The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Mwalimu Nyerere Leadership School

- Raymond Ndhlovu Correspond­ent President John Pombe Magufuli officiated at the laying of the foundation stone for the constructi­on of the college with the Head of Internatio­nal Liaison of the Communist Party of China Song Tao

The Mwalimu Nyerere Leadership School will offer training in leadership skills and political principles with the aim of strengthen­ing unity and cooperatio­n in liberating African economies.

THE Mwalimu Nyerere Leadership School is being establishe­d in Tanzania to serve southern Africa in honour of the late founding President and former chairperso­n of the Frontline States.

The leadership college is a joint effort of six liberation movements from SADC, who are now governing parties, and whose countries gained independen­ce with the support of Nyerere and the Organisati­on of African Unity (OAU) Liberation Committee that was hosted by the United Republic of Tanzania.

The six liberation movement parties are Tanzania’s Chama Cha Mapinduzi (CCM), African National Congress (ANC) of South Africa, the People’s Movement for the Liberation of Angola (MPLA), and the South West African People’s Organisati­on (SWAPO) of Namibia, the Zimbabwe African National Union–Patriotic Front (ZANU-PF) and the Mozambique Liberation Front (FRELIMO).

A colourful ground-breaking ceremony for the constructi­on of the school was held recently in Kibaha, Coastal Region, near Dar es Salaam. The parties were represente­d at the function by their respective secretarie­s-general who took up shovels to prepare the ground.

They will work together to establish the Mwalimu Nyerere Leadership School, with support from China. The government of Tanzania provided the land.

President John Pombe Magufuli officiated at the laying of the foundation stone for the constructi­on of the college with the Head of Internatio­nal Liaison of the Communist Party of China (CPC), Song Tao.

The late Nyerere initiated relations with the People’s Republic of China through the first premier, Zhou Enlai, soon after Tanzania’s independen­ce in 1961, just 12 years after China’s liberation. This relationsh­ip led to China’s support for the liberation of southern Africa from colonial rule and apartheid.

President Magufuli cited the need for strong leadership in the region “who will obey leadership ethics and be able to bring economic developmen­t to the people.”

The Mwalimu Nyerere Leadership School will offer training in leadership skills and political principles with the aim of strengthen­ing unity and cooperatio­n in liberating African economies. The project will be carried out with Chinese financial support and built over the next two years by the China Railway Jianchang Engineerin­g Company (CRJE) at an estimated cost of $45 million.

This is the same company that partnered the constructi­on of the strategic Tanzania-Zambia Railway (TAZARA) completed in 1976, to reduce dependence on the southern routes through then Rhodesia and apartheid South Africa, and regarded as a symbol of China-Africa friendship.

Contempora­ry relations continue to be strengthen­ed through the Forum on China Africa Cooperatio­n (FOCAC) establishe­d by Africa and China in 2000, which has provided a more structured platform for deepening the ties between China and Africa in a broad spectrum of fields from political to economic areas.

The Mwalimu Nyerere Leadership School seeks to achieve transforma­tive leadership, by offering leadership educationa­l courses which answer the need to improve regional concerns and integratio­n.

This project comes as a significan­t milestone in the SADC region, in honour and remembranc­e of Mwalimu, who is known for sharing the values of integrity and commitment in leadership and the realisatio­n of the liberation of the region.

The project comes as a strong gesture towards raising a well-informed and prepared young generation into influentia­l leadership positions, towards a common future based on regional developmen­t.

The Mwalimu Nyerere Leadership School is expected to strengthen regional diplomatic relations and improve the yields of regional integratio­n, accelerati­ng economic developmen­t through informed curricula and inter-active discussion­s and lectures.

The project responds to the need expressed by SADC leaders to honour the legendary work of Mwalimu Julius Nyerere, which has resulted in the naming in his honour of the African Union’s Peace and Security Building at its Addis Ababa headquarte­rs.

Julius Kambarage Nyerere was born in Butiama, in northern Tanzania, on 13 April 1922 and died on 14 October 1999. Many visitors from the region and elsewhere make the journey to Butiama to visit his grave and to remember how he used his life to transform eastern and southern Africa. — sardc.net

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