Within
Tanzania, the former president Benjamin William Mkapa and
some aides are under serious public pressure. Despite agitation
by civil society against the purchase, Mkapa was said to be
pushing for it. His then Minister of Finance Basil Pesambili
Mramba was quoted commenting on the purchase of the radar
equipment to point that if the deal meant it, Tanzanians would
rather eat grass than stop the purchase of the radar and another
tender for the acquisition of a presidential gulf-stream jet.
All this was between 2001 and 2004.
To acquire the radar, Tanzania had to borrow
money from the Barclays Bank to finance the purchase. Reports
have it that there are countries that acquired same type of
the system at a cost less by 45 percent. These include Saudi
Arabia, Indonesia and Turkey. Without the purchase’s
defence from the highest circles of the UK government many
people believe Tanzania would not have entered into the flawed
transaction. This amount enters into an already huge debt
of more than $7.2 billion that Tanzania owes the world despite
a debt relief under HIPC. How different is this from the traditional
odious debts that Tanzania would wish to denounce?
According to the UK’s Guardian newspaper
in January 2007, there has been admission by the middlemen
that BAE secretly paid the $12 million ‘bribe’.
The Bank of Tanzania reports the figure for Debt servicing
as amounting to 9.8 million dollars in the quarter ending
in December 2006. This raises lots of serious governance questions
both in the UK and Tanzania especially the fact that the British
Aerospace System is a British government owned firm. What
is the relationship between Tanzania and the UK in as far
as trade is concerned?
One thing is clear that the war against poverty
that Africa is waging is next to impossible if international
corruption can not be curbed. Tanzanians now are having to
spend huge sums to service ‘odious debts’ at the
expense of education, health and water, to name only a few
necessary social services for Millennium goals to be realized
come 2015. The people of the UK must support Tanzanians in
shaming such deals!
|