This is Tanzania we're talking bout here...they don't produce shyt,they even import food they used to grow back in the days,they are technologically eons behind,low literacy,corrupt as fukk,rural regions dont even have clean water,they couldnt even issue their citizens ID cards til 2013
They been dancing around this 'Kiswahili as a language for instruction in schools' for over 2 decades..
Its not a simple task to teach in Kiswahili,especially Science subjects
They jack most of the material from English books any fukking way..they have had to come up with new words for scientific terms.
If Tanzania was a developed nation,this would be hard but doable..but for one of the poorest countries in the world??
Its fukking stupid
Mr, Negroidal,
Thanks for those inputs.
All your points above perfectly describe a typical developing country. Let me just start by saying that our nation is a gift but at the same time a curse so let us try look at it from a fair perspective. It is true that we don't produce much at the moment because socialism or as I'd like to call the anti-privatization era killed most our industries (Nyerere's ego led him to ignore a lot of economists at that time). This definitely set us back half a century. However, like all the other developing nations who are going through the development stages, we are beginning to rediscover our own potential in our resources (recent discoveries of natural gas and oil). Despite that, its not a secret that we still seriously lag behind the rest in terms of physical and human capital (low education levels, high population growth rate, low life expectancy, high unemployment rates, commodity exports of raw materials rather than processed ingredients, majority of population lives in rural areas, poor technology etc.). To top it all, corruption is single-handedly ruining this country's reputation. We've been doing it wrong and wrong for decades. I blame the ruling party for putting this country into an immense shythole.
However, after having lived here for 3 plus years, I can sort of understand why the government would opt to kick out English. It's a huge risk that they are taking by opting to go with just Swahili but it sounds like a calculated risk. I am 100% sure that majority of the people in this country would prefer to focus on Swahili and to use it extensively in education.
For those who have ever visited this country would know that for the majority, Tanzanians and the English language rarely mix

. Truthfully, from experience, speaking English is like eating a forbidden fruit, you can't speak it in public without people looking back and looking at you like

. Hope this policy puts us in the right path because it will make it fair for a nation of people to communicate in a language in which they are comfortable. As an economist, this sounds like a good idea in terms of developing our human capital but we need to make sure that our youth are ready for the challenges and opportunities that can carry this country forward and put us on the global stage and not this egotistical thinking shyt that is presently at the core of our rotten government.