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<text id=93CT1884>
<title>
Tanzania--History
</title>
<history>
Compact ALMANAC--CIA Factbook
Southern Africa
Tanzania
</history>
<article>
<source>CIA World Factbook</source>
<hdr>
History
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Tanganyika
</p>
<p> Northern Tanganyika's famed Olduvai Gorge has provided rich
evidence of the area's prehistory, including fossil remains of
some of humanity's earliest ancestors. The discoveries made by
Dr. and Mrs. L.S.B. Leakey and others suggest that East Africa
rather than Asia may have been the site of human origin.
</p>
<p> Little is known of the history of Tanganyika's interior
during the early centuries of the Christian era. The area is
believed to have been inhabited originally by ethnic groups
using a click-tongue language similar to that of southern
Africa's Bushmen and Hottentots. Although remnants of these
early tribes still exist, most were gradually displaced by
Bantu farmers migrating from the west and south and by Nilotes
and related northern peoples. Some of these groups had
well-organized societies and controlled extensive areas by the
time the Arab slavers and European explorers and missionaries
penetrated the interior in the first half of the 19th century.
</p>
<p> The coastal area, in contrast, first felt the impact of
foreign influence as early as the eighth century, when monsoon
winds brought the ships of Arab traders. By the 12th century,
traders and immigrants came from as far away as Persia (now
Iran) and India. They built a series of highly developed city
and trading states along the coast, the principal one being
Kilwa, a settlement of Persian origin that held ascendancy
until the Portuguese destroyed it in the early 1500s.
</p>
<p> The Portuguese navigator, Vasco da Gama, touched the East
African coast in 1498 on his voyage to India. By 1506, the
Portuguese claimed control over the entire coast. This control
was nominal, however, for the Portuguese did not attempt to
colonize the area or explore the interior. By the early 18th
century, Arabs from Oman had assisted the indigenous coastal
dwellers in driving out the Portuguese from the area north of
the Ruvuma River. They established their own garrisons at
Zanzibar, Pemba, and Kilwa and carried on a lucrative trade in
slaves and ivory.
</p>
<p> European exploration of Tanganyika's interior began in the
mid-19th century. Two German missionaries reached Mt.
Kilimanjaro in the 1840s. The British explorers, Richard Burton
and John Speke, crossed the interior to Lake Tanganyika in
1857. David Livingstone, the Scottish missionary-explorer who
crusaded against the slave trade, established his last mission
at Ujiji, where he was "found" by Henry Morton Stanley, and
Anglo-American journalist-explorer, who had been commissioned by
the New York Herald to locate him.
</p>
<p> German colonial interests were first advanced in 1884. Karl
Peters, who formed the Society for German Colonization,
concluded a series of treaties by which tribal chiefs in the
interior accepted German protection. Prince Otto von Bismarck's
government backed Peters in the subsequent establishment of the
German East Africa Company. In 1886 and 1890, Anglo-German
agreements were negotiated that delineated the British and
German spheres of influence in the interior of East Africa and
along the coastal strip previously claimed by the Omani sultan
of Zanzibar. In 1891, the German government took over direct
administration of the territory from the German East African
Company and appointed a governor with headquarters at Dar es
Salaam.
</p>
<p> Although the German colonial administration brought cash
crops, railroads, and roads to Tanganyika, its harsh actions
provoked African resistance, culminating in the Maji Maji
rebellion of 1905-07. The rebellion, which temporarily united a
number of southern tribes and ended only after an estimated
120,000 Africans had died from fighting or starvation, is
considered by Tanzanians today to have been one of the first
stirrings of nationalism.
</p>
<p> German colonial domination of Tanganyika ended with World War
I. Control of most of the territory passed to the United
Kingdom, under a League of Nations mandate. After World War II,
Tanganyika became a UN trust territory also administered by the
United Kingdom. In the following years, Tanganyika moved
gradually towards self-government and independence. In 1954,
Julius K. Nyerere, a school teacher who was then one of two
Tanganyikans educated abroad at the university level, organized a
political party, the Tanganyika African National Union (TANU).
