Tuesday, 20 September 2016
SHORT HISTORY OF TANZANIA
Uncharted territory: to the 19th century
In the uncharted centuries of prehistory,
Tanzania is criss-crossed by tribal trade
routes linking the Great Lakes (Victoria and
Tanganyika) with the coast. These are the
same routes along which Arab traders
subsequently move inland, searching for slaves
and ivory.
In a second wave of penetration by outsiders,
Europeans use Bagamoyo (opposite Zanzibar)
as their starting point for exploration inland.
Burton and Speke do so in 1856, as does
Stanley in 1871 and again in 1874 . But the
most significant visitor to the region turns out
to be Karl Peters, a young man with a feverish
enthusiasm for the notion of a German empire.
Peters, with two companions, spends a few
weeks at the end of 1884 moving at frantic
speed within the sultan of Zanzibar's mainland
territories. The trio arrive in each new region
with blank treaty forms and German flags.
They fill in the local chief's name and
persuade him to make his mark on the
document and to run up a flag. Then they
move on. Grievously under-equipped and soon
short of food, they only just manage to make
their way back to the coast.
But Peters, returning to Berlin, has an exciting
proposition to put to Bismarck - who is
himself in high imperial mood, with his Berlin
colonial conference still in progress. A German
east African colony, Peters tells him, is there
for the taking.
In February 1885 Bismarck grants Peters a
charter for an East African protectorate, but
the fact is kept secret until the colonial
conference has ended. Meanwhile Peters
recruits more agents in Africa to continue the
work of distributing treaty forms. Their
instructions are to be schnell, kühn,
rücksichtslos (swift, daring, ruthless).
When the sultan of Zanzibar hears of the
proposed protectorate on his territory, he
sends a protest to the German emperor. It
reaches Berlin in May. Bismarck asks Peters
what the response should be. Peters replies
that there is a lagoon facing the sultan's
palace in Zanzibar, deep enough for warships
to anchor in.
A German-British carve up: 1885-1886
On 7 August 1885 five German warships steam
into the lagoon of Zanzibar and train their
guns on the sultan's palace. They have arrived
with a demand from Bismarck that Sultan
Barghash cede to the German emperor his
mainland territories or face the consequences.
But in the age of the telegram, gunboat
diplomacy is no longer a local matter. This
crisis is immediately on desks in London.
Britain, eager not to offend Germany, suggests
a compromise. The two nations should
mutually agree spheres of interest over the
territory stretching inland to the Great Lakes.
This plan is accepted before August is out.
The embarrassed British consul finds himself
under orders from London to persuade the
sultan to sign an agreement ceding the lion's
share of his mainland territory, with the details
still to be decided. In September the German
gunships begin their journey home. A joint
Anglo-German boundary commission starts
work in the interior.
By November 1886 the task is done and the
result is agreed with the other main colonial
power, France. The sultan is left a strip ten
miles wide along the coast. Behind that a line
is drawn to Mount Kilimanjaro and on to Lake
Victoria at latitude 1° S. The British sphere of
influence is to be to the north, the German to
the south. The line remains to this day the
border between Kenya and Tanzania.
German East Africa: 1886-1916
The administration of the territory in the
agreement of 1886 is handed over to Karl
Peters' German East Africa Company. The
company extends its territory to the sea from
1888, by buying a lease of the coastal strip
which was left in the sultan of Zanzibar's
possession. But local resentment leads to a
Muslim uprising in that year which is only
suppressed after the arrival of German troops
(assisted on this occasion by the British
navy).
The inadequacy of the company causes the
German government to take direct control in
1891. But Karl Peters retains his involvement,
being appointed imperial commissioner.
There follow two decades in which the
German authorities make considerable efforts
to develop their east African colony. A railway
is built from Dar es Salaam to Tabora and
then on to Ujiji. New crops, such as sisal and
cotton, are introduced and prove very
successful - as also is the development of
coffee plantations on the slopes of Mount
Kilimanjaro.
But this energetic German presence is
profoundly resented by the African tribes,
particularly when the harsh methods of forced
labour are used in the cultivation of the new
and alien crops. The result, in 1905, is a
widespread popular rebellion which becomes
known as the Maji-Maji rising.
Maji is the Swahili for 'water'. The rising gets
its name because the belief spreads among
the African workers that a magic potion of
water, castor oil and millet seeds can turn
German bullets to water. In August 1905 the
drums begin to broadcast the news that
cotton plants are being pulled up rather than
tended, in a symbolic gesture of resistance.
The excitement spreads throughout much of
the colony, as people drink the potion and set
off on a rampage wearing headbands woven
from the stalks of millet, the indigenous crop.
Soon, inevitably, there are murderous attacks
on Germans and the burning of their houses.
Reinforcements arrive from Germany in
October 1905, by which time many of the
Maji-Maji have already begun to discover that
German bullets do not turn to water. The
German commander, General von Götzen, uses
a strategy hardly more humane than that of
his colleague von Trotha in Namibia, whose
brutality has caused an international outcry
only a year previously.
Von Götzen decides that in the long term only
famine will bring these rebellious workers to
heel. He instructs his troops to move through
the country destroying crops, removing or
burning any grain already harvested, and
putting entire villages to the torch.
