DIRECTORATE OF PRESIDENTIAL COMMUNICATIONS
UNITED REPUBLIC OF TANZANIA
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Telephone:
255-22-2114512, 2116898 E-mail: ikulumawasiliano@yahoo.com Fax: 255-22-2113425
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PRESIDENT’S OFFICE, THE STATE HOUSE, P.O.
BOX 9120, DAR ES SALAAM. Tanzania. |
PRESS
RELEASE
The
Government has reiterated its position on the planned tarmac highway around the
Serengeti National Park to ease transport problems facing poor communities
surrounding the Park, saying it will still go ahead and build the road.
However,
contrary to what groups lobbying against the planned highway have been claming,
the Government insists the highway will not be built through the Serengeti,
which has been aclaimed internationally as the World Heritage Site.
The
Government position was articulated yesterday (Thursday, January 27, 2011) by
the President of the United Republic of Tanzania, His Excellency Jakaya Mrisho
Kikwete during his bilateral talks with the Managing Director of the World
Bank, Ms. Ngozi Ikonjo-Iweala at the margins of the World Economic Forum (WEF),
which both the President and Mrs.Ikonjo-Iweala are attending in Davos.
“Contrarary
to what some people are saying, and to the rumours being circulated everywhere,
my Government has never decided to build a tarmac road through the Serengeti,”
President Kikwete told Ms Ikonjo-Iweala.
President
Kikwete told the World Bank Managing Director that the Government plan seeks to
severely reduce the length of the current road passing through the Serengenti
National Park.
He
said that currently a 220-kilometre unpaved road was running through the
Serengeti and that the Government want to reduce it to only 54 kilometres that
will pass through the National Park and those 54 kilometers will remain
unpaved.
“Currently,
220 kilometres of road are passing through Serengeti National Park, right in
the middle of the Park. And there is huge traffic crossing the park with large
lorries and huge buses. We are unhappy with this situation. We want to reduce
the length of road going through the Serengenti to only 54 kilometres passing mainly
through the northern tip of the Park,” said President Kikwete.
He
added: “This planned highway will meet three major objectives. One, is to
reduce the flow of traffic passing the Park. Second, is to reduce the length of
the road running through the Serengeti and third is to empower those poor
communities living just outside the Serengeti to have a reliable road going
through their area.”
“Some
of the accusations against the Tanzania Government on this issue are quite
absurd. People sit in Dar es Salaam and listen to all these people and
institutions which are paid to say bad things about the Government, said the
President and added:
“
Tanzania
has the most impacable record in conservation in the world. About 20 per cent
of our land has been under conservation since our independence in 1961. We are
a leading nation in conservation in the world. How, then can we make decisions
that would destroy the Serengeti? We would be the last people to destroy the
Serengeti.”
President
Kikwete has advised those who are interested in getting accurate facts about
Government plans on the road supporting poor communities surrounding the
Serengeti National Party to talk to the right people.
“We
have a responsibility to our people. They need a road and we will deliver it to
them while fully preserving our beloved Serengeti National Park,” said
President Kikwete in relation to the long-running campaign against this road
mainly by non-governmental organisations (NGO’s) and some conservation groups.
Ends.
Submitted by:
Director of Presidential Communication,
DAVOS.
28 January, 2011