TANU-supported candidates were victorious in the Legislative
Council elections of September 1958 and February 1959. In
December 1959, the United Kingdom agreed to the establishment
of internal self-government following general elections to be
held in August 1960. Nyerere was named chief minister of the
subsequent government.
</p>
<p> In May 1961, Tanganyika became autonomous, and Nyerere became
prime minister under a new constitution. Full independence was
achieved on December 9, 1961. Mr. Nyerere was elected president
when Tanganyika became a republic within the Commonwealth on the
Nations 1 year after independence. On April 26, 1964, Tanganyika
united with Zanzibar to formed the United Republic of Tanganyika
and Zanzibar, renamed the United Republic of Tanzania on October
29.
</p>
<p> TANU and the Afro-Shirazi Party of Zanzibar were merged into a
signal party, Chama Cha Mapinduzi (CCM) (Revolutionary Party),
on February 5, 1977. On April 26, 1977, the union of the two
parties was ratified in a new constitution. The merger was
reinforced by principles enunciated in the 1982 union
constitution and reaffirmed in the constitution of 1984.
</p>
<p>Zanzibar
</p>
<p> An early Arab/Persian trading center, Zanzibar fell under
Portuguese domination in the 16th and early 17th centuries but
was retaken by Omani Arabs in the early 18th century. The height
of Arab rule came during the reign of Sultan Seyyid Said (1804-
56). He encouraged the development of clove plantations, using
the forced labor of the island's African population. Zanzibar
also became the base for the Arab slavers whose raids
depopulated much of the Tanganyikan interior. By 1840, Said had
transferred his capital from Muscat to Zanzibar and established a
ruling Arab elite. The island's commerce fell increasingly into
the hands of traders from the Indian subcontinent whom Said
encouraged to settle on the island.
</p>
<p> Zanzibar's spices attracted ships from as far away as the
United States. A U.S. consulate was established on the island in
1837. The United Kingdom's early interest in Zanzibar was
motivated by commerce and British determination to end the slave
trade. In 1822, the British signed the first of a series of
treaties with Sultan Said to curb this trade, but not until 1876
was the sale of slaves finally prohibited.
</p>
<p> In carrying out its policies, the United Kingdom gained a
supremacy that was formally recognized in the Anglo-German
agreement of 1890, making Zanzibar and Pemba a British
protectorate. British rule through the Sultan remained largely
unchanged from the late 19th century until after World War II.
</p>
<p> Zanzibar's political development began in earnest after 1956,
when provision was first made for the election of six
nongovernment members to the Legislative Council. Two parties
were formed: the Zanzibar Nationalist Party (ZNP), representing
the dominant Arab and Arabized minority, and the Afro-Shirazi
Party (ASP), led by Abeid Karume and representing the Shirazis
and the African majority.
</p>
<p> The first elections were held in July 1957, and the ASP won
three of the six elected seats, with the remainder going to
independents. The ZNP polled only a small percentage of the
total votes. Four Arabs and two Asians were appointed to the
government seats on the Legislative Council. Following the
election the ASP split; some of its Shirazi supporters left to
form the Zanzibar and Pemba People's Party (ZPPP). The January
1961 election resulted in a deadlock between the ASP and a
ZNP-ZPPP coalition.
</p>
<p> The elections that followed the granting of self-government
in June 1963 produced similar results. Zanzibar received its
independence from the United Kingdom on December 19, 1963, as a
constitutional monarchy under the sultan. On January 12, 1964,
the African majority revolted against the sultan, and a new
government was formed with the ASP leader, Abeid Karume, as
president of Zanzibar and chairman of the Revolutionary Council.
Under the terms of its political union with Tanganyika in April
1964, the Zanzibar Government retained considerable local
autonomy.
</p>
<p> Abeid Karume was named first vice president of the union
government, a post he held until his assassination in April
1972. Aboud Jumbe, a fellow member of the ASP and the
Revolutionary Council, was appointed to succeed Karume. In 1981,
32 persons were selected to serve in the Zanzibar House of
Representatives. The election marked the first poll since the
1964 revolution. In 1984, Jumbe resigned and was replaced by Ali
Hassan Mwinyi as both President of Zanzibar and First Vice
President of Tanzania. In the 1985 election, Mwinyi was elected
President of the United Republic of Tanzania. Idris Wakil was
elected as President of Zanzibar and Second Vice President of
Tanzania.
