Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
India–Tanzania relations refers to the current and historical relations between India and Tanzania. India has a High Commission in Dar es Salaam, [1] Tanzania has a High Commission in New Delhi, which is also accredited to Sri Lanka, Nepal, Bangladesh and Myanmar. [2] Diplomatic relations are described as close, friendly and cooperative.
Migration from Tanzania. As a result of the anti-Indian sentiment in post-independence Tanzania (beginning with the presidency of Julius Nyerere), many Indians migrated overseas to India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, the United Kingdom, the United States, and Canada among other nations. Notable people
Samia Suluhu made a three-day visit to India. Samia first met with the External Affairs Minister of India S. Jaishankar where the two delegations held bilateral talks. After this, the president headed to the Rashtrapati Bhavan where she was officially received by the President of India Droupadi Murmu and Prime Minister of India Narendra Modi.
Indian High Commissioners to Tanzania (since 1964) [ edit] N. V. Rao - July 1965 - November 1967 - High Commissioner to Tanzania. V.C.Vijayaraghavan - January 1968 - November 1970. Jagat Singh Mehta - December 1970 - April 1974. K. D. Sharma - September 1974 - July 1978. Alfred S. Gonsalves - August 1978 - October 1981.
Pravasi Bharatiya Samman-2010, PBS Medal by High Commission of India in Tanzania - 2013, Order of the United Republic of Tanzania - 2014. Rajni Kanabar (9 November 1940 – 25 June 2019) was an M.B.B.S. doctor and philanthropist belonging to the third generation of an Indian-origin family in Tanzania. [1] [2] He was the founder-chairman of ...
The Tanzania People’s Defence Force ( TPDF) ( Swahili: Jeshi la Ulinzi la Wananchi wa Tanzania) is the military force of the United Republic of Tanzania. It was established in September 1964, following a mutiny by the former colonial military force, the Tanganyika Rifles. From its inception, it was ingrained in the troops of the new TPDF that ...
Tanzania's first president, Julius Nyerere also was one of the founding members of the Non-Aligned Movement, and, during the Cold War era, Tanzania played an important role in regional and international organisations, such as the Non-Aligned Movement, the front-line states, the G-77, and the Organisation of African Unity (OAU) (now the African Union).
2020 Tanzanian general election. General elections were held in Tanzania on 28 October 2020 to elect the President and members of National Assembly. [1] The presidential election was won by incumbent John Magufuli of the Chama Cha Mapinduzi party. [2]