Tanzania was established in 1920 by British civil servants. The word Tanzania derives from Swahili Tanya (sail) and Nica (bright and dry plain). At that time, it was called East German East Africa, now known as the territory of Tanganyika, joined Zanzibar in 1964. Under the guidance and guidance of the first President Julius Nyerere (1922-1999), Tanzania solved many problems without causing battle and war. Communicate well.
Gender-based violence continues to be a major problem in Tanzania and the government acknowledges that it may have a significant impact on national economic, health and social welfare systems. This form of violence is diverse, including physical, sexual, psychological and economic violence primarily for women. Gender-based violence is imposed on people based on gender and is defined as any harmful behavior that mainly affects women in Tanzania. It is divided into four categories: lifelong sports and / or sexual partner violence, intimate partner violence experienced during the past 12 months, early marriage / child marriage, and female sexual disconnection / cutting.
Tanzania is obviously moving towards gender equality. The basic indicator is gender difference in adult literacy ability. Because the mother's education is closely related to the child's health, education and nutrition, this gap will have a major impact on the growth potential. In Tanzania, male literacy rate (85.2%) is 23 times higher than female literacy rate (69.2%). The ratio of 5 years ago was 29, and this figure gradually changed, so considerable progress was seen. In contrast, cultural differences by gender of Tanzania are far superior to LIC-Africa's average ratio 44
The list of closures is from Tagania's Chaga tribe. Traditionally, this tribe lived mainly on the east slope of Mount Mel and Mount Kilimanjaro in Moshi, Tanzania. In Tanzania, because it was regarded as the first Christian tribe in the colonial era, access to sophisticated medical care and education in Tanzania became easier.