</p>
<p>Political Conditions
</p>
<p> Julius Nyerere, who had served as president since the
Tanzanian union was established in 1964, did not stand for
reelection in 1985. In his place, union vice president and
president of Zanzibar, Ali Hassan Mwinyi, was chosen by the CCM
to run for president. Idris Wakil, speaker of the Zanzibar House
of Representatives, was chosen to run for president of Zanzibar
and ex officio second vice president of the union. Under
Tanzania's one-party system, no other candidates were allowed
to run in the October 1985 elections, and voters could only
approve or disapproved of the sole candidate. Mwinyi was
approved overwhelmingly, but Wakil, who ran only on Zanzibar in a
separate election, received only a relatively small majority.
Mwinyi subsequently chose Joseph Warioba as first vice president
and prime minister. (Under the Tanzanian constitution the
president and first vice president cannot both be from either
the mainland or Zanzibar.)
</p>
<p> Nyerere retains significant power through his position as
Chairman of the CCM, which was granted political supremacy over
the government by the constitution of 1977. Nyerere's term as
CCM chairman runs until 1987. The CCM is, in theory, the primary
source of policy in the social, political, and economic fields.
The CCM provides nearly all top governments leaders and plays
a leading role in the government scheme of nation-building. The
party's control structure is closely interwoven with the
government's.
</p>
<p> Tanzania has sought to achieve political and economic
development within an egalitarian framework. Since 1962, Nyerere
has used the Kiswahili word ujamaa (familyhood) to describe the
type of communal cooperation his government seeks to foster.
Tanzanian goals were set forth on more conventional socialist
terms in the TANU constitution and reaffirmed in February 1967
in a party document, the Arusha Declaration. The declaration,
which enunciated the principles of "socialism and
self-reliance," asked the government to consolidate its control
over the means of production, prepare development plans that
Tanzania could carry out without depending on foreign
assistance, and place greater emphasis on improving rural
living standards.
</p>
<p> To ensure consistency between precept and practice, the
declaration prescribed a code of conduct for party and
government leaders. Among the code's prohibitions were receipt
of more than one salary, directorships in private firms, or
ownership of rental properties or shares in any company.
Ministerial and civil service salaries had been reduced earlier
in a move toward the more equitable distribution of income.
</p>
<p> Shortly after the Arusha Declaration, Nyerere announced the
full or partial nationalization--with compensation--of
various private interests, including all commercial banks; a
number of food-processing, manufacturing, and trading firms;
and some of Tanzania's leading sisal estates. On the third
anniversary of the declaration, the president nationalized
Tanzania's privately owned, English-language newspaper and
began transferring the remaining private import-export firms and
all wholesale businesses to the public sector. In 1971, the
government nationalized all rental property valued at more than
$14,000. On Zanzibar, which moved more rapidly toward public
ownership, government control of the commercial sector is
virtually complete, while production in agriculture and fishing
remain largely in private hands.
</p>
<p> The CCM became the principal instrument for the political
mobilization of mainland Tanzania's population. Nyerere
envisioned the party as a "two-way street" for the flow of ideas
and policy directives between the village level and the
government. However, in early 1986 Nyerere admitted that the
party was moribund, particularly at local levels, and began a
campaign to inject new life into the CCM.
</p>
<p> Cooperatives, which once numbered more than 2,000 were
abolished in 1972. In an effort to stimulate agricultural
production, they were reapproved in 1982 and began operating
again on July 1, 1983, as a means of more efficient distribution
of inputs and collection of goods in Tanzania's decentralized
markets. The national education system was also revamped to
provide basic agricultural training for the many primary
school-aged children who are unable to continue their education.
</p>
<p> Public participation in mainland Tanzania's political
development has also been encouraged through the electoral
process. In the most recent general elections, held in October
1985, about 75% of the registered voters went to the polls. A
number of incumbent members were defeated, including several
former ministers.
</p>
<p>Source: U.S. Department of State, Bureau of Public Affairs, July
1986.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>