Skip to content
Government and Policy

John Pombe Magufuli Is Now ‘Very’ Dead After Days Of Speculation

BY Juma · March 18, 2021 07:03 am

KEY POINTS

President John Joseph Pombe Magufuli was born in Chato, north-west Tanzania, in 1959. He studied chemistry and maths at the University of Dar es Salaam and worked as a chemistry and maths teacher. He was first elected as an MP in 1995 and became a cabinet minister in 2000. He was first elected president in 2015.

After days of speculations, President John Pombe Magufuli of Tanzania is now dead. News about his demise was made public by the Vice President of Tanzania Suluhu Hassan who said that the “bulldozer” died of heart complications.

“It is with deep regret that I inform you that today… we lost our brave leader, the president of the Republic of Tanzania, John Pombe Magufuli,” Vice-President Hassan said in the announcement that Tanzanians had been waiting for days.

At the same time, she announced that there would be 14 days of national mourning and flags would fly at half-mast.  As per Tanzania’s constitution, Ms. Hassan will be sworn in as the new president and should serve the remainder of Magufuli’s five-year team which he began late last year.

After being sworn in, she will become the first woman to be President in Tanzania since independence. Critics say they do not expect much change from her since she was a close confidant of John Pombe Magufuli and might just expound on what Pombe had started.

President Magufuli was last seen in public on 27 February, but Prime Minister Kassim Majaliwa insisted last week that the president was “healthy and working hard”. Some people who speculated his death were arrested and jailed.

Brief History

President John Joseph Pombe Magufuli was born in Chato, north-west Tanzania, in 1959. He studied chemistry and maths at the University of Dar es Salaam and worked as a chemistry and maths teacher. He was first elected as an MP in 1995 and became a cabinet minister in 2000. He was first elected president in 2015.

Read More:

Denying the existence of Covid-19

When Covid-19 first hit the East African region, Tanzania was among the countries that took precaution by shutting down schools and encouraging people to observe Covid-19 protocols. One time, out of the blues, John Pombe Magufuli declared Tanzania free of Covid-19.

According to Magufuli, Covid-19 was not scientific but demonic and believed that only the “blood of Jesus” would heal them and said indeed, Jesus had chased Covid-19 out of Tanzania. The Ministry of Health in Tanzania stopped all daily briefs on Covid-19 in April 2020.

He discouraged his people from wearing masks. He told them that Covid0-19 was over despite numerous concerns from countries such as the United States of America. He slammed countries such as Kenya for making fun of his stand on Covid-19.

There were reports of mass deaths in Tanzania as a result of Covid-19. Pombe told Tanzanians that whenever they felt the signs, they had to take natural remedies like hot water and steaming themselves with herbs. Just like the days of Kinjengetile Ngwale, he of the Maji Maji rebellion.

Read More:

Days of speculations

President John Pombe Magufuli was last seen in public on 27 February, setting in motion speculations about his health. News broke out that an East African leader was at Nairobi Hospital being treated for Covid-19. The news was rubbished off by Tanzanian authorities.

Speculations about his sickness were taken over by Kenyans who talked about it on social media for more than one week. At one time, Kenyans declared that Magufuli had been transferred from Nairobi to India aboard Kenya Airways with a ventilator in tow.

Opposition leader Tundu Lissu has for days been saying that he had information that Magufuli was dead. He insisted that he was sure, the man who wanted to assassinate him, by sending people to shoot him 16 times was no more. He actually looked forward to his death more than anybody else.

Sources indicated that from 3-7 March, Magufuli became unconscious and showing signs of heart failure, according
to senior government sources and family members of the president. He has long suffered from heart problems, collapsed on a number of occasions through his first term presidency, and has a pacemaker.

Sources claimed that nobody had access to him since 7 March, adding that those closest to him have received no information regarding his whereabouts since then. This reportedly included his wife and children. The vice president
also reportedly did not know the whereabouts of the president.

The Tanzania Intelligence and Security Services (TISS) had taken control of the situation and information flows. on 7 March, President Magufuli was transferred from State House, where he had been on a ventilator for at least four days, to the intelligence services hospital on the orders of Vice President Samia Suluhu Hassan.

The president’s close family was reportedly brought to the State House on the previous night (6 March). Religious leaders were called for a special prayer session and traditional healers from the president’s Sukuma ethnic group were also brought to Dar es Salaam from his ancestral home.

Read More:

Covid Within Tanzanian Government

Eight cabinet ministers, three senior officials in State House, and Chief Secretary Ally Bashiru have been diagnosed with COVID-19 in recent days. The Speaker of Parliament is also currently ill with COVID-19, as is the Director-General of TISS.

Finance Minister Philip Mpango was filmed having a coughing fit, unmasked while giving a press conference approximately two weeks ago, and reportedly also has COVID-19.

An emergency cabinet meeting was held on 9 March, but this reportedly focused primarily on the 2021/22 budget discussions and there was no discussion of the president’s health situation, despite the calling of an emergency meeting by the VP.

According to the constitution, the VP will convene the ruling CCM party’s Central Committee to discuss her replacement as VP once she assumes the role of president, and to forward the name of her proposed replacement as well as that of the prime minister to parliament for confirmation.

The relative weakness (in political terms) of Suluhu Hassan will also contribute to a slowdown in decision-making, as jostling for influence and new power dynamics become the focus of senior CCM figures.

Vice President Samia Suluhu Hassan, who hails from Zanzibar, is not as influential within government as her position would suggest but analysts are hopeful that she will get the grip of power soon.

Juma is an enthusiastic journalist who believes that journalism has power to change the world either negatively or positively depending on how one uses it.(020) 528 0222 or Email: info@sokodirectory.com

Trending Stories
Related Articles
Explore Soko Directory
Soko Directory Archives