It is estimated that about 250,000 Africans die
in the resulting famine. German East Africa,
like German South West Africa , acquires in its
early years a besmirched colonial record.
Meanwhile Karl Peters, the originator of this
colony, has in 1897 been tried and convicted in
a Potsdam court for brutal offences
committed in Africa. They include his
response to the suspicion that one of his
servants may have slept with his African
mistress. The young girl is flogged and then
both are hanged.
These scandals shock Berlin sufficiently for
reforms in colonial policy to be hastily put in
place. But any likely benefit is cut short by
the onset of World War I. Early in 1916 British
forces move south from Kenya to occupy
German East Africa.
British Mandate: 1919-1962
After the end of the war the treaty of
Versailles, in 1919, grants Britain a League of
Nations mandate to govern the former
German East Africa - which now acquires a
new name, Tanganyika.
British policy from the 1920s onwards is to
encourage indigenous African administration
along traditional lines, through local councils
and courts. A legislative council is also
established in Dar es Salaam, but African
members are not elected to this until after
World War II. By then local political
development is an obligation under the terms
of UN trusteeship, in which Britain places
Tanganyika in 1947.
During the 1950s a likely future leader of
Tanganyika emerges in the person of Julius
Nyerere. Son of a chief, a convert to Roman
Catholicism while studying at Makerere
college in Uganda, then an undergraduate for
three years in Edinburgh university, Nyerere
returns to Tanganyika in 1953.
He immediately founds a political party, TANU
or the Tanganyika African National Union
(evolving it from an earlier and defunct
Tanganyika African Association). From the
start its members feature prominently in
elections to the legislative assembly. When
independence follows, in 1961, Nyerere
becomes the new nation's prime minister. In
1962 Tanganyika adopts a republican
constitution and Nyerere is elected president.
Republic of Tanzania: 1964-1985
In 1964 Nyerere reaches an agreement with
Abeid Karume , president of the offshore island
of Zanzibar which has been so closely linked
in its history to the mainland territory of
Tanganyika. The two presidents sign an act of
union, bringing their nations together as the
United Republic of Tanzania. Nyerere
becomes president of the new state, with
Karume as his vice-president.
Nyerere, by instinct an idealistic socialist,
guides his country along lines which often
have a utopian touch. Local self-sufficiency is
emphasized. Traditional and simple solutions
are sought for local problems rather than
relying on technological foreign imports. Great
importance is placed on education and
literacy, in which excellent results are
achieved.
Nyerere declares his political creed in a
document of 1967 known as the Arusha
Declaration. This announces the introduction
of a socialist state and is accompanied by the
nationalization of key elements in the
economy. With such policies Nyerere
inevitably has to rely on help from the eastern
bloc, and in particular China. Nevertheless he
is able to maintain his declared international
stance of non-alignment.
The Arusha Declaration puts agriculture at the
centre of the national economy and introduces
a programme of 'villagization' - meaning the
moving of peasant families into cooperative
villages where they can supposedly work
together more productively.
As elsewhere where such cooperatives have
been tried (in particular Mao Tse-tung's China,
a source of inspiration to Nyerere), they prove
both unpopular and inefficient. When Nyerere
relinquishes executive power voluntarily in
1985 (a rare act in modern African history,
and certainly one with no appeal to Mao), he
admits that his economic policies have failed.
But in his twenty-three years in office he has
established an impressive reputation as an
independent and free-thinking African
statesman - willing to sever relations with the
UK (1965-8) because of British acceptance of
racist Rhodesia and South Africa, but also
taking on the OAU (as when he recognizes
Biafra's secession in 1968).
Chama Cha Mapinduzi: from1977
From 1965 each part of the union has only
one political party, but they are different
parties - TANU in Tanganyika and ASP (Afro-
Shirazi Party) in Zanzibar. In 1977 they merge
as the CCM or Chama Cha Mapinduzi
(Revolutionary Party).
When Nyerere stands down as president, in
1985, he remains chairman of the CCM and as
such retains an important voice in the
formulation of general policy. For the
executive post of president the party puts
forward only one candidate, Ali Hassan
Mwinyi. However, by the early 1990s there is
irresistible pressure - here as elsewhere in
Africa - for the introduction of multiparty
democracy.
President Mwinyi promulgates a new
democratic constitution in 1992, with the
stipulation that political parties will only be
registered if they are active in both
Tanganyika and Zanzibar and if they are not
identified with specific religious, regional, tribal
or racial groups.
Elections are held in 1995. The CCM just wins
in Zanzibar, where opposition anger at
electoral malpractice disrupts polital life for
the rest of the decade. In Tanganyika the
CCM candidate Benjamin Mkapa is elected
president of the union, but only after all his
rivals have withdrawn from the race alleging
ballot-rigging.
During the 1990s very great strain is placed
on an already impoverished Tanzania by the
ethnic conflicts over the border in Rwanda and
Burundi . During a single 24-hour period in 1994
as many as 250,000 Rwandan refugees stream
into Tanzania. Eventually the total is 550,000
from Rwanda and 100,000 from Burundi. Many
of them are still in Tanzania at the end of the
decade.
In Dar es Salaam a hopeful sign is the
progress of an anti-corruption campaign
launched by President Mkapa. In 1997 more
than 1500 civil servants are dismissed on
these grounds.
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