http://www.dailynews-tsn.com/saturday/homenews.php?id=4340
Daily News, Tanzania
Saturday, March 19, 2005 @12:20 AM EAT

Aga Khan hospital set for modernisation

By DAILY NEWS Reporter

PRESIDENT Benjamin Mkapa yesterday witnessed the laying of the foundation stone for the phase two construction of the Aga Khan Hospital in Dar es Salaam by His Highness the Aga Khan and he later threw his weight behind the modernisation of the hospital.

The Aga Khan said he looked forward to seeing the hospital “offer the best in training for medical specialists, nurses and medical technicians in East Africa.”

The Aga Khan also said his foundation — the Aga Khan Development Network — will do its best to modernise the hospital. “We will also have the facilities and the best equipment to enable them (trainees) to practise in their chosen field of expertise.”

The Aga Khan told the audience, which included his daughter, Princess Zahra, that his network was committed to invest in medical education and health care facilities so that patient care at the hospital would be at international standards.

“Unless we make significant investments in education, equipment and other facilities, East Africa will fall further behind the rest of the world in health care”, he told his listeners. The hospital’s first phase was completed five years ago, according to a press statement issued to mark the occasion. The first phase gave the hospital 56 new padiatric and medical-surgical in-patient beds, a new emergency department and 18 out-patient consulting clinics.

The statement says that the hospital “recently acquired the country’s first MRI scanner that enables patients to benefit from enhanced diagnostic accuracy.”

According to the statement, during the past five years, the number of patients reporting at the hospital doubled “and phase two expansion will enable this trend to continue".

“The development includes the five state-of-the-art operating theatres, a 12-bed intensive care unit, a comprehensive radiology imaging department and a new maternity and neonatal intensive care unit.” The function was also attended by the Minister for Health, Mrs Anna Abdallah.


http://www.dailynews-tsn.com/dailynews/homenews.php?id=4335
Daily News
Friday, March 18, 2005
@12:45 AM EAT

State hails education partners

By DAILY NEWS Reporter

President Benjamin Mkapa has expressed deep gratitude to private providers of education in Tanzania for their solid support in building a learned Tanzanian community.

Speaking after laying the foundation stone for the Aga Khan International Academy in Dar es Salaam yesterday, the president said such institutions, religious and secular, have always been very important partners in the provision of education which was the cornerstone of the country’s development and prosperity. He particularly thanked His Highness, the Aga Khan and the Aga Khan Education Services in Tanzania for playing a crucial role in social service delivery including education and health.

The president noted that many people who benefited from education delivered by Aga Khan schools had played and would continue to play an important role in the development of the country and its governance. “The Aga Khan family and community have a long history in the educational development of Tanzania beginning in 1896 when a community centre was established in Bagamoyo....as we were moving towards independence Aga Khan schools in Tanzania included 11 nursery schools, 52 primary schools and four secondary schools,” he explained, adding that the first Aga Khan Girls’ School worldwide was established in Zanzibar in 1905. He said his Highness’ personal commitment to these issues was admirable and was to be emulated, encouraged and facilitated.

The government, he pointed out, was sincerely appreciative and cherished the contribution of the private providers of social services, declaring his confidence that the next government would continue to do so such that in partnership skills and capacities necessary in a successful war on poverty could be built. He explained that the importance of education was also affirmed in the Commission for Africa’s report issued recently which diagnosed the problem of the continent as primarily one of capacities which revolves around education.

Likewise, he said, the 1948 United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the 1990 African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child, recognised basic education as the fundamental human right. Mr Mkapa listed achievements recorded by the government in improving access to quality primary education, which included an increase in net enrolment in primary schools from 56 per cent in 1995 to 90.5 per cent last year. It is projected to reach 95 per cent this year.

“Primary school pass rates have increased from about 20 per cent four years ago to 49 per cent last year,” he said. But the president observed that the recorded achievement had created new and unprecedented pressure on secondary and vocational education. “For us in Tanzania the problem is compounded by the fact that the journey to improve our enrolment in secondary and tertiary education has to begin from an extremely low level,” he noted. He said although the government had embarked on the ambitious Secondary Education Development Programme (SEDP), which seeks to achieve a net enrolment ratio of 50 per cent by the year 2010 and increase Forms 1-1V enrolment to two million from 345,000 in 2003, the goals could not be attained without the support of private providers of education.

The academy, the third centre of excellence in a planned international network of 19 academies being established by the Aga Khan Development Network across sub-Sahara Africa, the Middle East, Central and South Asia, will be a residential school offering pre-primary to higher secondary education benchmarked against worl