 1, 2023,
Moroto, Nakasongola, Soroti, Kabale and Wakiso will become cities.
These urban areas are not comparable
and their declaration as cities is mainly political.
The late President Magufuli created
a number of municipalities and cities by declaration.
In April 2018, the President marked
Union Day by declaring Dodoma a City, up from a Municipality. Dodoma became the
6th city in the country joining Dar es Salaam, Mwanza, Tanga, Mbeya and Arusha.
Three years later in February 2021
President Magufuli dissolved the Dar es Salaam City Council and declared the Ilala
Municipality a city authority. He argued that it was unnecessary to have a city
which does not have a representative area, and that was a misuse of public
funds. Revenue collection was the main reason to prefer Ilala for city status,
among the 5 Dar es Salaam municipalities.
In January 2021, President Magufuli,
impressed by the revenue collection record of Kahama Town Council, elevated it
to a Municipality. On the other hand, Moshi has been clamouring for city status
for years, with no success.
There is need to have known criteria
for upgrading an urban area from one status to another. Revenue collection
could be one of the criteria. Others could include the status of land use
planning, service provision such as waste collection, environmental enhancement
including urban greening and controlling of flooding; implementation of own
vision and development plans; and urban governance arrangements (including
effectiveness for responding to citizen needs).
The current standards, to be found
in the National Human Settlement Policy of 2000 and the Urban Planning Act of
2007, are impractical and outdated. Tanzania needs a cadre of well-trained
urban managers, who can see urban areas as business entities. That way we may
avoid having cities that are dysfunctional, the majority of whose residents
live in unplanned areas, are unclean and unfriendly to their residents.
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